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Church schools building character, not seeking converts, says Reece

Published:Saturday | March 3, 2018 | 12:00 AMNadine Wilson-Harris
Nadine Molloy (left), principal of the Church of God-operated Ardenne High School points a student to an exhibition.
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Although several of the more prominent schools in Jamaica are operated by churches, Archbishop Emeritus Donald Reece estimates that less than 10 per cent of the students in these institutions belong to the denomination that operates their school.

Reece, who is the chair of the Ecumenical Education Committee, told a Gleaner Editors' Forum last Tuesday that in some schools, it is actually just about two per cent of the students who worship with the denominations which operate them.

"I am being generous, but they have less than 10 per cent of their respective congregants in their schools," said Reece, who heads the body of about nine church groups and trusts that own and sponsor schools.

"The ethos of our church and trust schools must somehow be maintained even as we teach students of various denominations or of no faith. Love of God and love of neighbour undergird the ethos, it undergirds the regulations, it undergirds the culture of the church/trust schools. This orientation, if allowed to permeate our curriculum, ought to bode well for the nation," added Reece. 

 

THEIR  ETHOS

 

He told Gleaner editors and reporters that while the aim is not to convert students from their beliefs, these schools are built on a Christian foundation, and as such efforts are often made to maintain the ethos of the schools.

"Church educational institutions have as their objective the formation of character with a Christian bias that entails genuine human values, which enshrine the total development of a person, body, mind and soul," said Reece.

"Some people may feel that we are forcing our culture of the church schools down people's throat, but I think not," he asserted.

The archbishop emeritus said that some Jamaicans chose church-run schools because they like the fact that discipline and spiritual development are prioritised.

"Our nation can benefit from a person with character, with values. That's why we are in education. If we can't do that, we might as well say bye-bye," added Reece.

He argued that it is therefore important that the Ministry of Education take into consideration the culture undergirding church-operated schools.

"It is to this end that the Ecumenical Education Committee seeks occasional dialogue with the Ministry of Education, Youth and Information, as our ethos must be maintained, because it aims at the entire person, body, mind and soul," said Reece.

nadine.wilson@gleanerjm.com

 

Some of the prominent church operated or sponsored schools across Jamaica

 

1. Campion College - Roman Catholic

2. Immaculate High School - Roman Catholic

3. Ardenne High School - Church of God

4. Kingston College - Anglican

5. St George's College - Roman Catholic

6. Calabar High School - Baptist

7. Convent of Mercy Academy (Alpha) - Roman Catholic

8. St Andrew High School for Girls - Methodist/United Church in Jamaica and the Cayman Islands

9. St Jago High School - Anglican

10. Meadowbrook High School - United Church in Jamaica and the Cayman Island

11. Holy Childhood High School - Roman Catholic

12. St Hilda's Diocesan High School - Anglican

13. Westwood High School - Baptist/ Anglican/Methodist/United Church in Jamaica and the Cayman Islands.

14. York Castle High - Methodist

15. Excelsior High School - Methodist

16. The Queen's School - Anglican

17. William Knibb High School - Baptist

18. St Hugh's High - Anglican

19. Mount Alvernia High - Roman Catholic

20. Morant Bay High School - Methodist

nadine.wilson@gleanerjm.com