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Petersfield,
Westmoreland
On
May 16, 2007, the Board of Management of
Petersfield High School was awarded the
best school improvement plan for western
Jamaica by the National Council on
Education (NCE).
But
it was only one of a list of
achievements the school has made in
recent times, under the able guidance of
Reverend Dr Basil Chambers, who took
over the institution in 1999. He brought
it from the brink of deterioration to
the success it is today.
"When I came here it was like animal
farm. All that was left was for the
students to come sit in this chair and
run the school," Chambers told the
Oserver West, indicating his black,
swivel chair.
He
noted that daily fights and indiscipline
were the order of the day at the time,
and recalled that friends asked him if
he had gone mad. But he was just what
the school needed.
Armed with a Master's degree in Human
Resource Management (HRD) and his
Christianity, he set out to change the
culture at the rural educational
institution.
"This school has turned around 360
degrees," the principal said proudly.
With a youthfulness that belies his 60
years and an undercurrent of boundless
energy, one can see how Chambers managed
to achieve the impossible at Petersfield
High: motivate staff and students, while
developing a culture of success.
Petersfield High is now ranked fifth in
Mathematics on the island among newly
upgraded high schools by the last Ralph
Thompson survey; and 90 per cent of the
74 teachers on staff have degrees.
Fourteen among them have Master's
degrees.
"Most of the training you get in HRD
speaks to the training and development
of people. When you train, you retain
your workers," said Chambers, who will
retire from teaching in August.
He
boasted that even his secretary had
recently received her degree in teacher
education, as did the secretary before
her who is now pursuing an advanced
degree.
"You know that if you are with Basil
Chambers you must prepare to soar and
succeed," he said.
At
present, Petersfield High boasts the
youngest heads of departments across the
island and it is testament to the HRD
principle of performance above tenure.
This is not to say that mature staff
members are not also at the helm of the
institution - Janet Jackson is one such
staff member.
Last year, she sent up 11 students, for
the first time, to sit Electronic
Document Preparation and Management (EDPM)
at CXC, and all 11 students returned
distinctions. This year, the school is
sending up 36 students to sit the
examination.
The
institution also has two centres of
excellence: a state-of-the-art
Cosmetology Centre, and a Machine Shop
and Welding Centre, which serves
students from other schools in the area.
But
of all his achievements, Chambers prides
himself on having incorporated the
school vendors into the school family.
Three years ago, even with some
opposition from the school board, he was
able to move the vendors from the gate
to a section of the school compound.
"I
didn't have full support, but now they
know they are valuable stakeholders," he
said, noting that there were fears the
school's tuck shops would suffer.
Instead, he said the tuck shops now sell
more than ever.
"That shows you the power competition in
regulating the market," he joked.
The
vendors also contribute to the
development of the school by paying $200
a week for selling on the premises.
Meanwhile, success has been the hallmark
of Chambers' life, from his early days
in Springfield, St Elizabeth to his
years at MICO Teachers' College and the
University of the West Indies (UWI),
where he completed his Master's in 1997.
The
first of 12 children, he first learned
the tenets of success from his father
whom he described as a hard worker who,
although not wealthy, worked hard to
ensure his children were taken care of.
He also learned responsibility at a very
young age, and helped his parents to
send his younger sisters to school.
He
recalled that unfortunately his father
was more interested in the education of
his boys than his girls and knowing the
importance of this, he stepped in to
help.
"I
sent my younger sisters to school. I
remember a wise old man telling me at
the time that if I help them once, then
I won't have to help them for the rest
of my life," he said, adding that his
efforts had paid off.
It
is this same philosophy that he has
adopted at Petersfield that if you do a
good job of educating youngsters now
then you won't have to worry about them
later. |