Peer mentors emerging from pilot mentoring programme

National Parent-Teacher Association (PTA)  Co-ordinator  Carol Benn says that the pilot Voluntary Mentoring programme  which  comee to an end this month has positively transformed targeted  student indiscipline, and  some of these students  are now role models  to their colleagues and have also taken on the role of peer mentors.

According to a Ministry of Education press release, the students who were selected to undergo  the programme now have an upbeat attitude towards their peers and teachers and have recorded improvements in their academic performance.

The one-year project which significantly supports the work of the Schools’ Welfare Department to create more violence free schools and promote environments that are conducive  to learning is being piloted at St. Winifride’s, St. Mary’s, Dolphin, Tutorial,  and Houston Secondary.

The pilot programme which has gained widespread support from headteachers and parents will continue, the national PTA coordinator said, adding that it will be extended to five  more schools by May this year.

The programme aims to inculcate acceptable behaviours in students, promote tolerance and  address some of the challenges facing the education system which include violence and low academic performance by some students.

The intervention also has at its core the strengthening of relations between the school, home and community.

Under the programme, a student (mentee)  was paired with a former student or another person considered suitable (mentor).

During the pilot, the mentor, the mentee and his/her parent/guardian  and the latter was introduced  to a range of activities such as concerts, exhibitions, and family outings.  They also interacted on a number of issues, particularly those of interest to the mentee.

Some 50 teachers along with 25 youth advocates and 100 student mentors have been tasked to deliver the programme which is also supported by the United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF), the release added.