Minister of Education Dr Nyan Gadsby-Dolly has said all secondary school students in forms four to six will be required to return to physical classes from Monday.
In a press conference held at the ministry's head office in Port of Spain on Wednesday, Gadsby-Dolly said the relevant teachers would no longer be required to teach online classes as all students must return to school.
Gadsby-Dolly noted that vaccinated students in forms four to six have been attending in-person classes since October 4.
'During this time, data was collected on student vaccination rates, daily physical attendance and the methods of operation used by schools to teach students who were not in physical attendance.'
She said data from the Ministry of Health, as of October 19, indicates that 49,853 (54 per cent) of students aged 12-18 have received their first dose of the covid19 vaccine and 36,540 (40 per cent) have received their second dose. The Pfizer vaccine is currently available for minors within that age group.
She said 30 per cent of forms four to six students are fully vaccinated with 34 per cent of denominational schools having reported more than 50 per cent of their four to six students fully vaccinated. Only one per cent of government schools indicated the same.
'Attendance data collected over the past two weeks has shown that school attendance is consistently lower in the government secondary schools, with an average of 50 per cent of the eligible cohort attending school physically.
'For the denominational and private schools, the attendance averaged 80 per cent of the eligible cohort and continued to increase; in some cases, the attendance was a high as 95 per cent at the end of the two-week period.'
She said the result of the trends in vaccination and attendance shows that teaching is taking place mainly online.
'While the ministry has supplied, and continues to supply, laptops and wifi devices to teachers and students to facilitate remote learning, the stated policy of the government has been the movement of our students back to the physical classroom safely and as soon as possible.
'The government does not hold, nor accept the position that the physical return of students to the classroom should be further delayed. Though we are forging ahead towards normalcy, we must be mindful that we are still operating in a pandemic, and all decisions must be contextualised by this reality.'
Gadsby-Dolly said analysis of the results of the Secondary Entrance Assessment and Caribbean Examination Council in 2021 provided evidence of the global predicted decrease in student performance, attributed, in part, to students' absence from the physical classroom.
'One of the main factors in arresting any decline in student achievement during this pandemic is the safe return of all our students to the physical classroom for more effective teaching and learning.'
She said the decision was also based on the feedback from all stakeholders.
'The general outcry from stakeholders, and when we met with them every stakeholder e