The government says military training for expelled students.

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PORT OF SPAIN, Trinidad, CMC – The Trinidad and Tobago government has approved a mandatory program for expelled students, allowing them to be transitioned to the Military-Led Academic Training (MiLAT) Programme.

Education Minister Dr Nyan Gadsby-Dolly, confirming that ten students have been expelled from schools here so far this year, up from three last year, said Cabinet had approved the move at its meeting on Thursday.

“So, for students that have to be removed from the school system, students who have to be expelled after all efforts have been made, we have already approved compulsory registration into the MiLAT program for such students,” she told a news conference.

The Education Minister acknowledged that while the MILAT program does not cater to boys, she said other government programs are accessible for training, such as after-school classes with free Caribbean Examination Council’s (CXC) Caribbean Secondary Education Certificate (CSEC).

Gadsby-Dolly said that while the number of pupils expelled in any given year is minimal, most pupils who displayed misbehavior in schools changed their behavior when they accessed student support services.

“Let me emphasize that the difference between the number of suspended students and those expelled in any given year is enormous.

“Most students, when the discipline matrix is enforced, and they are suspended, and they get into the hands of the student support services, can transform their behavior, can work with their parents, the school, and so on to adjust to the rules of the school to ensure that they get to the endpoint which is form five for most of them and form six for others,” Gadsby-Dolly said, noting however, there are pupils who for one reason or the other reach to the point of no return.

She said the Ministry of Education will also reach out to other arms of the government to lend support, adding that her Ministry informs the Ministry of Youth Development about pupils who have found themselves being expelled.

“We also reach out to the Ministry of Social Development and Ministry of National Security, informing them that these students have been expelled and require their assistance in terms of family counseling, in terms of any attention they can give, and exposure to programs available from the Government,” Gadsby-Dolly said.

She said this approach means that pupils are not being cast aside, noting that “even though they are coming out of the Ministry of Education system, other provisions are coming from the government to deal with these students and to assist them in ways the Ministry of Education cannot so that they can lead productive lives at the end.”

But she cautioned parents that the Ministry of Education cannot allow pupils to disrupt learning in schools, maintaining that the Ministry would do everything in its power to ensure that teachers and students have a safe environment that is conducive to learning.

Gadsby-Dolly said additional staff members have been hired to help with the transformative nature of school discipline.

“We have provisions in the law and the discipline matrix to deal with students who, despite our best efforts, are not transforming their behavior.

“As I have said before, parents, teachers, students…if with our best efforts, we are not transforming, then we have to consider the fact that other students are being disrupted, and if students in our schools are not transforming and not adhering to our discipline matrix then there are provisions to remove them from that environment and to assist them in a different way to what is available from the government.”

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