FIRST Lady Sandra Granger has given her full support to moves to provide teachers with the necessary tools to boost children’s self-esteem and promote their emotional development.
Mrs Granger was among participants in the first ReThink- Project Happiness Train the Trainer workshop, held at the Ministry of Education’s National Centre for Education Resource Development (NCERD) on Thursday.
Some 65 professionals, including officials from the ministry, NCERD, teachers, schools’ welfare officers, subject specialists, guidance counsellors and representatives from several non-governmental organisations, participated in the two-day training session.
Officials from ReThink-Project Happiness included Ms. Randy Taran of California, USA, Founder/CEO Project Happiness; Ms. Amanda Fernandes, Chief Happiness Officer at Rethink – Project Happiness Regional Director in the Caribbean and Ms. Brook Dorff, Director of Operations and Development, Project Happiness.

In an invited comment, the First Lady said her participation in the programme is linked to her collaboration with Mr Ernie Ross, Guyana’s Consul-General in Trinidad and Tobago, on ReThink’s Kind Soles programme, which donated hundreds of pairs to shoes to students in the hinterland.
ReThink’s Project Happiness, aimed at empowering persons to be empathetic and to live contentedly, also sparked the First Lady’s interest as she is interested in “recreating a Guyanese society that practises compassion.”
Mrs Granger said she is pleased about the training, noting that it will “equip participants with the skills to encourage and empower beneficiaries, particularly children in schools as children who feel good about themselves are less likely to commit suicide.”
The Project Happiness Train the Trainer Course comprised nine lessons designed “to improve children’s focus, emotional resilience and their ability to make better life decisions.”
The format of the workshop included presentations from the trainers, general interactive sessions and small-group interactive sessions,during which participants were allowed to practise skills such as empathy and appreciation.
Ms Dorff, who conducted one of two major training exercises, said that the link with the First Lady is “vital,” as she is passionate about enhancing the lives of Guyanese, particularly children and other vulnerable groups, and her influence “will broaden the reach of the programme from just schools to countrywide.”
VITAL TOOLS
The programme aims “to give students and teachers the tools for emotional resilience and to teach persons how to deal with all kinds of emotions,” she said.
The group was invited to host the sessions, and the skills taught will be used to augment the ministry’s programmes aimed at reducing the incidence of suicide, she added.
The ministry’s involvement in the training stemmed from an invitation Mrs Granger had extended to Mrs Evelyn Hamilton, Chief Planning Officer at the ministry, to the first presentation of shoes from ReThink, last year.
Mrs Hamilton then introduced the programme to the ministry, to determine how it could be incorporated into the schools programme, she said.
Mrs Colleen Cameron, Health and Family Life Education (HFLE) Coordinator at the ministry and based at the UNESCO building in Georgetown, noted that the training is happening at an opportune time. The ministry is currently revisiting its HFLE curriculum for Grades 1 – 9 and is developing its curriculum for grades 10, 11 and nursery children, she said, adding that the skills taught during the workshop will be integrated into the HFLE curriculum.

Education (HFLE) Coordinator, and Evelyn Hamilton (right), Chief Planning Officer,
both of the Ministry of Education (Ministry of the Presidency photo)
Mrs Cameron expects that the programme will be introduced at the start of the new school term on April 4, after the students would have returned from their Easter holiday break.
Meanwhile, Mrs Jennifer Cumberbatch, Director of NCERD, was heartened by the participants’ enthusiasm during the training and encouraged them to “find exciting ways to get children’s attention.” According to Mrs Cumberbatch, “each teacher, NGO who conducts this programme, will impact the recipients’ lives and, with regard to children, foster learning.”
NGOs
According to a Ministry of the Presidency release, the participating NGOs are also expected to use the knowledge that they’ve acquired from the workshop to serve their focus groups and wider communities.
Mrs Deborah Blackmore, a representative from the Guyana Foundation of which the First Lady is patron, and the Bernice Mansell Foundation, said the training has given the volunteers the skills that they need to boost the self-confidence of the persons whom they serve.
She said she plans to immediately incorporate what she has learnt into the Literacy Programme that the Bernice Mansell Foundation hosts for school dropouts, where she is a volunteer teacher.
Mrs Blackmore believes that the sessions have taught her how to improve children’s emotional resilience, a skill she views as crucial when treating troubled children and which she plans to now use “to boost their self-esteem and to encourage them to want to learn.”
Similar sentiments were expressed by Ms Uso Telford, of the Buxton Arts Theatre. Ms Telford said she works with many young persons and expects the training to “better my relationship with them.”
She hopes to use her newly acquired skills to “motivate them to make positive life choices.”
Meanwhile, Mr Vickram, one of only two male participants in the programme, while delivering the vote of thanks, expressed gratitude to the First Lady for her support. He added further levity to the sessions by reciting a poem he had written in honour of Mrs Granger, expressing the admiration that he and the country at large, feel for her. The First Lady thanked the group for the gift and expressed high hopes about the future outcomes of the workshop.