JMD 11.6 million investment in Technology Centres & Tablets bolsters access to virtual learning

May 12, 2021

UNDP Programme Coordinator Alicia Bowen McCulskie (centre) shares a moment with several students from west Kingston communities who were gifted with tablets to ensure continued learning throughout the COVID-19 crisis. A total of 181 tablets has been donated

More than 200 students in five West Kingston communities are receiving improved access to virtual learning spaces and equipment under a combined JMD 11.6 Million investment in tablets and technology centres donated by agencies of the United Nations in Jamaica.

Beneficiary communities are Tivoli Gardens, Denham Town, Hannah Town, Central Downtown and Fletcher’s Land.

The investments made through the joint United Nations/Government of Jamaica project – ‘Strengthening Human Resilience in Northern Clarendon and West Kington’, includes 181 tablets valuing JMD 6.1 Million funded via an allocation from the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) Multi Country Office in Jamaica; and technology retrofits to five community facilities through a JMD 5.5 Million grant funded via allocations from UNDP and the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP). The tablets which were recently handed over to primary and secondary students, represents an increase in UNDP’s allocation to the joint human security project, and forms part of UNDP’s comprehensive support to Jamaica’s COVID19 response and recovery efforts.

The combined USD$76 246 (JMD11.6 Million equivalent) investment in tablets and virtual learning spaces has been strategically brought together to ensure that students hardest hit by access to learning as a result of the COVID19 pandemic, are not further disadvantaged and left behind, impacting future human development.

In welcoming the donation of tablets, Member of Parliament for West Kingston, the Hon. Desmond McKenzie said the devices are being handed over at a time when many more students are asking for this kind of assistance. “It will energize many families who are struggling, especially those with only one phone to share for four or five children. It will give stimulus to those students who have already caught on the online revolution but are not in a position to afford a tablet or a smart phone, so today is an opportunity to expose the students to the advancing age of technology,” Mr. McKenzie observed.

UNDP Programme Coordinator Alicia Bowen-McCulskie explained that UNDP’s donation of tablets bolsters the West Kingston Virtual Learning Programme under which community facilities are being equipped with technology in partnership with Community Development Committees. She said centres in Denham Town, Tivoli Gardens, Fletchers Land, Hannah Town & Mid-Town have been gifted with earphones, broadband internet connection, printing facilities and facilitators to deliver support to learning opportunities.  Funds have also been budgeted for the engagement of sanitation attendants and procurement of cleaning supplies for the resource centres to ensure adherence to COVID-19 protocols, Bowen-McCulskie disclosed.

She explained that the Virtual Learning intervention is a partnership with the West Kingston Community Development Communities, the Social Development Commission and the Human Security programme which is in keeping with the programme objective of building the resilience of Civil Society Organizations  in responding to insecurities faced by their communities, including the COVID-19 crisis.

The Strengthening Human Resilience in Northern Clarendon and West Kingston project which started in 2018, is regarded as the first joint programme of United Nations Jamaica, combining the resources of six UN Jamaica members, namely – FAO, PAHO/WHO, UNDP, UNEP, UNESCO, UN Women – in addition to the UNDP-implemented Global Environment Facility Small Grants Programme.

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Note: The story applies the current UN exchange rate of J$152.79 to USD$1 to arrive at JMD equivalents