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24785: Vedrine (pub) A history of Education in Haiti



E Vedrine <evedrine@hotmail.com>

[This article appeared in the March 2005 issue of the Boston Haitian Reporter

Finding Some Means to Improve the Urban Achievement Gap

March 2005
By Nekita Lamour
Special to the Reporter

This month's column will be my response to various Education related articles, commentaries and letters to the editor that I have been reading since January. I will present a historical overview of Haiti's education, will provide some anecdotal observations as a veteran educator and finally will propose an Education Summit which will serve as a catalyst for a permanent Cross Cultural Education Task Force with various ethnic groups communicating among themselves. Haitians will use the steps that might lead to such "summit" to assess the Educational state of their own community.

I started to witness a decline of Haitians students' performance since the 1985-1986 academic year and brought it to various mediums. Haitians as part of the minority urban schools that Governor Romney referred to have regressed in their educational attainment. When a research study is done, one will document that in the past 10 to 15 years, more young Haitian Americans have been involved with the justice system or had succumbed from violent crimes. As a result, less Haitians attended a four-year higher institution, which is not healthy for a 21st century society.

Given the grim history of education in Haiti, I firmly believe that the governor, the Legislature, and the business community will have to take an active role to ascertain that an educational atmosphere is permanently established in the Haitian community.

A lack of interest in the printing world, an anti-intellectual attitude, a lack of dialogue among community leaders, a community "zoomed" only on the 200 year political quagmire of Haiti, and an indifference and complacency vis-à-vis civic and political affairs in the United States are symptoms of a deteriorating community. Individual achievements within the first generation, such as home ownership, significant presence of professional Haitians in mainstream political, social, literary, music, business and educational institutions that Professor Zephir penned last month have downplayed the importance of collectively planning the future of the Boston Haitian community.

In addition to coming from a country where the literacy rate is very low, Haitians of African descent are members of an oral culture. The 20 percent who are supposedly literate do not read regularly. Thus reading, which is the foundation of learning in the western world, is not familiar in a Haitian child's environment. Moreover, Haiti doesn't have a history of strong educational leadership.

Haiti's leaders seldom made educating the Haitian population a priority in their agenda. As I read the 162 page book l'Histoire de l'Education en Haiti by Jocelyne Trouillot, King Henri Christophe, a free-born negro, who reigned from 1806 to 1820, mostly in the North was the only government who had an efficient, austere, state of the art educational system in Haiti. He built elementary schools as well as colleges during his "kingdom." Medicine, Latin, French, Spanish, Religion, and the Arts were incorporated in Christophe's curriculum. Printing, science, meteorological studies were also highlights of his northern territory. A government printing company, Imprimerie Royal published numerous books. By the end of Henri's kingdom in 1820, an Almanac Royal, produced by Math teacher M.Moore, documented weather patterns and observations.

Christophe's instructional style was based on the British Lancaster method that he enforced under the counsel of abolitionist William Wilberforce. In this approach referred to as mutual teaching, one teacher taught the brightest students who in turn instructed others. Christophe did not have official vocational schools, but settings were established for training in mill and horse wagon repairs as well as in carpentry and printing apprenticeship. The school days were nine hours on a regular day and seven on early release days. Though Christophe tolerated all religions and languages, he encouraged protestantism and the teaching of English. Trouillot wrote that the leaders of Christophe's schools were British citizens such as T.B Gulliver, Simmons, Sanders, Sweet and Oxley.

Christophe paid his teachers salaries similar to those in my life time. For instance, Académie de Peinture (the Art Academy) teacher received 400 gourdes, a printing teacher was paid 180 gourdes monthly, and a school teacher 100 gourdes. For 19th century economy, a gourde is worth at least $US 3.00 now.

Believing that the Arts were also important in the formation of a society, Christophe built a theater in Cap Henry (Cap Haitian) with modern commodities of his time. After Henri's suicide, Haiti's educational system went from bad to worse. Boyer sold the art theater to a Masonic lodge. The signing of the Concordat with Rome under Fabre Geffrard in 1860 gave the Catholic church complete control of Haiti's educational system. That accord changed the shape of the schools, the mindset and the ethos of the Haitian.

One sees up to today in Boston, a Haitian people with high deference to the Catholic church and priests whom through an antiquated ministerial practices keep them isolated from the mainstream and disengaged in educational and community leadership endeavors.

Regarding Haiti's educational history, two visionaries Elie Dubois and Louis Joseph Janvier are worth mentioning. Fabre Geffrard chose Dubois as Minister of Education in 1859 who established a national school structure at all levels, with a focus on solid foundation at the elementary level by opening Ecole Normale Primaire et Ecole Normale Supérieure. Louis Joseph Janvier (1855-1919) a respected Haitian scholar, trained in medicine, a diplomat in London and Paris, envisioned mandatory elementary schools in urban and rural areas as well as in Masonic temples. Educating the girls and empowering women through voting and having them teach Haitian values were his priorities also. Like Christophe, Janvier called for an emphasis on the sciences. Anticipating the negative impact of the European instituted schools on the Haitians'minds, Janvier envisioned banning catholic and protestant clergy from teaching in the classrooms.

As with Dr. Rosalvo Bobo, the political and educational situation did not please Janvier either. In the late 1800's, he wrote "if things continue the way they are, Haiti will fall into an absolute anarchy." Thomas Madiou, a renown Haitian historian was a minister of Education under Michel Dominge's presidency (1874-1876). Due to what Trouillot called gabedgie administrative (bureaucratic waste), none of Madiou's educational visions came into fruition during or after his short tenure.

Given the gloomy history of Haiti's Education, Governor Romney's administration may need to consider appointing or forming a "Cross Cultural Education Task Force" composed of Haitians, Latinos, Brazilians, African Americans, African immigrants and involving the Asian and Islamic communities. I agree with the governor that, "a huge infusion of money is not the best way to help underperforming schools" (Boston Globe 1-14-05). I believe rather, special emphasis on community-at-large educational activities such as teaching about the MCAS, the curriculum frameworks, and this country's culture, ethos, or expectations could be the proper route. Comprehensive training engaging ethnic and euro teachers, new immigrant medias and their social agencies may be channels used to crystallize the governor's "Education Reform Act of 2005."

Finally, a "Cross Cultural Education Summit" with subsequent follow-ups where each ethnic community will share their educational experiences, including the Haitians, may result in more systemically inclusive vision and means to improve the educational achievement gap in urban schools.


Nekita Lamour has been teaching since l980 in the field of Bilingual/ESL/Multicultural Education.