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students

The educational system of Barbados was placed under the microscope by erudite BU family member Bush tea, when he submitted a thought provoking analysis rebutting the call by Peter Wickham et al to abolish the 11 plus examination on May 15, 2008. We are sure that the elevated discussion which ensued would have benefited readers and commenters alike. Although we had to tolerate the chest thumping behaviour by the HC, Lodge and Combermere graduates, we remind BU family members that whether in the United kingdom or United States most countries have developed educational systems which identify and stream children which demonstrate superior abilities. Attempts to dumb down our current educational system to appease the misuse of egalitarian ideals espoused by Peter Wickham et al should be viewed with suspicion.

Whenever Barbadians are driven to discuss reform in our educational system the focus can be predicted to fall on the secondary school system. In the BU household it is our opinion that our primary school system requires equal scrutiny. For some of us who have operated within the educational system, there is the common knowledge that the primary schools which extract the best 11-plus results rely on the strategies of teachers on site. Most Barbadians can list the public primary schools which are known to promote high standards and more importantly a high level of sweat equity from the teachers.

It comes as no surprise to us that former Prime Minister Owen Arthur’s family had a huge comfort level sending his daughter to West Terrace primary school.

The teaching staff at West Terrace has developed a reputation for developing a scheme which is responsive to the needs of ALL their children. Their willingness to go the extra mile which is provoked by their passion to make that environment receptive to learning is fast developing a national reputation.

Another island worth looking at is Barbados, which shows that the type of achievements made in Cuba are not restricted by communism, but by visionary leaders with the right strategies and passion. I guess the key word here, which you rightly mentioned, is ‘passion’. I’ve often wondered what our prospects could’ve been, if even half of the billions being sent down the drains annually to keep Air Jamaica flying were invested instead in education and even health care.

Source: Jamaican Gleaner

The quote above should cause Barbadians to feel good about what we have accomplished in education as a small island in our post independence period. However the reality is that we live in a dynamic environment, as a people we have to rely on relevant strategies within the education arena to equip our youth at every level to be productive citizens of the world. Against this requirement we must continue to critique our current educational system to determine relevance.

Since the Bush tea article we have received several notes which have highlighted anomalies in our primary education system. We have been able to verify some of those anomalies and we hope that the BU family would comment on what are some serious characterizations:

  • Many primary school children who have been identified as ‘special needs’ within the primary school sometimes have to wait for more than a school year to gain the required transfer to other institutions to match their requirements. There is one case where the evaluating results of a primary school student was available only after the child had been placed into the secondary school system
  • There is the case where some primary school children have been able to reach Class 1 and II who cannot read or write their names
  • The most gut wrenching story received is that of two students who got zero marks in the 11 plus examination. The travesty is not that the children would have participated in the primary system and yielded such a disappointing result, but the lack of an immediate response from our educational system
  • One of the notes received was highly critical of the ‘Criterion Test’ which is presided over by the Ministry of Education. As we understand it, it is a test given to all primary students at the Infants B through to the Class 2 standard irrespective of what levels of understanding the students have attained. As if this is not bad enough the results to the Criterion Tests are often returned months and years later after completion. The obvious problem with this scenario is that the lag caused by the late availability of the results of the test negates a solution oriented approach
  • Last but not least is the over sized classrooms within our primary school set-up, sometime 30+ which means that those children who require remedial care are doomed even before they start the journey of fulfilling their right to be correctly educated. The future of Barbados and the world depends on the readiness of the generation in waiting to build on foundations laid.

It is not our intention to be negative. It is our intention to provide simple analysis of our primary education system which needs to be improved.


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117 responses to “Primary Comes Before Secondary ~ Educational System Failing Our Infants”


  1. 11+ is here to stay!!, why? because it is a part of us. every year there is some sort of argument pertaining to this. every crop over there is some sort of argument. if 10 000 guyanese come there is some sort of argument. bajans bajans bajans. stop the foolery. There is no problem with the system tht is here. We have smart young children who look forward to these things. If they know the first verse to Rihanna’s song what is wrong with sitting an exam. If you want to excel you will no matter where you go.
    Face reality, it’s a part of our economy. We will continue to produce leaders right here and everywhere.


  2. Well the answer the debate is very simple…one just has to make it very personal…
    Let’s ask a few very personal questions…

    1. If you had to go to a surgeon for a life saving operation…and you walked in his/her office and you saw his/her grades posted on wall and he/she came last in class every year…would you allow that surgeon to operate on you?
    2. If you found out that the same surgeon went to a fly-by-night medical school of dubious character, would you allow him/her to operate on you?
    3. What about pilots…would you get on a plane if you found out the pilot wasnt well trained at a reputable top school in his/her field…?
    4. What about engineers…would you cross a bridge designed by some engineer who didnt go to a top school…

    The Egyptians long understood this concept of life when they designed the pyramid…which is also symbolic of the structure of life…
    History has already proven wrong those who tried to turn the pyramid upside down…
    I believe George Orwell dealt with this in Animal Farm as well…(hahahahahaha)

    “If she herself had had any picture of the future, it had been of a society of animals set free from hunger and the whip, all equal, each working according to his capacity, the strong protecting the weak… Instead – she did not know why – they had come to a time when no one dared speak his mind, when fierce, growling dogs roamed everywhere, and when you had to watch your comrades torn to pieces after confessing to shocking crimes.”

    And in the end…”The creatures outside looked from pig to man, and from man to pig, and from pig to man again; but already it was impossible to say which was which.”

    Oh btw….this was first form required reading literature at the older secondary schools along with Latin, French and the Sciences…


  3. Ya really tink dat ef Ronald Jones had gone to an older secondary school he would be criticizing dem? Ya tink!


  4. Ian Walcott,

    Like Bush Tea I also thought that you were a BLPite eating sour grapes. But man, you come out like a pit bull. Like one of those cowboys in the roaring 20’s with all guns blazing. You don’t care who is a B or who is a D. You calling a spade a flipping spade (or if you like – an ass, an ass). Wuhloss! I can feel your pain and frustration, brother. Let’s hope things get better. You go get them, tiger. Apologies for jumping to conclusions.


  5. So Ian I assume your doctor, dentist, pilot, lawyer and psychiatrist all went to top schools and Universities. If they placed last in their class would that be acceptable as long as it is a “reputable” school? Is a last place finish at a “reputable” school better than a first place finish at a school that is less well known? Unfortunately most of us only see the diploma on the wall when we go to visit the various professionals and as for the pilot we don’t have a clue as to how he got to that position, sometimes we don’t even hear his voice during the in flight announcements since he leaves that to the first officer, for all we know he could have had a drink or two prior to boarding.

    Ian what about the nurses who assist the surgeon during the operation or the mechanic who services the aircraft do you want to see their diplomas too? They are just as responsible for your safety as the doctor and the pilot.

    Many people the world over are treated by doctors who were not graduates of Harvard, John Hopkins or U of T and they survive and flourish. This portion of the thread started with you accusing the Minister of saying something that he didn’t, I repeat the Minister didn’t criticize the older Secondary Schools, he was critical of some people’s fixation with them as the only means of education for their children.


  6. I believe I quoted the Minister verbatim…


  7. The point is that every society has it elite systems in education, business, government, the military, etc…that’s the system we live in…
    Are we talking realism here or idealism?


  8. If we’re talking idealism…then I have no problem with those who are anti-establishment…but if we’re talking realism (it-is-what-it-is) then the discussion is really pointless…
    I believe that if we surveyed the population…most Barbadians would opt to keep the 11+ exam because it’s the fairest system of allocation…
    I would bet you anything that more than 90% of the populace would not want to destroy the elite secondary system either…whether or not they attended an elite school…
    YOU KNOW WHY…? Because, with the system as it is…it means that if I didnt get an opportunity, my child may one day get that opportunity…my brother, my sister or my niece…so no one really wants to change the system…not even the good minister…
    They all want the best for their kids my dear friend…and if he’s talking about “what began around slavery” (direct quote)…then he should get the hell out of parliament…
    It was the likes of Samuel Jackman Prescod who paved the way for the likes of that ASS to be able to now get up and talk such nonsense…
    I wonder how many of you who sooooooo want to change the system…are willing to take your children or your relatives out of the older secondary schools and home school them or even send them to another school…
    Tell many how many of you dont put HC, QC, or Combermere as first choices…
    REALLY…


  9. I agree that every country has its elite institutions, but the way these posts come across is that not only are there elite schools in B’dos but the people who go to them become elitists.

    Who is talking about abolishing the 11 plus? Perhaps it should be looked at to see whether there are other systems which might serve us better. The 11 plus has been around for approximately 50 years, so after 50 years can’t we think of other systems that may serve the students and country better? I went to an older Secondary school after the “Screening Test” and a second “Test” ( the name escapes me) but there were at least three or four students in my elementary class who were my academic equal or better yet I passed and they didn’t. That meant that at the time I had opportunities that they were denied.

    “I believe that if we surveyed the population…most Barbadians would opt to keep the 11+ exam because it’s the fairest system of allocation…” I suppose its fair if I can afford to send my child for extra tutoring or if I can drive my child across town to that school which gets “good results” for the 11 plus. I have no doubt that the 11 plus will survive Barbadians don’t like change, they view change with suspicion.


  10. Over 3,600 children sat the common entrance and we making a fuss about 7o0 of them and “throw” away the other 2,900+. To make this absurdity even more vulgar we tell the 700 that they are elite and then have them pursue the same programme of instruction as the 2,900.


  11. Hi No Worry:
    I dont wish to belabor the point…I think everyone agrees that there are some weaknesses in the system that must be addressed. Sargeant’s post speaks to that weakness though such examples are exceptions rather than the rule…
    We must give credit to the MOE for the changes they made in the last few years:
    1. You can now sit the exam if you are younger but academically capable.
    2. You can now sit the exam if you are not ready at 11 but one year later.
    3. There are at least two specialized schools for children who are not at all academically inclined.
    So no one is knocking the 2900 (approx 80%) who go to newer secondary schools…all we are saying is dont knock the achievement of the 700 (approx 20%) who came out at the top of the curve…
    It’s a competitive test that produces the 80-20 outcome…like any other facet in life…
    We dont seem to have a problem with this outcome in the competitive arena of sports…we accept it as the norm…in the NBA, in FIFA, in all sporting endeavors…the cream rises to the top…
    This is simply a combination of natural ability and preparation (investment in time, money, training and other resources)…
    My overarching concern is that we eventually kill off meritocracy…and I believe the 11 plus was to correct this problem in the first place…maybe there was some over-correction and we now need to come back to the drawing board and come up with a more centric model.
    That’s always the problem with correcting a wrong…as human beings we tend to over-correct…and there are many examples where we are now paying the price of over-correction…
    Namely, boys are being left behind…they’re dropping out of the system at alarming rates…and this has an impact on the family, the workplace and the general management of society…a system that is failing men is failing society…(now this is another issue)…but I believe the root cause came about with policies of over-correction…
    If our policy-making is driven by FAIRNESS, RESPECT FOR HUMAN RIGHTS, LOVE AND JUSTICE…then we are halfway there…we all need each other…in fact…the 20% needs the 80% and vice versa…and both parties are guilty of destroying meritocracy…
    It’s unfortunate that the new government has had the opportunity to correct some wrongs and make Barbados a country for all Barbadians…instead of choosing the moral high ground…we hear very loud of vociferous calls of “it’s we time now,” or a Rev. Massiah said only last week…put your party supporters first…
    This development is frightening…because history has repudiated all forms of witch-hunting…we have to be careful of the divisive politics and rhetoric…and this is my central argument….


  12. By the way “No worry”…if you really believe it’s the same program of instruction, then you are seriously misguided my friend…
    Please do your research…
    Theoretically, it’s the same curriculum…and it stops there…
    Program of instruction (methodology of delivery) varies from school to school…
    Level of teacher-student-parent commitment also varies from school to school…
    Level of investment into the school’s infrastructural upkeep and ongoing teacher training…also varies from school to school…
    These are the real underlying issues of ‘unfairness’ that must be addressed…
    And to give more credit to MOE…they have been atempting curriculum reform in the last few years…imagine we now have business studies, accounting, dance, theater, integrated science…
    These ‘new’ subject areas meant that a wider pool of students are now leaving secondary school with a basic five subjects…I think this has to be lauded…
    The stats are out there…
    Very often these blogs are based on “I thinkism” and not grounded in any empirical evidence…that’s why it’s easily dismissed as another form of the Bajan radio call-in programs…’OPINIONISM’…


  13. Look at the Historical development of education in Barbados from the year 1686-2000 and tell me if there hasnt been advancement and change…
    http://www.mes.gov.bb/UserFiles/File/Historical_Developments.pdf


  14. Education stats in Bdos:
    http://www.childinfo.org/files/LAC_Barbados.pdf

    Education and Development in the Caribbean: A cointegration and causality approach by Brian Francis and Sunday Iyare
    http://economicsbulletin.vanderbilt.edu/2006/volume15/EB-05O10022A.pdf


  15. Suckoo was on my tv every nite since my last post–

    she was on last nite and in the paper too

    is she the hardest working / like to be seen like to be talking minister of government ever ??

    an award should be reserved for her

    woman of the year !!!! ???


  16. i want to get 100 so please sen a web

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