Banner promoting anonymous crime reporting with a phone and contact number 1 800 TIPS (8477), featuring the Crime Stoppers logo and a QR code for submitting tips.

← Back

Your message to the BLOGMASTER was sent

Submitted by Jefferson
Combermere School

It is with great befuddlement that I write about the accomplished Combermere School. For hundreds of years this institution has produced influential citizens like the late Right Honourable David Thompson, former West Indian cricketer Rev. Wes Hall, author Sir Frank Collymore, UNESCO award winning film director and cultural historian Owen “Alik” Shahadah and President of the Senate Kerryann Ifill.

Combermere School offers an excellent music program, are the holders of countless cricketing trophies thanks to the Head of the Physical Education Department Mr. Michael Small, Mr. Roderick Estwick (cricket coach) and Mr. Michael Worrell (athletics coach). Combermere has approximately fifty-four trained teachers including one Guidance Counsellor; most of them possess bachelor degrees with at least three acquiring doctorates. However it is with great disdain that I write about this educational institution that was once rated as number three on the island and is currently failing our inquiring young minds. Let me start with the Principal who has a taken a lackadaisical approach to managing this school that is occupied by teenagers who are academically sound and street wise. Mr. Vere Parris is an invisible principal and he is definitely imperceptible during the lunch break when children are engaging in various unimaginable activities. He operates the school remotely from the confines of his air-conditioned surroundings. It is essential for Combermere School to obtain a leader as vigilant and dynamic as Mr. Vincent Fergusson (former Deputy Principal of Combermere, current Principal of Coleridge and Parry Secondary School). Mr. Parris is known as a courteous gentleman but not one who is a strong disciplinarian or a firm believer in Combermere culture even though he is a former Combermerian.

The practice of being an absentee Principal has trickled down to some of his teachers who have inherited the practice of being fifteen minutes late for forty minute classes (but of course the principal wouldn’t know unless he has a periscope), they have a reputation for not taking class registration and failing to teach lessons that are on par with the CXC syllabus and that of the other older secondary schools thereby forcing students to seek lessons elsewhere and costing parents hundreds of dollars per month. The Combermerians who are capable of gaining national awards are forced to enroll at Harrison College, Queen’s College and Barbados Community College in order to gain academic recognition. In fact, when last has Combermere even earned a Grade 1 at CAPE Level furthermore a national award? Shameful!

The teaching fraternity at Combermere School is providing little guidance, are poor facilitators and lack pastoral care for the budding leaders and pioneers of this country thus stunting their progress. Mr. Parris needs to rethink his management style recruit his vibrant, innovative, respectable teachers like Mr. Mayers and create a competitive atmosphere for students that have become somewhat lawless and undisciplined; he needs to encourage them to positively engage their creative minds and assist them in becoming worthwhile citizens and not just be able to say I went to “Cawmere.”


Discover more from Barbados Underground

Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.

213 responses to “Combermere Slipping!”


  1. Never in my life have i heard of 1st formers repeating. The mere fact that last year you had 1 repeating, and this year they are 2 repeating is of sincere concern. This means that this trend is getting worse year after year. I do not believe that after sitting the Common Entrance , and achieving grades to get to CS you should be repeating a form within a year. This speaks volumes of the teaching methods at the Combermere Secondary School. Also of great concern is the fact that 18 4th formers have repeated, and many going up with averages between 45 – 55% . What does this say about the results you will see in a year’s time at the CSEC level?
    Also of grave concern is the fact that the Principal of this said institution would waste time on the last day ,by making the children leave the hall one row at a time. I dont know if he saw this article and was trying to make a point , but there is no reason why children from all over the hall have to wait row by row to exit a hall , when there are 8 exits from that hall(including the balcony) . That Principal is living in a dub .
    Also on Mr . Vere Parris , earlier in this term he rewarded students for destroying furniture. Can yoiu believe that? A principal giving students free lunch from the canteen because they destroyed furniture? Only at the Combermere School.
    Can you remember arguable one of the best Maths teachers in this island retiring because Mr . Vere Paris was appointed as the Principal? It was only a matter of time before other teachers followed in his footsteps.
    Teachers do not respect Mr. Parris , Students do not respect Mr. Parris , Ancillary Staff do not respect Mr Parris , The Board of Management does not respect him, it is only a matter of time before this situation ends up like the Alexandra situation


  2. Listen…… i cant understand you all at all… at what point in time was the Combermere school even comparable in academic status to HC and QC? Never in history that is when. I would like to say that Combermere is still doing great things in academics. And don’t say that we didnt get any grade 1s in CAPE recently because last year a couple Combermerians did… I can tell you because i currently am in 6th form and I know those specific people… including a grade 1 in maths which is supposed to be the hardest of all. Check wunna stats hear cause this int rite fa real den, many of us study hard and do great things to uphold our schoool’s 1sand this is the thanks… I hope you all gained distinctions at CXC level like i did.

  3. old onion bags Avatar

    You go my brothersister……stroke the flag…..Long live Cawmere..that’s showing them …and we all are proud..eva ole scholar


  4. Hi, i think that i saw you visited my weblog so i came to “return the favor”.
    I’m trying to find things to improve my site!I suppose its ok to use a few of your ideas!!


  5. Who bloody well cares?


  6. alright if wunna went cawmere wunna would so shut up and stop talking shit u don’t know about

  7. offended combermerian Avatar
    offended combermerian

    hi i am currently a student at combermere and i agree that we are not performing as well as we used to in the past but i also believe that nationally at all secondary schools the performance of students has decreased significantly including qc and hc.
    combermere is still part of the top 3 and our cxc and cape marks are at least 85% and above each year, the highest i remember being about 93%


  8. Are we so easily satisfied with a performance which is explained based on where we are positioned compared to the others? What about self imposed stanards.

  9. offended combermerian Avatar
    offended combermerian

    I believe we should do our best to get the best possible results and not do just enough to maintain a position. A lot of children these days have goals of just passing a subject and not a goal of getting 80 or 90% that’s a reason why standards will fall at combermere and island wide.
    Also please note that we had a few exhibition the past few years and we continue to send children overseas in scholarships btw

  10. Curious onlooker Avatar
    Curious onlooker

    Yet again combermere gets 0 scolarships while hc and qc received a lot

    Do you think schools like foundation st. Michaels and Alexandra are surpassing combermere


  11. You can’t blame the intake of students because the qualifying 11+ mark is up there with the top schools. This leaves the teachers and headmaster.

  12. Curious onlooker Avatar
    Curious onlooker

    Exactly I think if they had a principal similar to that of qc the school would be Florishing


  13. @ David there is also the probability that more HC and QC students get additional help ( private lessons ).

  14. Curious onlooker Avatar
    Curious onlooker

    I’m a student at combermere and our csec and cape pass rates are usually slightly below qc and hc so besides the scholarships we are the same


  15. But we all know the prestige of the top schools is measured by the number of scholarships secured.

  16. Curious onlooker Avatar
    Curious onlooker

    Do you all believe combermere is still ranked third

  17. Curious onlooker Avatar
    Curious onlooker

    @David that is so true when did barbados scholarships start


  18. @David are you a combermerian


  19. Very familiar with Combermere, a good number of the BU household attended Combermere. What else do you what to know?

  20. Curious onlooker Avatar
    Curious onlooker

    @David what us your view of the top 5 or 10 schoolso now in order


  21. The top 3 PUBLIC secondary schools, the others you can place in a hat.

    QC
    HC
    St.Michaels

  22. Curious onlooker Avatar
    Curious onlooker

    @David I strongly disagree

    Qc
    Hc
    Cs/sms varies from year to year but around the same mostly
    Foundation
    Lodge

  23. Curious onlooker Avatar
    Curious onlooker

    @David in all the years was combermere ever ranked 1or two?


  24. It was a respectable 3.

  25. Curious onlooker Avatar
    Curious onlooker

    @David combermere must be included or at least tied with st. Michaels


  26. I’m also a student many children from the said st. Michaels and qc and hc enter the combermere 6th for yearly and vice versa


  27. Traditionally students with the highest marks at 11 plus opted to go to HC and QC.

    That is why students from those schools won the most Barbados Scholarships.

    What has changed ?

  28. Curious onlooker Avatar
    Curious onlooker

    @Hants nothing has changed
    But combermere is still ranked in the top 3

  29. pieceuhderockyeahright Avatar
    pieceuhderockyeahright

    @ Curious Onlooker

    Judging from your diction and “presence”, “Quamdiu quidem studiosus..” I would hazard that, you are close to the end of your school “life” and are a female.

    I have three questions for you

    What caused you to come here and post your questions?

    Why is the issue of position rather rank so important?

    Do any of your friends do like you do and post here?


  30. I have asked this question for many years.How come Combermere School produces some of our finest and influential citizens but hardly a Barbados Scholarship holder.One former student,an attorney at law suggested the principals and most of the teachers did not take their role seriously,did not view the attainment of a Barbados scholarship as an acceptable unit of success and therefore it was not a goal neither was part of the school’s culture.I think Combermere is like the DLP of today,going along on the success of students of former years.For a school with a 6th form since 1952,it has failed miserably compared to the outstanding scholarship still associated with the two colleges,Harrison and Queen’s.Perhaps outstanding alumni like Bishop Wood,The Very Rev Dean Harold Crichlow,Professor Keith Sandiford,economist Charles Skeete might be encouraged to give their views on the subject.

  31. de Ingrunt Word Avatar

    @Gabriel, what more would they add to your succinct and I suggest accurate comment that: “the attainment of a Barbados scholarship…was not a goal neither was part of the school’s culture…”

    That may sound harsh to the many excellent Combermerians out there but if there are real I believe they would agree that although individual students and staff surely would have aspired to achieving that local academic Grail in any given year that the overall ethos of the school was not geared to scholarships as was HC or QC.

    Looka, the school uses to have a lot going for it re its musical departments and a strong esprit de corps and all that sort of thing.

    I well recall when that ‘Old School Ties’ (if that is the correct name) program on CBC had given the school such a positive spin that desire to send kids there was ‘off the charts’. Unfortunately for them that then fell off precipitously in later years and so too has the other strong traditions (so it seems).

    But to be a scholarship winning school you have to live and breath that diligence. As you said the leaders at Cawmere never seemed to have that as an overarching focus.

    They turned out some great citizens though (and a few scoundrels).

  32. Curious onlooker Avatar
    Curious onlooker

    pieceuhderockyeahright I stumbled across the post and it interested me is there a problem
    And yes the rank is important to me

  33. Curious onlooker Avatar
    Curious onlooker

    And we get sxholarships/ exhibitiona every few years

  34. pieceuhderockyeahright Avatar
    pieceuhderockyeahright

    @ Curious Onlooker

    It is not a problem.

    De ole man does just like to understand what makes young minds like yours tick when you go upstream agains the current of the norm to venture here and to post your questions.

    You do know that you may be one of the few in your age group who (i) came to this article AND POSTED and (ii) continued to engage the Blogmaster

    There is a thing about us old people who, in seeing young minds that are curious and are more than onlookers, want to find out why because as our generation dies, we wish to have young, agile minds inherit AND CARRY ON.

    It is no problem at all, it is a welcome encounter


  35. It is obvious to me that there are about 50 students a year who study enough and are bright enough to get a Barbados Scholarship.

    It just happens that HC and QC probably have 40 of those students.

    It is also likely that there are more teachers at HC and QC willing to put in extra work to get the best out of their students.

    A Barbados scholarship is is the result of a combination of quality teaching and students who are gifted and driven to obtain the best marks possible.

  36. pieceuhderockyeahright Avatar
    pieceuhderockyeahright

    @ Curious Onlooker

    You sit in the calss with the others.

    What do you think is the root cause of this application or lack thereof among your peers?

    What causes this spurt of achievement and this laxness in your opinion??

  37. Curious onlooker Avatar
    Curious onlooker

    @Hants I agree

    But I still belive that most students at st. Michaels qc hc and combermere work similarly and are capable of achieving similar results besides the 10-20 from hc or qc who get scholarships yearly most of the other children work in similar levels to each other

  38. Curious onlooker Avatar
    Curious onlooker

    pieceuhderockyeahright the problem is the teachers and the students some teachers put in little effort and some students put in little effort

  39. pieceuhderockyeahright Avatar
    pieceuhderockyeahright

    @ Curious

    Six of one half dozen of the other.

    What, beyond the Ministry of education failing to effect a continuous evaluation of their teaching stock, would you recommend?

    For the students, more than the teachers? Was, and is, there anything that could be done to salvage them?


  40. @the scout June 11, 2012 at 9:56 PM “Cawmere should have taken a leaf out of C.P’s book, 2 P.M’s, 2 Gov’s Central Bank, 2 G.G’s,including the present one, an anglican Bishop, most secondary schools headed by former C.P students, the manager of the BWA, a large number of present and past P.S’s in govenment cricketers, like Keith Boyce, Courtney Browne, both of whom represented the W.I.
    In addition Colridge and Parry also produced the Chancellor of the University of the West Indies Sir Hilary Beckles.

    Big up Coleridge and Parry.

  41. Curious onlooker Avatar
    Curious onlooker

    I believe if teachers were stricter on the handing in off assignments and attending class on time etc we would be better off I also think students should try @harderpieceuhderockyeahright


  42. @curious onlooker

    What is your view of Parris?


  43. Simple
    The discussion was about the performance of Combermere at the level of scholarship winners compared to HC and QC

  44. Curious onlooker Avatar

    @David I’m very fond of mr. Parris good man indeed but he needs to be stricter

  45. Curious onlooker Avatar

    Why isn’t lodge or st. Michaels up for discussion


  46. Someone felt moved enough to submit this piece.

  47. Curious onlooker Avatar

    @ David what piece you mean

  48. Curious onlooker Avatar

    @David please give me a good reason why you didn’t improve combermere in top three

  49. pieceuhderockyeahright Avatar
    pieceuhderockyeahright

    @ Curious

    The reason was not too hard, it was based on consistent results

    Queens
    Harrison interchangeably
    St Michaels
    And then Foundation Combermere and Lodge

    It is interesting that you gave this insight into the teacher student dynamic.

    Generally a student will never say that a teacher needs to be stricter it is generally the other way

    Some officials should look into this frank remark coming from a curious student


  50. ” thereby forcing students to seek lessons elsewhere and costing parents hundreds of dollars per month. ”

    Is the writer aware that students from every school, including Harrison’s and Queen’s, have lessons?

    In fact, St.Leonard’s is well renowned for the HC and Queen’s students filling there on Saturdays receiving guidance on science subjects.

    Where do you think those national awards come from?

    Those children who get the scholarships and exhibitions, plenty-plenty lessons.

    Another thing you need to consider further, albeit briefly mentioned.

    Where did those award winners spend their first five years to CXC?

    Many did not come from HC and Queens’, but gained access there by high quality CSEC results, from other schools.

    Many from HC and Queens did not shine like others who went on to sixth form.

    There is no magic in HC and Queens. The students with the best academic results are filtered out first at Common Entrance and then again at CSEC entry requirements (or competition) to CAPE level / sixth form.

    And then, plenty of lessons, ALL of them.

    What of those who did not make the cut to the sixth forms? Did HC and Queens do them justice?

    One must be careful with conclusions and not cherry pick the easiest low hanging fruit.

    Food for thought.

The blogmaster invites you to join the discussion.

Trending

Discover more from Barbados Underground

Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

Continue reading