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education

The aim of education should be to teach us rather how to think, than what to think โ€” rather to improve our minds, so as to enable us to think for ourselves, than to load the memory with thoughts of other men.

– Bill Beattie (18th Century Scottish physician and poet).

There appears to be pockets of acceptance in Barbados that education, broadly defined, has been a key agent of personal and national development. This sentiment is manifested both at the micro and macro levels of the society. Beginning in the 1950s with Cabinet Government under Premier Grantley Adams and the Barbados Labour Party (BLP) and, continuing through most of the last 50 years, Barbados saw the expansion of basic primary and secondary education, and the growth of tertiary and vocational education.

Education has proven to be the springboard for the development of human capacity in Barbados. Barbadians rightfully place a premium on education as a liberator, empowerment tool, and vehicle for upward social mobility. From the cane-fields to the boardrooms, and from the butchersโ€™ stalls to the classrooms, a skilled workforce emerged, thereby, contributing to the modernisation process in Barbados. Progressively, education allowed for the exercise of personal freedom to be better expressed in a social democratic society.

Incidentally, Barbadosโ€™ Ambassador to CARICOM Robert โ€˜Bobbyโ€™ Morris, who is a Democratic Labour Party (DLP) stalwart, former trade union representative, and historian recently contends that โ€œeducation is the most important thing we [Barbadians] have to focus on in the next 50 years as it has been our main focus for the past 50 years.โ€ This assertion should be a wake-up call for some in our midst.

New enrolment at the University of the West Indies is not encouraging. There is a perilous drop since the โ€˜desperateโ€™ but ill-conceived turn which saw the provision of โ€˜freeโ€™ tertiary education for our nationโ€™s people being stopped. Affordability is now a cause for major concern and it is very likely that many of our youth could become lost. The countryโ€™s education system is at this time in need of vital reforms and transitions for the next stage of development. The work to be done must be implemented with the type of innovations and pragmatism necessary for progressing Barbados through the next 50 years as Ambassador Morris would have suggested.

Some of the political elites have kicked away the socio-economic ladder upon which Barbadians made good their escapes from the bowels of poverty and the belly of want. How could a political party be so backward and devoid of ingenuity to prefer abandoning the project of โ€˜freeโ€™ tertiary education, particularly, when the outcome of education can be used to rekindle economic growth? Did the DLP not envision that free education can be fittingly deployed as a market lever or economic tool with the means to improve economic growth and mitigate increasing poverty? Dr. David Browne, only a few years ago, assuredly stated that: โ€œFree education provided the mechanism by which hundreds of families got on the social escalator out of poverty to economic progress and enfranchisement.โ€

The fact is that Barbados experienced virtual stagnation and very minimal economic growth over the last eight years. Hence, it is incomprehensible why the DLP government under Prime Minister Freundel Stuart would fail the population by pulling the education mat from under the poor? Todayโ€™s youth and the underemployed rely on โ€˜freeโ€™ education for their escape from deviance. It becomes more reprehensible that the very DLP government could have in 2014 so savagely ripped the heart out of our youth and gutted life-long learners wanting to access โ€˜freeโ€™ tertiary education. The current DLP alarmingly displays lack of empathetic appreciation for Barbadosโ€™ history of social and economic development.

As a maturing nation, Barbadians ought not to remain preoccupied with who will pay for the delivery of quality free education, and who must benefit as a result of the national sacrifices, without fully exploring all possible options. The DLPโ€™s focus remain blinded by the contaminated thinking that has also done damage to the very idea of higher education being instrumental for achieving economic growth and bringing prosperity to all. Stuartโ€™s deafening silence and abject refusal to present a clear vision for Barbados happens to be the obscurity not allowing visibility beyond the permissible term limit.

Certainly, and up to at least 2013, education was understood across the political divide as making a necessary contribution, in concert with other factors, to the success of national efforts to boost productivity, competitiveness and economic growth. Education has been paramount in setting the framework for civility and stability within Barbados, creating access and opportunities for a population emerging out of the grips of colonial exploitation and underdevelopment.

Education policies since Barbados attained independence in 1966 were driven by leadership that was cognisant of the islandโ€™s limitations, but aware of the enormous benefits that could be reaped from having a universally educated society. Persons like the Right Excellent Errol Barrow, โ€˜Tomโ€™ Adams, and Owen Arthur among others were confident that investments in human capital would become even more important, as Barbados lifted the entirety of its population. Education plies to the societal development of capability and is readily relished when there is the gravitas of people empowerment.

Access to free education has, through its various avenues, reduced the incidence of poverty and fostered prosperity in Barbados. The imposition of tuition fees placed a roadblock before the potential students and their struggling parents. The DLPโ€™s implementation of tuition fees, coming during a period when the country was already gasping under several austerity measures, is proving counterproductive.

Why would the political elites close their eyes to facts, and be adamant that the government must mercilessly bleed the society with taxes while abandoning the free education project? The rash impulses by a fumbling DLP, known to be critical of opponents and blind to the potential gains of education, will no doubt cloud out the voices of the advocates. This crop of policymakers and technocrats will remain dismissive of the investment, seeing only the financial and social costs which they readily insist are burdens on the treasury.

No one doubts that financing tertiary education is expensive and rising; but Barbados has been willing to make the huge sacrifices at the personal and societal levels. The discussion must step outside the hallways of economic formulae and the constraints of accountantsโ€™ numbers. By way of history and something that we ought to be proud, the provision of โ€˜free educationโ€™ in Barbados overturned the colonial order. Education would have largely benefited the wealthy and privileged – defined not only by money but by race โ€“ prior to the likes of National Heroes Adams and Barrow.

Barbados has come a long way since independence, although it now seems that the country is stuck in reverse gear. For the most part of the last 50 years, increasing demand by potential students and private sector employers as well as successive governments for tertiary education graduates was a sure indicator that education does play a major role in effecting national development.

Sadly, the Prime Minister and Cabinet demonstrated little innovation; they announced rhetorical promises built around delayed bursaries. They rolled back years of national advance while manifesting the DLPโ€™s antithetical stance to the fact that education remains the key for growth and rebuilding Barbados. It is crucial that โ€˜freeโ€™ education must once again occupy a central role in any new administration governing Barbadosโ€™ national development.

Barbadians can draw direct inference in terms of investment and sacrifice from the virtue of acquiring a quality education. Perhaps, now is the time for revisiting the nationโ€™s collective notions on free education. Barbadians should make the necessary sacrifices so that our returns on investments are palatable to the paying society. Importantly, Barbados ought to recommit to the craft of shaping a thinking society. What inherently matters is not class, status, race, gender, or even the height of educational attainment, but the capacity to have an overwhelming majority of the population that can think and have fair accessibility to higher education.

(Dr. George C. Brathwaite is a researcher and political consultant, and up until recently, he was editor of Caribbean Times (Antigua). Email: brathwaitegc@gmail.com )


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84 responses to “The George Brathwaite Column – Investing in Education”

  1. Well Well & Consequences Avatar
    Well Well & Consequences

    The educated illiterates in parliament signed their owned demise when they eliminated taxpayer funded education….added more taxes, but are wasting the taxpayer’s money to the tune of millions of dollars with useless independence celebrations and visits from the buckingham palace parasites which is unfair for taxpayers to also foot that bill…while people struggle, students are unable to remain in school, unemployment is high, crime and gun violence is high and myriad other social problems.

    The electorate need to send this government a message….”not one effing seat”.

    Ministers of government and members of parliament. …the educated illiterates, taxpayer’s money is wasted on them….the weakest links in the black race.


  2. This is George’s most idiotic article to date. Nothing in it makes any logical sense.

    First he starts out regurgitating a quote from some dead Scotsman to the effect that education should be about having your own logical thoughts -rather than regurgitating the thoughts of others…

    Then to reinforce the kind of ‘education’ he has, he goes on to quote other ‘great thinkers’ like Bobby Morris – Caricom ambassador (who secured the fishing agreement)… that โ€œeducation is the most important thing we [Barbadians] have to focus on in the next 50 years as it has been our main focus for the past 50 years.โ€

    Shiite man!! even if this statement is generically true, it MUST logically mean that what we consider ‘education’ in NOT REAL EDUCATION ….otherwise George would be able to generate his own logical thoughts….. AND 50 years of universal free ‘education’ in Barbados would NOT have brought us to the point where we are now …. up shit street.

    Finally George …. if ‘education’ was as valuable as you are putting it up to be, then how come Bajans only take it up in droves when it is FREE?
    What does it tell you that NO ONE MISSES Reggae on the hill or Kadooment for lack of funds … but UWI enrollment is in jeopardy despite easy loan enticements…?

    …not that what we call ‘education’ …and what you have TONS of…. is a lotta shiite.

    But both you AND Bobby are 100% correct about the value of TRUE EDUCATION.
    What wunna need to find out is what EDUCATION REALLY IS….


  3. Tertiary education is not free in the UK. It is not free in Canada. It is not free in the USA. But poor little Barbados is supposed to have it for free?
    That is the surest route to a further decline in the quality of the university. Standards at UWI have already fallen dramatically from the early days in the 1950s and 1960s. Don’t make it worse by enrolling the masses in overcrowded lecture halls and dumbing down the curriculum.


  4. The government should spend more on education, but it should be spending on technical subjects like engineering, computer science and the physical sciences, and on apprenticeship and internship programs to teach practical skills.
    No more useless book learning in crowded classrooms.

  5. Well Well & Consequences Avatar
    Well Well & Consequences

    On that I have to agree with Chad…if you are going to use taxpayer’s money to fund education…make sure it’s in disciplines that are useful to the island…use the models of Germany, Japan, India and Scandinavia….ya cant go wrong …..more techical colleges and useful education, skills training etc, which are more useful than political science…what they hell is that….just look at the quality of politicians and tell me that is a discipline that anyone with a brain would want to be associated with….and many other subjects on the UWI curricula that is pure crap…..absolutely useless in the real world…just suitable for keeping the island in the dark ages….20 years behind everyone else.

    Use dusciplines than ya can EXPORT…, your people are your only real and best resources.

    …….economist……what the hell is that…, not one of them can help bring down the deficit, yet the island is riddled with them…….useless.

  6. pieceuhderockyeahright Avatar
    pieceuhderockyeahright

    @ Brother Bush Tea.

    “Knowledge dwells in heads of men, replete with thoughts of other men.

    Wisdom dwells in heads of men attentive on their own”

    This is indeed a “stellarly” inane submission (as are all of George’s submissions of late)

    But, in retrospect, if each of you notes the topics that are being submitted by the “researcher and political scientist” one will note a “pattern”

    He is not as stupid and simple minded as many of us beleive him to be.

    He is “culling”

    He puts out his seemingly as(s)inine comments replete with bovine material befitting the Moyne Commission era and sits back (like David Come Sing a Song?) and reaps the scholarly imput of those of us who feel inclined to try to educate the seeming dufus.

    While he compiles the submissions for the Manifesto of the Covenant of Hope People.

    By so doing “THE POLITICAL SCIENTIST” and the party that he is representing is able to cull the requisite echolalia that, when it is published prior to election time makes us readers feel good.

    It is c type of intellectual doggie pulling or clitoral stimulation of the ego which “political scientist” know well to do.

    Much like practiced echolalia.

    Leh de ole man mek it simple for you.

    De village idiot is constantly the target of heckling but you, you always got a kind word for he ingrunt scvunt, and a pint and a half of Alleyne Arfur for him.

    Ultimately you is he “friend” and he will do anything for you due to this simple manipulation of his simpleton reasoning.

    It is much like how a new female pally george whom i have eased my scrutinization of, because of the representations of 5 others here, realizes that AC, the ingrunt one is really a scvunt, BUT, and here is the mystery of many mysteries, agrees with that dufus on multiple points, and they now have a bond.

    The sad thing about this is that, even if you were to write out the exact words to use to transmute lead to gold, IN BOLD CAPS, before george and his tribe of political swine, the incoming Troika, would be totally incapable of deciphering it AND BEREFT OF ANY SKILLS TO USE IT.

    They would probably intone it and, being the waste foops that they are, change their own feet to lead in the process, oooops that would not be a transmutation since they already have leaden feet.

    The problem that I have with both these tribe of monkeys is that they are always trying to be smart and rape the citizens of their thoughts.

    There is nothing called collaboration amongst them but whey do i use that part of speech of the third person objective case?

    I mispoke, it should be us.


  7. Free access to university is the key for a broad basis of the middle class.

    No emancipation without education! THAT is simply the reason why the black community in the US does not catch up with the other ethnical groups there. Remember, slavery ended in the US not before 1970 (abolishment of Jim Crow laws). Remember, black is a synonym for poverty in the US. How can a group of poor and still discriminated people access university when you pay 20,000 – 50,000 USD for this service per year? No affirmative action, no big memorial days, no president Obama, nothing will make up for this disadvantage. If the black community had free access to university in the US, the youth would see a real chance to escape poverty. University degree would solely depend on your personal effort to learn.

    It might be true that you pay for education in the US, UK and Canada. However, we should look beyond at those countries where social justice is a principle, namely Scandinavia and Germany. There is a reason why Germany has a trade surplus of 310 billion EUR per year (even trumping China) and Britain a trade deficit of 165 billion EUR per year. That is a difference of nearly half a trillion. No trade without an innovative and highly skilled workforce.

    The next government must return to free education for the basic level (B.A.) – at least for families earning less than 100,000 BBD per year and maybe in combination with a sufficient graduation at school. Otherwise Bim goes the same way as Jamaica and the rest of the Caribbean.

  8. Well Well & Consequences Avatar
    Well Well & Consequences

    http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/australasia/new-zealander-s-keen-to-ditch-the-queen-and-seek-independent-state-when-she-passes-away-new-poll-a7228141.html

    Even NZ is seeimg the light….no one wants blight to follow them forever.

    The education system was not designed to benefit ALL the people, it was designed to be a process of elimination, just look at the scum for keaders…all with certificates if one kind or anithrr….none with a moral or ethical core.

    Then….look at the business people who control the leaders, the white collar criminal who cintrol the leaders….most of whom did not finish school, read Leroy Parris…and others……or only had a high school education….read Peter Harris….and others.

    Did you get my drift now.

  9. Bernard Codrington. Avatar
    Bernard Codrington.

    I am not too sure what the original article’s objective was. Judging from the various types of responses most seem to have had the same difficulties.

  10. Bernard Codrington. Avatar
    Bernard Codrington.

    But there are some nuggets of truth scattered here and there. The most important being that education is a public good and should remain so because we need to ensure equality of opportunity to access it. It is only valuable when those who can benefit pr want to benefit should receive it ,otherwise we would be wasting scarce taxpayers money. Which we all pay, even the poor. Broad education ‘S purpose is to teach us how to think and how to learn. with that basic skill we can do anything that our heart desires. Unfortunately many people collect certificayes ,diplomas,write peer reviewde articles in prestigious journals and at the end of the day make no useful contribution to the society in which they live. Yes Education is necessary for economic and social progress but…..


  11. @ Tron
    How do you manage to make a US based argument and then apply the conclusion to Barbados?
    Barrow and company saw the OBVIOUS need to provide basic educational tools to recently emancipated masses back in the 60s …and did so… at great costs..
    If you seriously think that our children in 2016 still need such ‘catch-up’ assistance in order to keep up with others in the society, …then some shiite is badly wrong bout here.

    The US will never institute a ‘free education affirmative action’ for Blacks because their decision makers have no interest in the enfranchisement of minority Blacks in their country…

  12. Bernard Codrington. Avatar
    Bernard Codrington.

    Please forgive the obvious typos in the above : i.e certificates, peer-reviewed,etc


  13. @Bush Tea

    Good point. I use USA as an argumentum e contrario, as an warning example what happens when tertiary education is abandonded. On the opposite, I introduced Scandinavia and Germany as examples why free tertiary education is important even for the most developed countries.

    Bim needs free tertiary education to secure the (partial) success of emancipation and to improve efficiency and quality of services.

    More suggestions on imrpoving quality of education will follow …


  14. An we call weself an educate people. Really, we do. Now dis ole man wid he diabetes … wunna gunna stupse!!! Ya heah?!!!!

    For Christ’s sake … the bulk of students on the Hill in the polic-sci and humanities disciplines (which are fecking CRUCIAL for development) seem to be single mothers with a level of literacy on a par with the average BU poster — that’s to say, a level that wouldn’t get them into one of the more shite universities in a grown-up country.

    De ole man say: Ya feel me?


  15. The original poster, with his PhD from the Hill, in the first five words of his first sentence:

    “There appears to be pockets of acceptance …”

    No. See, the subject here is “pockets”, which is a plural noun, so it needs a plural form of the verb. There appear to be pockets of acceptance …

    You try that shite at postgraduate level in the FIRST sentence of an essay in a university in a grown-up country, you might as well start packing your bags.


  16. I agree with some commentators (eg Bush Tea) that tertiary eduction needs to be improved in this country to give back some value for the taxpayer.

    We need:

    a greater emphasis on natural sciences, less social sciences
    a more selective style of exams (not everybody needs to pass)
    obligatory internships during the university holiday (eg at Frustrated Businessman ๐Ÿ˜‰ so the students smell the coffee and do not tell the audiance to “blame and shame” everybody who increases prices more than 2 % after the last tax-hammer.
    lessons on efficiency, planning, work ethic, integrity and transparency
    lessons on practical abilities …
    less essays and more questions requiring practical solutions, since one of the main problems of this country is lamenting and appeasing where an ax is needed.


  17. Interesting to hear that Dean St.Hill and Patrick ‘Salt’ Bellamy will host the next Central Bank sponsored news event to be broadcast on CBC TV8 this Thursday.

    Muy interesante indeed.

    >

  18. Well Well & Consequences Avatar
    Well Well & Consequences

    The island is small so I dont know how well a co-op program for university students will work there….but…they can also co-op in different countries/islands.

    Top universities in North America use them, they open many doors internationally and the networking, experience and future job prospects, opportunities to be consultations and/or owning your own business….is phenomenal.

    It’s time to stop with the small island, small minded, british bred mentality already…the present model is going nowhere real fast.

    Many of my relatives used those available co-op programs and never regretted it.


  19. RE Dis Ole Man September 6, 2016 at 1:55 PM #
    The original poster, with his PhD from the Hill, in the first five words of his first sentence:

    โ€œThere appears to be pockets of acceptance โ€ฆโ€

    No. See, the subject here is โ€œpocketsโ€, which is a plural noun, so it needs a plural form of the verb. There appear to be pockets of acceptance โ€ฆ

    You try that shite at postgraduate level in the FIRST sentence of an essay in a university in a grown-up country, you might as well start packing your bags.

    NOT TRUE I READ WORSE THAN THIS DAILY FROM UNIVERSITY STUDENTS IN THE USA


  20. The original poster with the PhD from the Hill asks, apparently mystified:

    “How could a political party be so backward and devoid of ingenuity to prefer abandoning the project of โ€˜freeโ€™ tertiary education.”

    There is no such thing as “free” education, tertiary or otherwise. Everywhere, somebody pays. Somebody pays the teachers, somebody pays for the labs and the electricity and the maintenance of the buildings. Somebody pays for everything, nothing is free.

    So it’s a simple equation: are you going to give free, university-level access to education to 100 people who struggle with the most basic sentences in their mother tongue, or are you going to employ 12 besuited and tenured dickwads in the Ministry of Education to do the work of three? Transforming UWI’s Department of Victimhood-and-Everyone-Owes-Me-A-Living into an actual, grown-up Department of History would undoubtedly help.

    Dis ole man say: like me on Facebook, wunna heah?!!!


  21. Ah, “Dr” Porgie, bless. You got your degree from one of those third-tier Caribbean diploma mills. Ah lie?

    In your tiny and ill-educated universe, an eight year old with Tay-Sachs is simply on the threshold of the Rapture into Righteousness, ah lie?

    Christ, man, just watch the cricket when you can, and please stop boring us with your third-rate medical knowledge. Please. Ya heah?!!! Ah lie?!!!

    Like me on Facebook … stupid thought and smiley face, random use of upper case.

    Yes, what’s wrong with Bim’s education system is blindingly obvious to anybody who’s [see what I did with the apostrophe there] read a book since dey leff skool, ya heah??!!!


  22. NO I WENT TO UWI LIKE SOME OF THE BEST IN THE CARRIBEAN
    WAS TAUGHT BY SOME OF THE BEST IN THE CARRIBBEAN

    THE GUYS AT THE third-rate medical SCHOOLS ALL READ THE SAME FIRST RATE TEXT BOOKS


  23. “The best in the Caribbean”, of course, Dr. Porgie, is a term that raises a lot of questions.

    “Dr” Georgie … wunna still awaitin on lil baby Jeebus to rapture we right into [randomly capitalized] Righteousness wid de idiot Tea? Ah lie? … cricket … Noah …. Job … Tay and, indeed, Sachs.

    As we blessed Lawd an savya Jeesus Kris’ did say unto we on a hot spring day in Judea: how dat new silly mid off doin’ fa de Samaria team? Well kept, Jesus, well kept, sir!

    Like me on Facebook.


  24. Answer not a fool according to his folly, lest thou also be like unto him.
    Answer a fool according to his folly, lest he be wise in his own conceit.
    PROVERBS 26:4 -5

  25. Well Well & Consequences Avatar
    Well Well & Consequences

    “opportunities to be consultants and/or owning your own businessโ€ฆ.are phenomenal.”

    The grammar and error police are out and about…ha-ha.


  26. “Dr” Porgie enlightens us thus:

    “Answer not a fool according to his folly, lest thou also be like unto him.
    Answer a fool according to his folly, lest he be wise in his own conceit.”

    You misquoted, you idiot dunce. You can’t even get this right?

    Exclamation, smiley face, random use of upper case.

    Like me on Facebook!!!!!!


  27. @ Tron September 6, 2016 at 2:11 PM
    It is hard to disagree with your prescriptions here, but when you assess where we are failing as a country you will see the error of your medicine as it pertains specifically to Barbados.
    Here is the hint…
    When our ‘second rate’ graduates emigrate …..or when foreigners are invited to come and take control of our asse(t)s here, the ACTUAL technical performance of these ‘second rate’ graduates is quite impressive.
    It is uncanny!
    …From as far back as Intel…
    …Formerly bankrupt National Banks make impressive profits;
    …Mediocre ‘Light & Power’ companies become star performers within foreign Emeras
    …Banks Holdings problems quickly become star performers under spanish control

    Bob Marley tried to explain the phenomenon of ‘mental slavery’ but we keep missing the message.

    @ Jack(ass) Boremann
    Boss… why don’t you kiss ….. oops ah mean….. get thee behind Bushie nuh.
    Thanks.

  28. millertheannunaki Avatar
    millertheannunaki

    @ David September 6, 2016 at 2:14 PM
    โ€œInteresting to hear that Dean St.Hill and Patrick โ€˜Saltโ€™ Bellamy will host the next Central Bank sponsored news event to be broadcast on CBC TV8 this Thursday.
    Muy interesante indeed. โ€œ

    So David do you see this as a move to prepare the Bajan chatterati for what is around the corner?
    Is David Ellis no longer on the Guvโ€™s Xmas list?

    A devaluation or to put it more euphemistically, a downward adjustment of the peg that aligns the Bajan dollar with the U S $ is the preferred (most efficient) method to reduce the conspicuous consumption habit (living off other peopleโ€™s money) right across the board and to shift demand from imported items to locally grown and produced items especially food and drink.

  29. Well Well & Consequences Avatar
    Well Well & Consequences

    http://www.nydailynews.com/news/national/itt-tech-shuts-campuses-crackdown-article-1.2780270

    This is how vulnerable students are when they are dependent on funding for education….130 campuses in 39 states for 50 years….all a scam by ITT TECH, they were advertising ad nauseum all through the 90s and as recently as last month….on all channels.


  30. @Miller

    Given the state of the economy journalist with some financial acumen/track record should be leading the discussion. Salt is a DJ and Dean although an intelligent sort is not a financial journalist like Hoyos for example.


  31. WELL WELL
    GLAD TO HEAR THAT ITT TECH CLOSE
    THERE ARE OTHERS THAT WANT SHUTTING DOWN


  32. News: Certain food prices up 10 % in Massa Supaduba Center! Thank you Chris for economic serfdom!

    Massive inflation without any economic growth. Reminds me of Maduro.

  33. millertheannunaki Avatar
    millertheannunaki

    @ George Brathwaite:
    โ€œNew enrolment at the University of the West Indies is not encouraging. There is a perilous drop since the โ€˜desperateโ€™ but ill-conceived turn which saw the provision of โ€˜freeโ€™ tertiary education for our nationโ€™s people being stopped. Affordability is now a cause for major concern and it is very likely that many of our youth could become lost. The countryโ€™s education system is at this time in need of vital reforms and transitions for the next stage of development. The work to be done must be implemented with the type of innovations and pragmatism necessary for progressing Barbados through the next 50 years as Ambassador Morris would have suggested.โ€

    Why should the State continue to invest in so-called university education when the returns are as measurable as the water thrown down Maxwell pond? Arenโ€™t the members of the present Cabinet all graduates of the UWI (except of course for possibly Dr. Lowe and that self-taught professor of everything under the sun Kellman)? Is that what the UWI is producing as leaders?

    Why educate people to university level if the only opportunities open to them are to be hewers of wood and drawers of water to be just cooks, cleaners and security guards at Hyatt and Sandals?

    If you were smart enough you would have realized by now that the move afoot is to close down the Cave Hill campus in its present form. There is no future for that Campus. Its death knell would be the pending closure (aka restructuring) of the Law Faculty which has been the raison dโ€™รชtre for its existence for many years.
    Who needs so many lawyers in a digital future of statute law anyway?

    What should be more of an interest and concern is what has become of the proposal to create a single tertiary education institution called the University College of Barbados by merging the BCC, Polytechnic and Cave Hill Campus.

  34. pieceuhderockyeahright Avatar
    pieceuhderockyeahright

    Why do successful universities do that Cave Hill does not???

    As a de facto “Hive” comprised of different bees from different colonies, the Cave Hill University should have first attracted a cadre of thinkers, their ethos and direction being led by the Management of the UWI in general, and failing in that, by its local impotent management structure, I,e. the now toothless Sir Hilary.

    As a concentration of the optimal HR and intellectual congregation of minds, this tertiary institution should have the most profound impact on its student populations, its coterminous business audiences, the wider local captive population AND, since we are talking about a pan Caribbean entity, it is obvious that it should have a significant impact on the minds/operations of its regional (and international) graduates.

    That, by the way, IS JUST THE THEOSOPHICAL ASPECT of the operating environment of the university as it continues daily to attract practical collaborations with businesses through said highly skilled staff at its place of operations and pursued a diurnal promotion, and propagation, of this “revised mantra”

    The same way attending Yale brings with it a “carte Blanche” entry certificate to the world of work, such should be the attendant laurels of a UWI attendance.

    I fear discoursing on what the attendant elements of attending our medical Mona, Law, at Cave Hill, and Architecture unit, at St Augustine, should be doing, as such relates to being the nexus of powerful economic nests in the region, will only get de ole man vex.

    Need I say that de ole man may be among those who seem to have a strong, and not too complimentary opinion, of the UWI and its non existent “civic engagement programming”

    And you may ask “what the Ef is that?”, to which de ole man will respond “that” relates to the proactive, but now non existent, program/strategy that the UWI should have long engaged in vis a vis how it actively pursued “meeting a relevant civic goals initiative” as central to its economic decisions, (read revenue generation) by structuring indigenous, targeted teaching, research, technology and business development programs and to assiduously transmute such programs into bespoke outreaches for local, and regional, and international use.

    Simply put – Teaching English to non English Rich Latin Americans (using distance learning and total immersion classes) collaborations between its sciences and technology departments with business houses or research and development through bilateral funding, of course people going say dem does do some of those things now but, and here is the clincher, “how do they do it? On what basis are the projects chosen? And what are their outcomes?”

    The latter part of this post is quite extensive a topic and is one that the ole man, would prefer not to discuss cause, since I know de shenanigans wid de Robinsons and nuff uh dese Deans and ting, um going be a tome

    However, suffice it to say that, “producing snow cone carts, year after year, whose construct can only operate in a region where the ambient temperature is 68 to 70 yet you deploy your products (both people and produce) in regions where Bob Marley’s “96 degrees in the shade” are instructive, seems counter intuitive, at least and, with all the so called brainiacs at UWI, as their current malaise clearly confirms, what is being practiced there IS DEFINITELY NOT WORKING!!!

    But who be de ole man to comment pun dese tings doah?

    Come leh we wuk up and have a good time…

  35. pieceuhderockyeahright Avatar
    pieceuhderockyeahright

    Subject verb agreement is atrocious, (…are instructive Whuloss)

    de IPad is not too “review friendly”, read when you done bird picking all dese words wid a finger at 4 and 5 o’clock, you does doan spend too much time reviewing lolol

    De ole man claim “grammariticus Stinkliaritus” a medical condition where one cannot put the right nouns and verbs and parts of speech together.

    It is part of the group of diseases which commences as “decimalus incorrectus Stinkliaritus” where even if you are the Minister of Finants, you do not know where to put a decimal point on a national tax. Heheheheh

    If wunna doubt me as to its impact axe Dr Georgie Porgie who will confirm de ole man lie, sorry claim. I was gine change dat but I did already hit de submit comments button…


  36. The solution is so simple that the educated we never get it………..all we have to do is change secondary schools to colleges.

  37. de pedantic Dribbler Avatar
    de pedantic Dribbler

    @millertheannunaki September 6, 2016 at 8:30 PM and @ pieceuhderockyeahright September 7, 2016 at 6:01 AM …

    โ€Why should the State continue to invest in so-called university education when the returns are as measurable as the water thrown down Maxwell pond? Arenโ€™t the members of the present Cabinet all graduates of the UWI…Is that what the UWI is producing as leaders?” AND

    “As a concentration of the optimal HR and intellectual congregation of minds, this tertiary institution should have the most profound impact on its student populations, its coterminous business audiences, the wider local captive population AND, since we are talking about a pan Caribbean entity, it is obvious that it should have a significant impact on the minds/operations of its regional (and international) graduates.”

    Take all that both of you have said as absolutely accurate as it is fair to say that the UWI must change and adapt as you both and others have intelligently suggested.

    However, they have also produced excellent graduates over the years who have gone forth and ‘conquered’ in their own way on the world stages and indeed locally/regionally!


  38. @Dee Word

    You do appreciate that the success of how we deliver education must be measured in the context of an always changing landscape in which the educated has to function? Can we claim success when our society in deteriorating economically and socially at such a rapid rate? Shouldn’t we hold the educated class more liable than others?

  39. de pedantic Dribbler Avatar
    de pedantic Dribbler

    @Mr Blogmaster, re “You do appreciate that the success of how we deliver education must be measured in the context of an always changing landscape in which the educated has to function?”…that is correct of course.

    It speaks to the basic element of life…adapt and change or die! Education is at the core of that drive to live.

    It was said by some pundit a few days ago that the efforts by people like Elon Musk (long life batteries) will change the entire dynamic of energy – and thus the fossil fuel industry – in the next 10 years.

    It reminded me of chat here with you and then a brief one with Pacha re energy needs and Saudia Arabia’s oil strategies. He opined that oil prices would return to their previous high water marks (all like now). That seemed odd to me based on all the other punditry saying otherwise.

    All that to say, that this period with this alternative energy sources and fossil fuels is a very crucial one for our (world) future. So is our regional UWI adapting to recognize that and the various other shifts in world affairs? Is our Min of Ed adapting our local pedagogy accordingly?

    Are they for example all adapting to this ‘new’ political reality of a new Czar in Russia, the unquestionable world’s strong man, and the new ‘heating war’ that he can literally make into his own forceful ‘cold war’. What does a preeminent Russia presage for regional and world affairs!

    Sir Hillary is absolutely much more intelligent and well-read than I will ever be so if I can appreciate these very simple yet profound dynamics of the ‘changing landscape’ I will have to presume that he does too…in fact he would have done so a long time ago (I further presume) and would be orienting his institution to meet future needs.


  40. The Video.

    Pros.

    While unsure of the age of the subject this can be said of/for him.

    In the face of the obvious subject verb illiteracy of the male effecting the instruction he has recalled the material

    his cognitive skills regarding letters and their respective sounds (a few of which his instructor(s) either do not know or based on his age dependent acuity, he has not acquired,)

    He knows his alphabet AND WAS ABLE TO SHOW UP HIS INGRUNT INSTRUCTOR WHO CANNOT WRITE.

    He “learnt” cat and consequently was able to recognize that the writer, while effing up the last character must have been writing a “t”

    In the proper circumstances that young man would be very bright insofar as his regurgitate skills are concerned, one cannot however project whether his ability to extrapolate his education would be similarly impactful

    Cons

    There are at least 5 that this exercise shows beginning with the inability of the instructor to write properly (his characters are almost baby like themselves) and the impact that such potentially has on the learning/teaching cycle

    The session was ergonomically incorrect insofar as where the “teacher” positioned the written paper for the boy’s review ergo him having to twist his head. (Understandably this is for Internet viewership)

    I will not list the rest because I comprehend the thrust behind this video here vis a vis budding black brilliance and how it could and should be nourished particularly if, and my assumption is that, this is the boy’s father.

    A black Afro American child in the presence of a black Afro American man, positive vibrations

    What is important in all cycles is teaching what we know, with a caveat that, what we know as baseline data, is both valid and forms a firm foundation for our children to continue on, when exposed to formal and more structured educational institutions

  41. Well Well & Consequences Avatar
    Well Well & Consequences

    By the time the backward officials start to pretending they are doing something to upgrade the education system and provide more techical training…quantum computers will no longer be just theory…once again Barbados will be 20 years behind and cannot keep up…the leaders are the problem…saw Byer claiming the young males dont want to be trained….so instead of looking for excuses…train the males who are interested, eventually others will follow….I think it is more likely that young males do not want their lives tormented by people who are not trained to train anyone.

    I will bet if I ask all the ministers of government and the members of the oppostion what are quantum computers….not one of them would know….the leaders lack knowledge, they cannot help the population, they are attracted to parliament for the perks, the high salaries, the pensions….the opportinities for kick backs and bribes…they are useless to the people with their present mentalities and…in their present forms.


  42. God equipped every person at birth with the capacity to think. Education, in the form of schooling, has always (and will always) be about what to think. Quality schooling is thus a function of curriculum content and valid and reliable assessment.


  43. @ Ping Pong
    God equipped every person at birth with the capacity to think.
    ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
    Ok then….!
    Explain AC…. ๐Ÿ™‚

    “Schooling” is a good term for what we are really talking about.
    In Bushie’s opinion, schooling is a CRITICAL aspect of national development, …where older generations pass on traditions, beliefs, values and knowledge to future generations – who are meant to build on this foundation as they seek to pass on an IMPROVED structure to THEIR children.
    The problem comes when part of the foundation being passed on, is compromised by mental slavery ….such that the traditions, values and knowledge being transmitted are tainted…. with brass…


  44. @ David
    What does one need to do to get George to defend one of his papers?

    Shiite man!
    We tried being nice (well some people did …not stinking Bushie… ๐Ÿ™‚ )
    We tried being critical…
    We tried being dismissive…
    ..and now being clearly insulting…

    Bushie really thought that a robust debate could have been had …assuming that George had actually given some thought to the piece ..and thus feel able to defend his arguments…

    Guess not….

    REALLY bright people look forward to being challenged – it brings out the real genius in them.


  45. Bush Tea

    Good schooling will result in the transmission of the useful traditions, validated beliefs, ethical values and contemporary knowledge. However it also anticipates the future and hopefully leaves the former students with the tools to negotiate the future if not to shape it. Nearly everything about our school (and university) experience is about “knowledge” that is dated and on the way to obsolescence. Barbados is preparing its young people for the world of 1916 and not 2016.

    I agree with your comment that if the university degree was good value for money then more students would find the means to pay for it.


  46. @ Bushie

    George reads the comments and is free to jump in if you agree to shed the stinking ๐Ÿ™‚


  47. In 2008 when the DLP took office, I was hopeful when the Ministry of Education was renamed the Ministry of Education and Human Resource Development. I said to myself:

    “Hmm interesting. Maybe these guys are going to really move the country forward in terms of the human capacity building and embark on integrated planning and implementation vis a vis dovetailing economic planning, physical development and human resource planning”.

    Then came the six hour fiasco in terms of the parliamentary speech by Mr Ronald Jones in presenting the Human Resource Development Strategy and the subsequent inaction. In its second term the Human Resource component was dropped from the name of the ministry.

    I should have known better.

  48. Well Well & Consequences Avatar
    Well Well & Consequences

    http://ow.ly/tZ8l303ZLLW

    Some degrees that is being said will no longer exist in 20 years…easily replaced by technology.

    Whst will unprepared islands do.

  49. Well Well & Consequences Avatar
    Well Well & Consequences

    “Law itself can be replaced by technology”

    I am sure many people will be happy to see law replaced with technology, there will be very little use for lawyers then…been hearing about this for quite some time.

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