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Grenville Phillips II, leader of Solutions Barbados

Whenever examination result are announced in Barbados, there is the predictable call for fundamental changes to our educational system.ย  With approximately 60% of our secondary school students failing to achieve grades 1 or 2 CSEC passes, the system clearly need improving.ย  However, an analysis of the recommended changes reveals that the aim is not to reduce the failure rate, but rather, to divert those whom they consider โ€˜non-academicโ€™ into trade schools, where they can learn to โ€˜work with their handsโ€™.

Hands do not work by themselves.ย  The same brain activity required to guide a surgeonโ€™s hands is the same that is required to guide an artisanโ€™s.ย  Further, the consequences of failure for both can be disastrous.ย  A surgeonโ€™s error can result in the death of his or her patient, and the artisan steel-benderโ€™s error can result in the collapse of a multi-storey building.

With proper training, the surgeon can learn to do the steel-benderโ€™s work and the steel-bender can learn to do the surgeonโ€™s.ย  The reason why one became a surgeon and the other a steel-bender is based on the incorrect assumption that some secondary students are not academically suited, and should be sent to โ€˜work with their handsโ€™.ย  All of our secondary school students can learn โ€“ they just need time and encouragement.
In primary school, I had difficulty understanding the school work.ย  My teachers did their best, but I simply could not understand most mathematical concepts โ€“ like the square root.ย  In response, for one year my mother taught me English, my father taught me mathematics, and I was not allowed to enter the โ€˜living roomโ€™ which contained the television.ย  With much effort, I passed the Common Entrance Examination for Combermere School.

I entered Combermere School in 1975 in lower first form.ย  I remember the feelings of accomplishment when I realised that I was actually understanding the work.ย  However, I soon recognised that I had another problem.ย  While the teacherโ€™s and text bookโ€™s explanations were understandable, I had difficulty remembering the material once the teacher left the classroom, or once I closed my text book.ย  My brain seemed to leak knowledge like how a sieve leaks liquid, so that there was very little left to recall during tests and examinations.

After the first term, we were handed yellow report books.ย  Mine read: โ€œNumber of boys in Class: 29.ย  Position in Class: 29โ€, and occupying the highest possible position, I thought that I came first.ย  I proudly declared that to anyone who asked me, until I happened upon Peter Riley, who claimed that he came first.ย  I was about to challenge the accuracy of that assertion, but then realised that Peter was the brightest boy in the class, and I was not.ย  As God is my witness, it was only then that it began to dawn on me that in this case, the highest number was not the most favourable.

In 1976 I was promoted to upper first form, and girls entered the lower first form.ย  In 1977, I entered second form.ย  However, they abolished the upper first form and there were suddenly girls in my classroom.ย  I was now 13 years old, and the novel feelings associated with puberty made the girls an impossible distraction to me.

When an attractive girl sat next to me in class, and her skirt rose above her knee to expose her thighs, then the teacher taught me in vain.ย  The only subjects that I had decent marks in were technical drawing and industrial arts โ€“ where I worked with my hands.ย  Recognizing this problem, I read the textbooks at home, but the challenges of recalling information persisted well into 4th form.

Occupying the bottom third of the class for most of my secondary school life, I observed too many boys giving up prematurely.ย  One senior teacher revealed his observation that most boys gave up in third form.ย  Sometime between late 4th and mid-5th form, my brain seemed to mature, and I began to both understand and remember the work.ย  Had I not kept persisting, had my parents not kept encouraging me, then I would not be a structural engineer today.

The solution is to keep all of our secondary school students interested enough in the school work, until their brains have had a chance to develop to both understand and remember information.ย  In a Solutions Barbados administration, the secondary school curriculum will be redesigned, so that the first 3 years will be dedicated to teaching the more practical aspects of subjects, like: music-by-ear, conversational languages, applied sciences, English literature, art, technical drawing and home economics.ย  The final 2 years will be reserved for adding the more theoretical CXC requirements.

Grenville Phillips II is the founder of Solutions Barbados and can be reached at NextParty246@gmail.com

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148 responses to “The Grenville Phillips Column – To Trade School With You!”


  1. What percentage of GDP would a future Solutions Barbados government spend on education?


  2. this article highlights what is wrong with the school system. old people designing solutions based on the past for our young people….Cxc should not be the main focus. we need to teach people to work together that’s all. that’s it……


  3. change the secondary schools into universities problems solved

  4. Bajan Free Party/CUP/.Violet Beckles Plantation Deeds from 1926-2017 land tax bills and no Deeds,BLPand DLP Massive land Fruad and PONZI Avatar
    Bajan Free Party/CUP/.Violet Beckles Plantation Deeds from 1926-2017 land tax bills and no Deeds,BLPand DLP Massive land Fruad and PONZI

    All we need is the best truth we can find, in the best books we can find , with the best teachers we can find in the best schools we can build , at the end of all , All taking the same test , Barbados need a Base of information for All and not different books on the same subjects and the books don’t teach you what the test will be on, We will see who lazy and find the problems in the homes and homework not done or the study, We can not all be in different races and come to a same finish line, All must be equal to know who score best .Before they are judged,

  5. Sunshine Sunny Shine Avatar
    Sunshine Sunny Shine

    What Grenville highlighted is a fundamental problem with the think tank system that deals with education. They continue to mould the same system on the basis that if it is not broken do not fix it and that the number of passes at the grade 1 or 2 level is proof of success. When the child reaps that success than what? Find a job in the already few establish businesses or go on to university to get bachelor’s to come back and seek a job in the already establish saturated businesses? Are we not ready to create our own industries, put our money into manufacturing our own ideals and geniuses, or simply content with an educational system that sees CXCs as the ultimate success, a first degree as the ultimate success, and a masters or pHD as the pinnacle of that sucess?


  6. At the end of the day the quality of our education must be appraised based on our ability and capacity to sustain a quality society.


  7. Grenville,

    The way you remember information is to read about it, and then either (a) rehearse it —
    that is, repeatedly recreate the information in your head (with the books closed) — (b) apply the information to solve various practical problems, or (c) memorize the way the information is used in “model answers” to examiners’ questions.

    These techniques are seldom taught in secondary schools by the blockheads who preside over most of our classrooms, but if you have tried all these methods and still have trouble remembering, you are a dunce unsuited to academic work.


  8. While there is the disaster of the Grenville Tower fire, in the the UK

    This Bajan Grenville cannot burn, like Mr. Harding. There is no political fire within, therein. It can’t light a single fire.

    Thusly, it may well be time for a Bajan Grenville to be caught afire, through spontaneous combustion of course (smile).

    Not that he is unimbued with the disaster capitalist mindset of re-gentrification, as is Grenville Tower

    This mamby pamby, Bajan Grenville, must expose himself to the hottest fires if he is to be burnished in perfection.

  9. Sunshine Sunny Shine Avatar
    Sunshine Sunny Shine

    David

    We have plenty of academics, graduates, and high achievers. Why is the society not reflecting that? How is success measured in Barbados and what criterion is used to come to that realisation? You know as well, David, that a society is a reflection of its leadership and the structures put in place to make a society strong and its value systems well maintained.


  10. @SSS

    Good questions!

    One can copout and suggest the smallest of our societies lend to a lethargy by academics that inhibits leadership. There maybe a stasis that comes into play. Our academics appear to excel in the external place. What is your view?


  11. In 1980, over 50 per cent of Indian teenagers were illiterate – not even in school – while most of the education budget was spent on the privileged. According to some reports half of 10 yr olds in India cannot read at the level of the average 7 yr old in the West. This is serious, since 13 per cent of the nation’s population are teenagers.
    Yet, India is one of the fastest growing economies in the world, producing some of the leading scientists and mathematicians.
    Can we contrast this education model with that of neighbouring Singapore? India spends 2.7 per cent of its budget on education, with a pledge to raise this to 6 per cent. Political parties must spell out their education budget ambitions if Barbadian voters are to take them seriously.
    We must raise the bar with free government-backed CXC courses in English, maths and ICT. Make these basic qualifications compulsory for all school leavers and as pre-entry qualifications for all public sector jobs.


  12. The statement that “with proper training” a steel bender and surgeon can be taught either roles is so fundamentaly flawed it deserves no serious comment. Can an expert welder be trained to a concert pianist? There is this thing called talent that is part of human nature, and it has no correlation to occupying the bottom half or top half of a class.

    I experience this fact every day: 50% of the doctors (pilots, engineers, whoever else, etc) finished in the bottom half of the class. This is a statistical fact, and the only thing that changes this is individual effort and application.


  13. @ SSS
    We have plenty of academics, graduates, and high achievers.
    ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
    academics and graduates yes! …thanks to the misguided philosophy of Sir Cave

    But what high achievers are you talking about?
    Unless you mean the high level mendicants who ‘achieve’ by robbing poor people of their birthrights; ….by stealing from the treasury; …..by accepting bribes from the devil’s local advocates; ….and by borrowing what the know they can never repay.

    ‘Truest flame lies in high endeavour”

    To ‘achieve’ is to PRODUCE something of VALUE to society…..
    So …who are our ‘high’ achievers?


  14. BUSH TEA

    You are at risk of becoming a one-note commentator. You cannot attribute every problem to mendicancy and greed.

    Hey all you Bajans, the GREAT BILL COSBY IS FIGHTING BACK AGAINST HIS FEMINIST OPPRESSORS. THE JURY IN HIS SEX ASSAULT TRIAL IS DEADLOCKED.

    Hip Hip, Hooray!!!


  15. Bushie
    This thing called pre-emtive text plays tricks on you….Truest fame…..p text wrote…. flame…..


  16. @Mr Blogmaster at 4:44 PM …I am a bit unclear why it’s a cop-out that “the smallest of our societies lend to a lethargy…”. In nature that is an absolute truism. The folks who do not have the drive and ability to overcome adversity and strive to success will always remain the ‘smallest of society’.

    Our recent history does validate the simple fact that several of our politicians are capable “academics” when that is seen in the basic stats of degrees and scholarship. Folks like Toppin and Hinkson as I recall both won UWI scholarships during their time there and of course before and after them we have always had national scholars rising up the political totem pole.

    So it’s surely not about the ability.

    Thus to SSS’s query re “how is success measured in Barbados”: it’s measured the same as in all other places.

    Success for some is acclaim with CXCs etc, scholarships and degrees. Success for others is establishing a profitable business. For others its rising to be commander of the Coast Guard, BDF or Police Force. And then maybe simply building your comfortable house with no debt and growing a great family. And much more!

    And and all those individuals can be great leaders if they also have the nous and desire.

    Barbados has produced lots of potential awesome leaders who have ran far from politics. We have also produced lots of pissant posers who have prostituted themselves to gain political leadership.

    We have and will always have very capable people…here and abroad!

    @Hal, interesting example you make re India. Obviously you look past the ABSOLUTE population numbers of that country and get lost in percentages…I don’t think one can.

    All those illiterate teenagers are surely twice the entire Bajan population and still they have the other segment of smart kids which would still trend maybe thrice our population.

    The point. The % stats compared to us are a nonsense in many regards. Compare India to it’s population and world power equivalent China.


  17. Hmmm…..here we are after fifty years of this system…in deep doo doo….and we are still singing how great we are……we too love spinning top in mud.


  18. Ooops, @Hal didn’t read your stats properly. The numbers of 50% of teenagers and they being 13% of total pop would make those numbers much greater than twice or thrice our entire paltry population. Just correcting … I did do maths at school. LOL.

    @Konkieman re “The statement that โ€œwith proper trainingโ€ a steel bender and surgeon can be taught either roles is so fundamentaly flawed it deserves no serious comment.”

    Fah trute!

    There are psychologists who assert that if given healthy, regularly capable children at a young age regardless of parental gene pool, backgrounds, social class and the like that they can make them into world class ‘whatevers’.

    I suspect that is the context of what Phillips is driving towards.

    If one can be a skilled surgeon where steady nerves and supreme confidence must be merged with knowledge then why can’t an equally skilled expert artisan (welder or other) who must also have the same steady nerves and supreme confidence not be able to merge his smarts and reach that potential if he or she is given the chance.

    You also dismiss the fact that were many cases of supposedly ‘average’ people who were battle-field medics completing life saving procedures which required skill and ability.

    Those same ‘average’ folk would not normally get into the top medical colleges back in the ‘real world’ and thus never attain the title surgeon …

    Again, that would be the context of Phillips’ commentary.

    Obviously not every welder or skilled artisan would have all the abilities to ever become a surgeon or concert pianist….but some – given the chance – certainly could.


  19. Thanks Gabriel
    …that was no preemptive text – just a careless Bushie… ๐Ÿ™‚

  20. peterlawrencethompson Avatar
    peterlawrencethompson

    @SSS said “We have plenty of academics, graduates, and high achievers.”

    Yes we do. I have met more than a few scattered across the globe.

    Since getting back to Barbados a few months ago I have met a fair number of very talented young (under 35) men and women who would do a much better job than the old fogies currently in positions of authority.

  21. Sunshine Sunny Shine Avatar
    Sunshine Sunny Shine

    David

    Wealth is an indicator of success. Therefore, poverty would be the indicator suggesting failure. A country’s strong economic position base on the success of those variables that fuel it, Industry, productivity, exports, etc, are major factors. Objectively, the determination of a country’s success cannot be measured without comparing it to some other country’s position. So Barbados is successful when compared to a Haiti, but not so successful when compared to a Germany. However, are these reliable indicators? If a man living in a mansion is a symbol of success, but miserable and unhappy, can we say he has achieved ultimate success without these important by-the-way-props, which could be another indicator suggesting that there is something call peak success? I am calling it the ‘by the way’ because we often say, ”by the way, are you, he, she or it happy, joyful, at peace, and filled with love’? If the latter has any bearing on success, then success cannot only be a measurement base on material possessions. We have to factor in those props that are suggesting a peak beyond just success. Likewise, we have to factor in those same props as a reflection of a country’s success, while looking at the aspect of its poverty along the lines of material possessions and the ability to earn one’s keep. I am inclined, therefore, to lean towards the fact that success reflects leadership. Be it in the home or at the level of a government. Because the decisions of both are responsible for any measure of achievement (big or small) that in turn is responsible for all the above factors in building a strong economy for the wealth and strength of a healthy vibrant society.

  22. Sunshine Sunny Shine Avatar
    Sunshine Sunny Shine

    Bush Tea

    Most of our high achievers do not reside in BARBADOS. The current system that exists does not cater to those who have the potential to go beyond academia to achieve greatness far beyond the conventional thinking that is restrictive. We have bajans who are renown scientist, inventors and contributing significantly to the GDPs of other countries who understand that to improve one’s capital base, significant investments into research and innovate must be excused with frivolity and ‘box in’ thinking

  23. Sunshine Sunny Shine Avatar
    Sunshine Sunny Shine

    I want to make it clear in my above comment that a degree, masters of doctorate does not reflect success unless it is used as a transformation key to unlock significant developments that are beneficial to a society, and by large, a country.


  24. @ SSS
    Most of our high achievers do not reside in BARBADOS.
    ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
    Bushie rests his case.
    So then they are some other countries’ high achievers….
    perhaps they are our “academics and graduates”.

    But we seem to be quite happy with the runts….
    …or at least we were until the inevitable consequences set in…


  25. @Grenville Phillips “In a Solutions Barbados administration, the secondary school curriculum will be redesigned, so that the first 3 years will be dedicated to teaching the more practical aspects of subjects, like: music-by-ear, conversational languages, applied sciences, English literature, art, technical drawing and home economics. The final 2 years will be reserved for adding the more theoretical CXC requirements.”

    Dear Grenville:

    Please do not do this. Most of us are not like you. I suspect that you had/have an un- diagnosed learning disability. Most of us managed to pass the 11+ for a “good school” without coaching from well educated parents and without extra lessons. Some of us were 1st, 2nd, or 3rd in class from Infants A onwards, and some of us, maybe most of us understood from the time we were 4 or 5, that 1st meant that we were the best in class, and that 29th or 30th meant that we had better find a way to hide our school report from our parents, lol!!!…we never needed to be told these things.

    So if Solutions Barbados is elected I beg you please to avoid messing with the curriculum, most of us are not like you. Most of us do fine with very little effort.


  26. @Grenville Phillips “In 1976 I was promoted to upper first form, and girls entered the lower first form. In 1977, I entered second form. However, they abolished the upper first form and there were suddenly girls in my classroom. I was now 13 years old, and the novel feelings associated with puberty made the girls an impossible distraction to me.”

    And by the way some of us, maybe most of us have NEVER let the opposite sex distract us from our school work, or our work work. Some of us, maybe most of us have the natural ability to control our emotions and our bodily desires. Some of us have understood from very young not to let our genitals rule our brains.

    We were NEVER impossibly distracted by the boys, nor by the girls.


  27. @Hal Austin June 15, 2017 at 5:24 PM “We must raise the bar with free government-backed CXC courses in English, maths and ICT. Make these basic qualifications compulsory for all school leavers and as pre-entry qualifications for all public sector jobs.”

    This is already the case.

    Every school offers free English, Math, and Information Technology up to CXC level.

    All of my children managed to do this successfully.

    It ain’t that hard.


  28. @chad99999 June 15, 2017 at 7:22 PM “Hey all you Bajans, the GREAT BILL COSBY IS FIGHTING BACK AGAINST HIS FEMINIST OPPRESSORS. THE JURY IN HIS SEX ASSAULT TRIAL IS DEADLOCKED.”

    I was almost ready to say welcome back chad99999, glad to hear that ICE has released you from detention, but then you have to come up with this Bill Cosby foolishness. Any man who by his own admission buys drugs to use on women so that they will have sex with him is what we in Barbados call “a lil’ pieca man.”

    Stupssseee!!!

    Real men don’t need drugs to get women to willingly say “yes”

  29. Sunshine Sunny Shine Avatar
    Sunshine Sunny Shine

    Bush Tea

    They are still born and bred Barbadians. Barbados is just not big enough in its thinking to go beyond your brass bowl mantra and nurture many of these persons geniuses. I would think that everyone, including you, knows this to be a fact. I am not disputing what you say it just that to make any significant achievement, one has to look beyond Barbados, and that is said.

  30. Sunshine Sunny Shine Avatar
    Sunshine Sunny Shine

    Simple Simon

    Granville provides an example of his childhood and you turn it into a some of us can, it what sounds to me like you trying the belittle the man. Granville is saying he might have been one of the persons who could not but through supportive parents he was able to become part of the percentage who overcame. Jesus H Christ, what is wrong with some of you people. And to think, you are one of the people on here whom I tend to read their comments. Shite man, just don’t be critical because you can be. Let some objectivity prevail at times na man.

  31. Sunshine Sunny Shine Avatar
    Sunshine Sunny Shine

    should be sad


  32. Not trying to belittle anybody. But I don’t know why people are always making a fuss about the 11+. The 11+ is not a difficult test for a well nourished child of average parents.

    This evening me and the grand spent 15 minutes on homework, and an hour laying on a blanket counting and observing the sun, the clouds, bats, birds, airplanes, fireflies and stars, and talking about such things. The grand who is far, far from 11+ age even composed a poem and remarked that he should bring out a book and pencil next time in order to record the poem before it is forgotten.

    Learning is or should be a joy.

  33. Sunshine Sunny Shine Avatar
    Sunshine Sunny Shine

    Oops sorry Bush Tea

    I am a bit sleepy. The response to you should read,…must not be excused with…


  34. Simple Simon,
    I am suggesting that these subjects be made free of cost for every citizen, no matter their age. I think I know that school children study these subjects.


  35. de pedantic

    Nice to know you did maths at school/university. I have difficulty counting to 11 – to ten I have my fingers.
    What I said was that in 1980, 50 per cent of Indian school-age children were illiterate, it is now one in ten. This is in a country with about 260m school-age children.
    Even the ones in school learn very little, half the ten yr olds cannot read a paragraph meant for seven yr olds, although India produces some of the world’s learning engineers and mathematicians – an elite group. The average Indian 15 yr old would be in the bottom 2 per cent of most developed nations peer groups. Remember, India has youth bulge – 13 per cent of the population are teenagers.
    Overall, India’s literacy rate has risen from about 52 per cent in 1990, to about 74 per cent in 2011.


  36. @Hal

    There is nothing wrong with benchmarking but there is always a but. Countries like India and Singapore possess unique characteristics that help to define them as nations and which have fed the kind of success both enjoy based on how we define success for the argument. This is another topic on its own.

    The question is how do we carve our place in the world based on our ability to harness characteristics that are Barbadianna. By pursuing a strategic path that is driven by brand Barbados chances are we will be able to tap the unbridled enthusiasm and creativity of a nation.

  37. Well Well & Consequences Observing Blogger Avatar
    Well Well & Consequences Observing Blogger

    Another valuable lesson to be learned, more important than any 11 + or regurgitated tests.

    http://bit.ly/2sFOPTv

    The centuries old evil and nastiness of UK racism and classism that is stoll a blight and poison running through the Caribbean, cost over 100 lives to be lost in the Grenfell fire…which they are trying to cover up..

    Stop copying the evil oozing out of UK….that is what should be taught from primary school level.

    “Racism And Classism Killed The Residents Of Grenfell Tower
    15/06/2017 10:09

    Skylar Baker-Jordan
    Contributing Editor, The Gay UK Magazine

    DAN KITWOOD VIA GETTY IMAGES
    The flames hadnโ€™t even been extinguished from Grenfell Tower before people started screaming that no one should โ€œpoliticiseโ€ this tragedy. As I type this, though, at least 12 people are dead, and authorities expect that number to drastically climb. Most of those who perished, or who lost everything in the flames, were Black and Minority Ethnic people, and they were all poor (the nature of living on a council estate).

    We are talking about some of the most marginalised and oppressed people in our society dying in a hellish inferno, so the very nature of the discourse around what happened at Grenfell Tower is innately political whether we want it to be or not. The fact is, Grenfell Tower – from the residentsโ€™ years of documented complaints about safety to the fact is lies in the richest borough in London – is a stark reminder of whose voices get listened to in modern Britain, whose donโ€™t, and that this dichotomy can have deadly consequences.

    We donโ€™t yet know what caused the fire. But what we do know is that tenants had for years being raising concerns about how the Kensington and Chelsea Tenant Management Organisation (KCTMO) – to which the local council had delegated management of the tower – were cutting corners on safety and refusing to listen to tenant concerns”


  38. David,
    The first thing is to breakout of the narrow mindset that little Barbados is unique. It is a mindset that pervades every area of Barbadian life – from the myth of a small open economy can only do certain things, to that we have a unique educational system. I went through it and that is a another myth.
    We need to reform our educational system and the way to do it is to look at best practice around the world, then look at our cultural, economic and social resources and shape a new system that draws on the best of all worlds.
    I have used the example of pensions before, but will remind you. In 1981 the Fascist Pinochet create what at that time was the most advance pension system in the world. Since then, every pension system in the world has been forced to take that in to consideration, if only to dismiss it. From the US 401K, to New Zealand’s Kiwisaver, to Australia’s Superannuation, to Britain’s autoenrolment.
    That is how you learn, not by burying your head in the sand and pretending the waves are not coming in.
    If we are to compete in a highly technological and competitive world, then we have to look at the new jobs being created and prepare our young people to fit those positions, from artificial intelligence to the free market of ideas (ideas are an asset too).
    To beginning with, we will not achieve this with what is called whole of class teaching in rooms of 30 or more students; that is preparing students to fail. Modern education is more collegiate, group learning, and offering one-to-one tuition.
    Grenville has given a good example of this even though the cowards and brain dead, themselves semi-literate, have been attacking him.
    In his case, he had parents able to teach him at home, in other cases parents paid out a lot of money (and continue to|) to give their offspring private lessons.
    Basically, there are two models facing us: the comprehensive model, in which no child is left behind; and the awfully named elite model, teaching children to their skills and talents.
    With the comprehensive model, we need a safety net for late developers or those who have changed their minds about a particular career; that is for society, not just wealthy parents, to decide.


  39. @Hal

    Not sure why you are of the view that there is disagreement with your view as stated. The challenge is that we need strategies to disrupt. Solutions abound. The operationalizing of the plans remain the issue. We differ on what it will take to tap in to a spirit that is Bajan. This is where the momentum will come. We need leadership.

  40. William Skinner Avatar
    William Skinner

    It is very obvious to me that Grenville’s article
    are attracting extremely enlightening discussion.
    This shows to some degree, that the country is
    thirsty for more in depth discussion about many
    of our problems. It is also obvious to me, that
    Both the BLP and DLP are barren of any new
    ideas.
    Unfortunately, Grenville apparently believes that
    SB can be a productive political party by pretending
    not to be one! Not one public meeting; no town halls
    no apparent political PR etc. I reluctantly conclude
    that I really don’t understand what he is doing. For
    his sake and the sake of our country, in dire need
    of rescue from the political rascals, known as
    BLPDLP, I hope he does.


  41. David,
    I am not contending that you differ in your view, but what is not clear is the road map fore change.
    I do not believe this government, nor the minister, are capable of the kinds of change I am envisaging.
    Change must start at the bottom, not the top ie at nursery and primary level, not at university level. Start by teaching bilingually from age of four to five; which means that by the time that children reach the school leaving age of 16 |(hopefully 18 in the future) they will be competently bilingual.
    Add to all this a critical approach to education; a change in the curriculum with an emphasis knowledge rather than learning by rote; ICT, the great vehicles in transmitting education; and, most of all, a new epistemology of education.
    @David, this will be accompanied by a raising of the status to teaching, making it a graduate-entry profession, with heads having had training in management.
    So, in a generation we will spring to the top of the global ratings. Look t Singapore: in 1965 Singapore was a swamp land, not even wanted by the Malaysians and used by the British only to train its military in guerrilla warfare.
    Then along came an authoritarian, Cambridge-educated lawyer, and the rest is history. We are the architects of our own future.


  42. we dont know what caused the fire …but.. Wait till the cause is found, The people in the puerto rico highrise blaze or in the mgm grand hotel fire were not oppressed and they were caught in an inferno themselves. New cladding was put on the building to modernize the look, upgrading buildings is hardly the work of slum landlords. Let the investigation take its place before trying to use the deaths of these people for political ends. If you think emergency personel turned their backs on these people and did not risk their own lives to save them your crazy.


  43. Lawson,
    This is more complex than you can imagine. I will say briefly: this is the heart of the Notting Hill carnival; the carnival is held in Ladbroke Grove and not Brixton for sociological reasons.
    That part of West London was the home of the Caribbean community in the 1950s and 60s; there was awful ethnic cleansing.
    The tragedy is awful, but it is the Brits at their best. There is a lot more to be told. Just have a look at the interviewees on TV. What is missing?


  44. @ David

    “The question is how do we carve our place in the world based on our ability to harness characteristics that are Barbadianna.” Best comment.

    Yes we have high achievers and talent, but other countries do too. In a globalised economy high achievers and talent alone will not suffice. India’s population is 1.3 BILLION, if 72% as Hal says is literate, that country may very well have more high achievers and talent than we do. Therefore where on the supply chain (not the whole production line), can we be “specialists”, due to our Babadianna, rather than this notion that we can be a mini hollywood or mini Silicon Valley. Secondly, mastering skills such as decision making, communication influencing, strategic thinking, team work, problem solving etc will be the key our transformation. These should form part of the early secondary school curriculum.


  45. Sunshine Sunny Shine June 15, 2017 at 11:33 PM #

    โ€œMost of our high achievers do not reside in BARBADOS. The current system that exists does not cater to those who have the potential to go beyond academia to achieve greatness far beyond the conventional thinking that is restrictive.โ€

    @ SSS

    I agree with your comments.

    These are some of the reason why โ€œmost of our high achievers do not reside in BARBADOS:โ€

    The CEO of the recently opened Argyle International Airport in St. Vincent is BARBADIAN, Hadley Bourne, who was an Air Traffic Controller at GAIA.

    When Bourne first sought funding to pursue studies in aeronautical engineering, his request was denied and he was told there wasnโ€™t any scope for aviation in Caribbean region and he should pursue studies in mechanical or electrical engineering instead.

    His story is very interesting and shows that, despite discouragement, โ€œperseverance seldom fails.โ€

    โ€œWith hopes dashed at this point, Bourne settled for a job with Banks Holdings Limited, working over three years between Banks Breweries and the Pine Hill Dairy.

    With a ray of hope that his ambition to have a career in aviation was still on track, he left private enterprise for a job in the Civil Service, working as an air traffic controller.

    He was awarded a National Development scholarship in 2003, went off to the UK to study aviation and earned a bachelorโ€™s degree in aerospace engineering with first class honours.

    Armed with this first degree, it was back to the control tower at Grantley Adams International Airport and his job as an air traffic controller.

    A second National Development Scholarship enabled him to secure a masterโ€™s in management with specialisation in human resource management from the University of the West Indies Cave Hill Campus.

    Five years later, he was fortunate to be awarded a third National Development Scholarship and went to Australiaโ€™s Griffith University and completed another masterโ€™s in aviation management, this time specialising in aircraft accident investigation, safety management assistance, aviation quality assurance and management system.

    After each success, the loyal Barbadian returned home to his job in the Control Tower.

    Though he may have been progressing in the area of qualifications, it seemed like on-the-job promotion to the top round of the ladder was eluding him, despite the fact that he had moved from air traffic controller, to air traffic supervisor, to air traffic instructor.โ€

  46. Well Well & Consequences Observing Blogger Avatar
    Well Well & Consequences Observing Blogger

    Lawson….the social poison of classism and racism caused the fore, some reports say a faulty refrigerator on the 4th floor ignited, be that as it may, no back exits, no sprinkler system and fire alarms, cutting corners re proper building materials for refurbishment , cutting on fire fighting equipment. ..Borus Johnson should be fired, cutting on measures to ensure better safety standards for minorities residing in the city….Theresa May should be fired.

    And just for being allround poisonous, pretentious blights and frauds ….many people should go to prison for Grenfell.

    BTW….look at ya boyfriend, you and Chadster’s and John’s shared boyfriend ..lol


  47. @ SSS

    Hadley Bourne is an example of an individual who was discouraged by the system and despite his qualifications, promotion to a job requisite with his qualifications eluded him.

    We all know how it goes in Barbados, especially in the Civil Service, where individuals such as Bourne are continually overlooked in favour of a politicianโ€™s relatives, friends or political party affiliate.

    We had a man such as Hadley Bourne in Barbados, fighting to get promotion in the aviation field, while construction contractor Mark Maloney sits on LIATโ€™s Board of Directors, representing Barbados, the majority shareholder in the airline.

    Barbadosโ€™ lost is St. Vincent & the Grenadinesโ€™ gain.

    These are also issues in our educational system that need to be discussed.

  48. Well Well & Consequences Observing Blogger Avatar
    Well Well & Consequences Observing Blogger

    BTWโ€ฆ.look at ya boyfriend, you and Chadsterโ€™s and Johnโ€™s shared boyfriend ..lol

    http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/americas/us-politics/trump-comey-obstruction-justice-investigation-firing-robert-mueller-latest-a7793691.html

    Ah forgot to post..lol

  49. Well Well & Consequences Observing Blogger Avatar
    Well Well & Consequences Observing Blogger

    Artax…that’s the social poison and blight of which I speak, is it any wonder that the government , judiciary, all departments are so dysfunctional.

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