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Four transformational truths are Timing, Innovation, Strategy and CollaborationThe Elements of Transformation Strategy

There is the proven that individuals and businesses who continually adapt to the environment in which they operate will likely succeed. If we try to fit how the local public sector has been managing its business compared to the private sector and the world it gives currency to the use of the word anachronistic. Prime Minister Mia Mottley has been a frequent user of the word of late.

Unfortunately as part of government’s objective to modernize processes in the public sector, hundreds of low level, low skilled workers have been retrenched. Understandably concerned Barbadians have inquired why send home workers from the bottom if the exercise is about cutting cost? We have to protect the most vulnerable and we will be holding the government to its word that BERT has an adequate safety net included.

Honest Barbadians will admit  however if the public service is to operate efficiently in the current environment there must be a job redesign. We have listened to successive governments braying about improving business facilitation. It is not the fault of the workers although the blogmaster will suggest this is where trade unions- the workers representative- have failed in the last 25 years to strategically add value to the process of nation building.

It is an indictment on the leadership of Barbados that in 2018 government departments still record transactions in ledgers- documents still require the ‘lick’ of a stamp. The blogmaster supports the requirement to urgently transform from the analogue to the digital. Leveraging technology to efficiently deliver services is a no-brainer.  What is difficult to understand is how come successive Barbados governments have invested billions in education per capita and lag scores of other countries that have expended less!

During a recent press conference Sir Hiliary and Eudine Barriteau of the University of the West Indies (UWI) highlighted that the regional university was ranked 591 out of the 1,258 in the  Times Higher Education (THE) World University Rankings. Of interest is that both of them touched on the ‘technology and innovation park‘ which is promised to open in Bridgetown in January 2019.

In the link provided we are informed the facility will house classes to support a Bsc. Software Engineering degree programme and also technology start-up bushiness to conduct research and development in conjunction with students at the UWI. She also revealed that talks have started with Gabriel Abed of Bitt Inc about supporting new tech start ups.  Beckles also shared this is being done with the cooperation of Chinese Universities.

In BU’s most recent blog – Senator Rawdon Adams Sobering Intervention in the Debt Restructure Debate  Adams asked what kind of Barbados do we need to build now that we have dismantled what was to deliver on the kind of life we want (words to this effect).
Barrow presided over an agrarian economy, Tom Adams shifted to a mix of agrarian and services and Owen Arthur went the whole hog by switching out to a services economy. Given the suspicion how the world views jurisdictions that provide services for international business companies there is clearly an urgent requirement to incorporate new business lines to diversify and hopefully spur economic growth. Feedback so far is that the RERE programme is only a baby step in the right direction, it has to go a lot further.  Making Bridgetown a smart city is a Barbados Labour Party (BLP) manifesto promise. Ronald Jones had responsibility for Human Development and innovation. What was achieved in this regard is not worth mentioning. Pushing more ‘coding‘ in schools is a national imperative.
Although mentioning China is a hot button word for many- a hegemonist is a hegemonist- a look at how it has been integrating technology to create opportunities for its people is instructive.

 


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396 responses to “Time to Build Barbados Silicon Valley”


  1. Once again the BLOGMASTER is fallen into a popular Barbadian fallacy, new technology will solve countries problems. Technology does not solve problems it’s MERELY an operational aid. Granted Barbados is far behind first world in replacing the pencil and paper, however introducing digital ledger technology into the Barbadian culture is frought with issues. The basics do not exist in the Barbados financial and operational systems to adapte a new system with all the necessary rules and regulations inplace prior to implimentation.

    Building a silicon valley is counterpart to building a new GREENLAND.


  2. @Wily

    We understand your point, do nothing. Continue with obsolete systems. We get it every time.


  3. Great article and very instructive. However, the arrogance of some of the 30 MCU may prohibit any positive action on the above suggestions. Heard the DLP members were ignorantly arrogant but some of the Mottley Crew Upstarts are intellectually Dismissively Arrogant. To have a meeting with Ryan Straughan and Marsha Hinds will leave you feeling the positions have gone to their heads in short order. #BLPARROGANCE


  4. You mean Marsha Caddle?


  5. @David

    Country has to learn to CRAWL before they can WALK. Every endeavour must start out with sound firm calculated initiatives, Barbados always wants to leap to the Conclusion before learning the procedures and basic requirements along the way, that’s why FAILURE is a constant in Barbadian political circles.

    It’s not the time to be implimenting new technologies, MAJOR FINANCIAL ISSUES require 100% of the countries attention for the next several years until SOUND FINANCIAL footing is re-established, only then can new ideas be introduced into the populace. It’s not a question about begin NEGATIVE, it’s a question about realistic objectives, small steps at a time.


  6. We will not be implementing new technology, we are replacing obsolete technology. The way business has to be conducted in the global market will not adjust to our inefficient approaches.

    Capiche?


  7. “She also revealed that talks have started with Gabriel Abed of Bitt Inc about supporting new tech start ups. Beckles also shared this is being done with the cooperation of Chinese Universities.”

    What crap is that…that is not how it works.

    First of all Eudine would have to be mad to now encourage these crooks to put pressure on government to give Abed 3 years tax breaks at the expense of the taxpayers instead of giving the tax breaks to the new tech startups to get on their feet..

    Abed cannot even get Bitt inc or mMoney off the ground, this is just another scam to rip off taxpayers again.

    ya see proof positive that the clowns with degrees up at UWI are totally clueless to oiw the real world works…and she is the principal…imagine that. …

    Chinese and Japanese can assist with training AND recruiting….they are SKILLED at this….thousands of students in North American universities get their leg up through these people..they started these programs and know how to help startups and individual programmers.


  8. Everything is always done backward on the island….you go DIRECTLY to the source of these skills and to those WHO BUILT the technology.to get the ultimate results…there is a reason why top universities engage China and Japan.

    Because by the time UWI gets around to this snail pace nonsense…technoligies would have already been upgraded by China and Japan.


  9. @ David
    Wily Coyote is 100% correct.
    He is NOT saying to do nothing. What he IS saying is that it will not help to do shiite now.

    The REAL truth is that we did not really SELECT these thirty shiite hounds. We just DISMISSED the other pack of jackasses – and this was the ONLY other option – since Caswell did not BUP, and Grenville, well intentioned as he is,… is operating outside of his true calling (out of unselfish national interest).

    Innovation and creativity on a foundation of MERITOCRACY is the only possible answer for Barbados.
    However, there is now no time for this solution to develop naturally. It is also not practical to expect that such development can come from a bunch of lawyer-type jokers who are themselves mired in dishonesty, incompetence and self-praise, derived from the mistaken belief that their 30-0 victory is an endorsement of THEIR OWN leadership potential.

    These are essentially the same shiitehounds that we were anxious to dump when David Thompson appeared to be slightly competent and to be not too dishonest back 11 years ago.
    He was not….
    Barbados CANNOT now be saved.
    That is just the brutal truth – based on the REALITY of our current hopeless circumstances.

    However IF we were smart enough … or lucky Enuff…
    it is still technically possible for us to make a hyper jump to a state of innovation, creativity and meritocracy by installing a panel of national administrators who are SPECIALLY selected based on the SOUND OLD BIBLICAL principles of “he who has been faithful in small things …. let us make him master of the great things….”.

    Something like a national council of say eleven such persons, given the authority by law and the constitution to transform the economy over the next three years by executive order, would be needed to execute the kind of change that Barbados would need to have a good chance of survival and success.

    We will NEVER entertain such a thing….
    But…
    EVERYTHING ELSE is too late…..

    QED
    ….grass.


  10. @Bush Tea

    We have to improve by doing many things at the same time. The face the Mottley government is adopting existing technology to drive change required to improve is positive. We can be defeatist, try to improve or cockup and die.


  11. This article is more to my understanding and there are a few points that I would like to take issue with or to agree on

    “What is difficult to understand is how come successive Barbados governments have invested billions in education per capital and lag scores of other countries that have expended less”
    ********* I left Barbados about 38 years ago and I get the impression they are still teaching the same subjects and in the same fashion. I suspect that even with the availability of the internet, that nothing, except the students, have changed. Insanity is maintaining a system that was created to serve the British Empire and expecting it to serve our present needs.

    In BU’s most recent blog – Senator Rawdon Adams Sobering Intervention in the Debt Restructure Debate Adams asked what kind of Barbados do we need to build now that we have dismantled what was to deliver on the kind of life we want (words to this effect).
    *** Cannot touch this one, but I would love to see the look in the blogmaster’s eyes when he sees Rawdon.

    Barrow presided over an agrarian economy, Tom Adams shifted to a mix of agrarian and services and Owen Arthur went the whole hog by switching out to a services economy.
    ***** This is a beautiful way to describe the failing of Barbados. Did the land up and leave or is it still back there on the island. There is a need to return to the land to get us to food security. It would be interesting to know how the service dollar is distributed between the various sectors in Barbados. I suspect that a large segment of the island is seeing little or nothing of that dollar.

    “Pushing more ‘coding‘ in schools is a national imperative.”
    **** In his shortest sentence, the blogmaster has hit the nail directly on the head.


  12. Unfortunately, it is not a simple case of either ‘try something’ OR die…
    A very high percentage probability is that we can try something, …with great effort…. even with positive results…
    AND STILL DIE.

    Ms Mottley is admittedly appearing to make an effort … certainly MANY TIMES better than anything we have seen in 20 years, BUT do you recall all the impressive efforts that were made to save David Thompson?

    Did he not have the very best of doctors that CLICO funds could pay for?
    Did not priests and pastors (some with doctorates) pray for his recovery?
    Were not the BEST POSSIBLE efforts made to ensure his recovery….

    Is not his donkey grass?

    Life is hard …. and then we die.

    The FACTS are that unless we access a professional, accurate diagnosis of the ailment, and then come up with an effective intervention that addresses this disease …. AND THEN EFFECTIVELY ADMINISTER that intervention,
    then we WILL die…..
    no matter your, or Ms Mottleys, good intentions.

    Same situation here boss….
    We have a bad case of national colon cancer. and the BLP is pursuing conventional therapies based on IMF medicines from the last century.
    Doing “the best that we can” may not be snuff…
    Bushie is saying that unless we get ourselves a RADICAL NEW AGE operation …and urgently, the result will be a no brainer.

    Grass…


  13. “Silicon Valley” technology has been around for awhile and we’ve been ‘talking’ about it since 2000 began……….. we are good at ‘talk’ but abysmal at IMPLEMENTATION.

    High tech needs a large initial investment… which we do not possess …… trying to do it piecemeal, will result in a waste of money.

    Government should take care of the people and let the private sector spend on high tech, master it, then implement it for government. Let them take the ‘risks’. But to achieve any investment by the private sector… and I don’t only mean the ‘big’ guys, I mostly mean the small – medium start-ups and entrepreneurs —– you must offer real incentives.

    Squeezing taxes out of the people you wish to take us into the future is not a wise plan.

  14. de pedantic Dribbler Avatar
    de pedantic Dribbler

    David Mr Blogmaster, good post to tickle debate….there is much more to your point you left unsaid due surely to a desire to be brief but in so doing you gave the @Cayotes room to howl most distressingly!

    The point he and @BushT is making is absurd in every context….where is he living to assert that “[t]he basics do not exist in the Barbados financial and operational systems to adapte a new system with all the necessary rules and regulations inplace prior to implimentation”.

    There is a quite different Bdos of which i am aware where many companies provide financial and operational systems to compare with the first world operators.

    There are local companies who provide excellent technical systems securely linking funds for all types of consumer transactions, investments etc…and have been doing so for years.

    It is insane to suggest that “What he IS saying is that it will not help to do shiite now”

    Govt officials DO NOT ‘develop naturally’ the complexes that form a ‘Silicon Valley’…they are formed by innovative entrepreneurs who merely lean heavily on the tax and other largesse gained from govt…at day’s end you salve the arrogant egos and appease the political whims of those elected folks to reach the desired business objectives.

    Which govt official arrogantly or otherwise developed the rather ‘simple’ but yet technologically impressive loyalty system (Magna) started in Bdos and which spread across the region…I mention that simply to highlight that despite strange naysaying remarks excellent technological real life “baby steps” were made YEARS ago.

    That’s one simple example of how technology “advances” of a quite intrusive sort using all the necessary financial rules and regulations are fully entrenched across more of our operational backend than we may appreciate or understand….

    So yes Mr Blogmaster you are absolutely correct to press the need for a comprehensive change in educational stances and curricula that better preps the work force for the new job market which this more pervasive technical usage will create….

    … and of course book ledger operators still abound but does anyone here really believe that ANY private company doing likely just $100,000 in revenue does NOT use QuickBooks or PeachTree (is that still around) or some other accounting package.

    The folks like Cayote and BushT can sing their old songs…they are members of a choir visiting seniors citizens🤣 so let them all reflect their years of hard work as they enjoy retirement…life continues to move on rapidly…they really need not pay attention!

    BTW, the comment that “[s]he also revealed that talks have started with Gabriel Abed of Bitt Inc about supporting new tech start ups….” is just lovely corporate speak by those trying to finagle their way into acceptance!


  15. @KS

    The bajan version of Silicon Valley. Be craftsmen of our fate. We do nothing we die. We try something there is hope according to the sarcastic footnote of sirFuzzy.


  16. There seems to be a growing consensus that Barbados must radically change not only “what it does” but “how it is done”. I do not pretend to know the answers to these issues but I sense that within the collective national community the answers are already there. So my question is: what is holding us back?

    Maybe when there is nothing left to lose except literally life itself then we will take that leap but then such a leap will not be of faith but of desperation.

  17. de pedantic Dribbler Avatar
    de pedantic Dribbler

    Mr Blogmaster everything being dumped in suspense…retrieve one non duplication , thank you.


  18. @Dee Word

    The challenge for those ignorant about technology must be leveraged to improved our lifes is that they equate technology only with computers and software and not the more generic how we do things.


  19. Barbadians have been socialized to conform and assimilate. We see these qualities expressed when Bajans emigrate to US, UK, Canada etc. We are always the least vocal and visible. How do we disrupt? The question of the day!


  20. Have a look at the video posted in the blog which many have not bothered to view. It gives a painful insight how far behind Barbados lags the world where to be competitive is key.


  21. The Blogmaster and several other bloggers do not understand new digital technologies, they are costly(Capital for soft & hard) and training staff(Investment) to implement and then like your tablet becomes obsolete in 5 or less years and needs upgrading(more capital) or replacement. New technologies result in less staff requirements(more people on the bread line) and costs of the people(staff) are replaced by increased capital costs. In normal first world countries efficiencies will be realized, however in third world countries efficiencies decline and the attempted situation being corrected gets worse. Bloggers are making the point that “some” private industry in Barbados is technologically savvy, this is in fact correct, however their connections/affiliations to the First World business’s is obvious and thus the technologies are offshore not local.


  22. Barbadians have been socialized to conform and assimilate. We see these qualities expressed when Bajans emigrate to US, UK, Canada etc. We are always the least vocal and visible. How do we disrupt? The question of the day!(Quote)

    What unadulterated nonsense. An observation from stupidity.


  23. “Pushing more ‘coding‘ in schools is a national imperative.”

    And that’s what you do, you push…UPDATED CODING…not the archaic nonsense they now have and calling it coding in the high schools..

    ……from primary school level…there should be coding classes…so that every time there is a worldwide upgrade…your students from primary to high school to college/university just fall in line with current skills….and stay in the top income earners bracket, competing with the best programmers and coders in the world..for the highest paying jobs which these people are ALWAYS in demand for..always…

    Theo..these people got a long way to go and the only hold up are the LEADERS..keeping everyone backward and in servant mode…

    .Ronald Jones wasted a golden opportunity from as far back as 2010 because he preferred see fraud universities on the island to give himself an opportunity to pretend to be a chancellor…ya can’t make any of this up…..NO VISION..not one of them, don’t wait for them to start now, a total waste of time and energy


  24. David

    “Barbadians have been socialized to conform and assimilated … We see these qualities expressed when Barbadians emigrate to the US, UK and Canada etc.”

    As a Barbadians who lives abroad I take issue with your statement because it doesn’t hold true for every Barbadian who lives abroad.

    Now to whom are you comparing these Barbadians who are the least visible and vocal to?

    And it would be of interest to know how you arrived at such a concluded, or what important facts or factors cause you to arrive at this conclusion?


  25. What some are not getting…first rate programmers, front/back end software engineers etc ..once those skills are achieved and more often than not the skills cannot be taught in Barbados when they reach a certain level….NO ONE ON THE ISLAND WILL BE ABLE TO PAY THEM..not even government…so they will be working remotely anyway, for top conglomerates, foreign countries and governments and wealthy individuals…but the benefits to the island will be unparalleled.

    Basically that is where the problems lay, most do not understand what these skills entail, how they are marketed and who requires such skilled persons…

    …those shite hound businesses existing there that like to pay subsistence wages and thinks everyone is a slave…will not be able to afford such skilled people…so the university coming up with these ill thought out grand ideas cannot possibly believe that once qualified these young people will then be forced to stay in Barbados to play the low wages games through a bunch of conmen.

    They have not thought this through and need to start coding in primary schools through high school, through college university..and start classes in programming..and let the kids do the rest..


  26. Thanks Hal Austin … pure ignorance…


  27. The following explains Marsha CAddle’s recent delivery in parliament. Extrcted from the IMF document p.15.

    Structural Reforms to Support Growth
    20. To promote long term and potential growth, labor, product and service markets will be liberalized (MEFP Section V and structural benchmarks). The proposed structural reform of SOEs will improve the quality and efficiency of public services and, by restoring confidence, attract FDIs and increase potential growth. Further reforms are planned to increase speed and flexibility of business processes to significantly reduce clearance times at immigration, customs, and expedite issuance of construction permits in planning entities. There is also a need to reform legal processes and improve services at the CAIPO. Labor laws will be modernized to increase labor market flexibility—including by easing labor market regulation, to improve incentives to work and to contribute to increasing productivity.


  28. @ Lexicon

    What I find embarrassing about David BU is that he continues to post such nonsense as chairman of the board. I suggest he should do so, if necessary, anonymously. But it appears he gets an ego kick.


  29. How do you apply to work in Barbados’ Brand New Silicon Hills and Valleys

    Are you ready

    Yes, I’m ready

    I’m ready to learn


  30. WARU

    “Pushing more coding in schools is a national imperative”

    I cannot name one school here where I reside abroad that teaches coding in High School, and you are suggesting that the small island of Barbados with its shallow economy made use of coding in primary school a national imperative.

    Sir, no disrespect intended, but you come across as an utopian ideologue who needs to awaken from his deep slumber… because you are obviously living in a world of make believe to propose such an outlandish idea in a time of economic crisis.

  31. de pedantic Dribbler Avatar
    de pedantic Dribbler

    @Cayote, your reality continues to be unmatched by the real life of which I am familiar!

    I believe the Blogmaster and others very well “understand new digital technologies” and as any one steeped in technological news is aware accepts that high cost will come when the technology is developed for deployment to greater market scale.

    But we all should know from the case studies of how the Microsoft application developed or more recently that of the Facebook network that they took significant venture capital to become the everywhere products of today but that the nascent original development in a parent’s garage or a college dorm was more about long hours, great ideas and technical nous. The original hard capital investment was ‘insignicant’

    It is that mindset and explosion of hard driving developers of which this blog directs its focus..investment $ come accordingly as investors see potential…currently lots of money chase good ideas !

    Barbados in NOT immune to the reduction in labour usage due to new technologies, so how youccan offer that the island be less focused on how tech is deployed ? …we have no choice so we must train our workers to fit.

    A simple example is how the banking industry has changed markedly in last 20 years. No longer are jobs as tellers, loan officers and other such posts as available because online banking has reduced the need for branches and the relevant staff….the average Bajan knows that only too well. In fact surely some folks under 25 have encountered a bank staff member maybe once or twice a year as adults and yet are fully functional with all their banking needs.

    We get with the new program or essentially we are deleted!


  32. I don’t know where you reside..but coding in schools have been going on for years, even Barbados, as archaic as the coding is…has coding in schools…my grandchildren does coding in school…you must be in Shithole Arkansas..

    It is not outlandish and will not cost anymore than all the hundreds of millions of dollars being stolen from the people or wasted by both governments…


  33. @Lexicon
    Your experience is different to my own.
    I was always pushing my son to attend computer classes and to learn how to code.
    Somewhere on this old computer is code from a class he took.

  34. peterlawrencethompson Avatar
    peterlawrencethompson

    I understand that people who care about Barbados want us to catch up with developed economies and leave our outmoded Dickensian ways behind, but trying to imitate Silicon Valley is not going to work.

    The main currency in Silicon Valley is trust, not capital or technical expertise. It is trust which creates the environment for risk taking and it is risk taking which is the cornerstone of innovation.


  35. @Peter

    How do we set the expectations for those who wish to dream? Our leaders of today and tomorrow?

  36. peterlawrencethompson Avatar
    peterlawrencethompson

    The school system in Barbados was designed (mostly by the Christian Church) to keep Black minds enslaved after social changes made it no longer legal to enslave Black bodies. The more prestigious the school, the more effective it was at entrapping Black minds in the self defeating quagmire of defending White privilege while Black.

    It is unreasonable for us to play any significant role in our economic liberation struggle.

  37. peterlawrencethompson Avatar
    peterlawrencethompson

    @David
    Creativity is the most important cognitive skill that we must encourage among our young people. Reading, writing, arithmetic and also coding are all pointless unless they are in the service of creativity.


  38. Agree Peter but creativity is not incubated in a vacuum.


  39. PLT…the school system is yet to IDENTIFY it’s creatives and even when they know they have GIFTED children in the schools with exceptional abilities…it is not encouraged….nor recognized unless it is relatives, friends the same nepotism nastiness….when the creatives who are NEVER recognized actually create anything..it is STOLEN and sold by the same parasites in government and in the private sector..

    …..there is a serious problem on the island that can only be removed with the removal of this last stagnant government..

    …..the 1950s style of governance gotta go or the people will never prosper or climb heights of creativity and excellence in the majority black population…they will remain stagnant fo multiple generations going forward and not just in the last 3 generations..75 mostly wasted years…in these people’s lives and that of their children and grandchildren..


  40. @Dribbled

    You use the Barbados banking business as a technological implementation, your correct, however as the majority of the Barbados banks are Canadian controlled they use first world technology which is offshore implemented and maintained, see Wilys original post. Now when Wily goes in any of these Barbados Canadian controlled banks he finds lines at least 30 deep, people standing inline for decades, hummmmm, the technology for online banking is available, bank has ATM’s, HUMMMMM. You can take a horse to the trough but not make him drink.

    Generational change is what is needed along with NEW EXPERT GOVERNMENT MANAGEMENT for the country over the next couple of generations, that is If GOB can get it’s finances in order. Odds makers S&P, MOODY’S, IMF, offshore investors etc are giving POOR ODDS against recovery.


  41. PLT…
    Creativity is the engine of success in the 21st Century.
    Innovation (the actualisation of creativity) is the fuel
    …and marketing is the road map.

    It is NOT technology
    It is not money
    it is not size
    It is NOT even military might per se

    Technology in itself … ANY TECHNOLOGY…. is just a high tech trap for the uninitiated.
    Wily speaks of its obsolescence ‘every five years’….. It is in fact more like five MONTHS when you understand that the technology is really in the SOFTWARE.
    Once you become addicted to the ‘upgrades’ you are hooked like any drug addict.

    The ONLY real winners are the creators and OWNERS of technology … and they ONLY retain this advantage if they remain at the cutting edge of creativity and innovation.

    Ours is a culture of ‘waiting to see if things work over and away’ before we delve into anything ‘new’….
    In the 21st century, such a culture is doomed to obsolescence and failure ….. in the grass.
    No matter HOW much money we beg for or borrow…


  42. PLT..I really thought someone had warned you by now about what they do to their creatives and gifted black people who are NOT connected.. but you will learn as you go along, ya only arrived recently..

    There was a young man on here, also called David, a creative, who spent years fighting both governments for stealing his creations in collusion with those in the minority tiefing community…he used to post on here for a long time…and he is but one creative victimized in Barbados by both governments…I have met many, many more.


  43. “Odds makers S&P, MOODY’S, IMF, offshore investors etc are giving POOR ODDS against recovery.”

    Because they know you do not have intelligent government ministers..ya have a bunch of half assed lawyers at best and a whole bunch of old world crooks from the previous 2 governments…remember, one half of the same coin….

    …..the newer ministers are yet to prove themselves…so we have to wait and see if they are tainted and painted with the same very broad BLP brush..

  44. peterlawrencethompson Avatar
    peterlawrencethompson

    @David
    Caribbean parents strive to crush creativity in their children at every opportunity. They call it own-wayish or hard-ears. Creativity thrives on questioning and curiosity and experimentation…. being allergic to dogma so the Churches strive to eliminate it at all costs. Creativity flies in the face of “common sense” so my old HC headmaster who’s edict that “a breach of common sense is a breach of school rules” effectively crippled the creativity of entire generations of Bajan youth deserves a place in the most sulphurous regions of hell.

    So as I said above it is entirely unreasonable for us to expect ourselves to create our economic liberation.

    This simply means that we have no choice except to BE unreasonable.


  45. Plt

    You defined it as INGENUITY … but I see it more as the CRITICAL THINKING ELEMENT that is need more so than a ever in our academic system. The system needs to have within it the kind of individuals who have what it takes to push beyond the academic conventionality of the age. Bill Gates, Steve Jobs and founders Facebook, and Amazon are the kind of individuals who pushed beyond the academic conventionality … but at great sacrifice and cost.


  46. Peterlawrencethompson

    David, has concluded earlier that Barbadians are conformist, so how then do we expect the young people to challenge what they are being taught when the system does not account for critical analysis?

  47. peterlawrencethompson Avatar
    peterlawrencethompson

    @Lexicon
    Critical thinking is important only after the initial creative insight. Without that creativity, all that critical thinking can do is more efficiently reproduce the status quo.

    You might pause to reflect that Ms Mottley is very proficient in critical thinking.


  48. @PLT

    How about going back to basics? How about the government fund nationwide free maths courses for all post16 Barbadians? We have enough underused school buildings in the evenings and weekends and enough un(der)employed maths teachers available. Get the Chinese to fund it.

  49. peterlawrencethompson Avatar
    peterlawrencethompson

    @Hal Austin
    By age 16 Bajan youth have been intellectually crippled by their parents, churches and schools in equal measure. Unless some crisis jolts them out of that rut they will never actually begin to think.

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