Education

Committee to monitor education priorities under IMF deal coming

Education Minister Ronald Thwaites is to set up a committee to monitor the performance of the education sector, with regards to the International Monetary Fund (IMF) targets and the policy priorities set out by his Ministry.

Thwaites says the committee will comprise members of civil society.

He says the setting up of the body is part of efforts to allow stakeholder groups to hold players in the public education sector accountable.

CARICOM youth to benefit from regional after-school programme

GEORGETOWN, Guyana -- Young people in the Caribbean Community (CARICOM) will benefit from an after-school programme designed to use creative techniques to reduce at-risk behaviours, increase health-related awareness, impact educational aspirations, self-esteem and social connectedness among the youth in all CARICOM member states.

Didacus Jules

This policy paper seeks to address issues in BASIC EDUCATION defined as the continuum of education provision from early childhood to primary to secondary education (incorporating also technical and vocational education). Too often studies of this nature have focused on primary and secondary education and ignored the vital importance of pre-primary or early childhood education in laying the foundation for achievement in later years. Additionally, the pace of globalisation and the impact of the technological revolution have made higher education a developmental imperative and have made it necessary to redefine basic education as inclusive of secondary education. The paper therefore treats basic education as the new minimum but holistic educational standard that the region is expected to deliver to its citizens.

PDF
0

Gov't to Introduce Breakfast Programme in Schools

Sunday, April 07, 2013GOVERNMENT will be introducing a breakfast programme in the new legislative year, as part of measures to improve student nutrition.The initiative will be piloted in 150 schools in Kingston and St Andrew, with some 115,000 students to benefit.It is being undertaken by the Ministry of Education in collaboration with the Ministry of Agriculture and Fisheries.The breakfast programme is among measures being undertaken in the areas of education, health, water, and climate change, which were announced by Governor General Sir Patrick Allen while delivering the Throne Speech in

Administrators Urged to Use Reports of National Education Inspectorate

Friday, April 12, 2013 EDUCATION Minister Ronald Thwaites yesterday told school administrators to use the reports from the National Education Inspectorate (NEI) as a guide to improving their institutions."We have a tool in the education system now which we are not using adequately. In the transformation process, the National Education Inspectorate has been providing inspection reports on a majority of our public schools.

Bus Fares for PATH Students

BY ALICIA DUNKLEY-WILLIS, Senior staff reporterFriday, April 19, 2013THE Government is to introduce a pilot programme to provide bus fares for student beneficiaries of the Programme for Advancement Through Health and Education (PATH), Finance Minister Dr Peter Phillips announced yesterday.Phillips, in opening the 2013/14 budget debate, said funds have also been provided to introduce bursaries to tertiary-level students and implement a project to deliver 120 housing solutions under the programme, which was allocated $4.4 billion this year.He said the intention was also to provide skills trai

New Lease on Life for Freemans Hall Primary

Sunday, April 14, 2013FREEMANS Hall in Trelawny, like many other rural communities, has challenges of public water supply, poor infrastructure and limited economic prospects.

2 New Diagnostic Centres Coming for Children with Special Needs

BY AINSWORTH MORRIS Career & Education writerSunday, April 21, 2013MINISTER of Education Ronald Thwaites says parents with special needs children can expect two new diagnostic centres for children in Montego Bay and Mandeville, which should cost the Government approximately $40 million.According to Thwaites, who was speaking at the 20th anniversary service for special needs institution Promise Learning Centre at the Knutsford Court Hotel in Kingston on April 13, parents from these and surrounding areas have been burdened with the responsibility of taking their children to Kingston for a

Peter-John Gordon
January 1, 2012

This exercise will not seek to address the issue of financing the central administrative cost of the education system, i.e. the cost of running the Ministry of Education. We make no attempt to cost the transition from where we are to where we want to be. What we do is to construct what we perceive to be a reasonable school system and ask ourselves what it would cost to maintain such a system; we therefore jump immediately to the desired configuration.

PDF
0
Paula Daley-Morris
January 1, 2000

As a developing nation, Jamaica continues to experience economic challenges that have far-reaching implications for all sectors of the society. Education For All (EFA) is a concept that Jamaica has tried to embrace for more than two decades. One of the nation's goals for the 21st century is to raise the quality of education for all its citizens, thus equipping them to be productive contributors to societal growth. Recently, Jamaica turned its attention to information technology (IT), with particular attention to the education sector, because it saw its introduction as a proverbial “Black Starliner;” a means by which the country’s economic prospects could be changed. In the early 1990s, the Jamaica Computer Society Education Foundation (JCSEF) launched an initiative to facilitate the establishment of computer laboratories in secondary schools. These laboratories were to be used to train students to use computers in the workplace, and to prepare them to sit external examinations that were internationally accredited. As a result of this initiative, 90% of the island’s secondary schools were equipped with computer laboratories which facilitated students doing the Caribbean Examinations Council’s (CXC) IT examination. The impact of this project enabled the focus on computerisation to be expanded to include primary schools, enabling them to be equipped with computers and to have their teachers trained to use them to aid learning.

This monograph describes the initiatives that enabled the introduction of computers in Jamaican primary and secondary schools. It also describes the student performance on the CXC IT examination over a period of six years. The results show that each year more candidates were entered for the Technical Proficiency level than for the General Proficiency level of the examination. It further shows that student performance at the General Proficiency level steadily improved over the six years, while it fluctuated at the Technical Proficiency level. It highlights the fact that the performance of Jamaican candidates improved significantly in the year CXC instituted the six-point grading system. However, most of the passes were below the Grade I level. The data suggest that there may be deficiencies in the education system that caused IT teachers to show a preference for teaching the Technical Proficiency syllabus. The implications for this occurrence as it relates to tertiary level training in computer science are discussed.

 

PDF
0

Pages

Subscribe to RSS - Education