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Structuring National Programmes of Parent Supports in the Caribbean

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SKU: cje 37-2

Over the past few decades, a considerable body of work has been created by Caribbean and external academic/research institutions and government research arms (often aided by international donor agencies), towards describing and fostering a beter understanding of Caribbean child-rearing practices, family structures, and perceived social problems within families and concerning families.

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Advancing the Early Childhood Development Agenda in the Caribbean in the New Millennium: Achievements, Challenges, and Prospects

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SKU: cje-37-1

In September 1995, the Caribbean Journal of Education (CJE) dedicated a special issue on Early Childhood Education in honour of the late Dudley Grant, a renowned pioneer in this field in the Caribbean. One of the journal articles (Davies 1995) provided an overview of  the issues and concerns that were current in the early childhood sector then.

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Tales from Practice: Enhancing University Teaching Skills Using the Critical Friends Approach

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SKU: jedic15-2-3

This reflective essay looked at the critical friends approach to faculty development, in particular, its role in enhancing teaching skills and reflection in a Certificate in University Teaching and Learning project. The paper drew on the experiences of teaching staff, engaging in a faculty development project and used the insights from actual practice to corroborate the literature and advance the conversation on critical friends. The experience of learning throughout the faculty development project was enhanced by reflection-in-action and reflection-on-action.

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Editorial

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SKU: jedic15-2-0

The Journal of Education and Development in the Caribbean (JEDIC), in collaboration with the Enhancing Teaching and Learning Commitee of the Faculty of Social Sciences, The University of the West Indies – Mona, has brought together this emerging material, with a focus on the unique needs of Caribbean students, lecturers and universities, to a broad audience of scholars, teachers, students, and other key stakeholders via this special issue, “Enhancing University Teaching and Learning in the Caribbean Context.”

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An Investigation into Male Perspectives of their Educational Experiences in Trinidad and Tobago

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SKU: JEDIC-14-1-4

This study explored male perspectives of their educational experiences in the Trinidad and Tobago school system. It examined key push factors responsible for leading males away from pursuing higher education as well as factors responsible for male underachievement at the post-secondary and tertiary levels. This qualitative study utilized six focus groups comprising 56 participants from private and public post-secondary and tertiary institutions located in largely North-East, Central and South Trinidad.

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Circuits of Identity and Cultural Transformation in the Work of Two Caribbean-diaspora Poets: Jean ‘Binta’ Breeze and Dorothea Smartt

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SKU: JEDIC-14-1-3

In this article I explore constructions of diasporic space in the work of two Caribbean-diaspora poets, Jean 'Binta' Breeze, and Dorothea Smartt, and examine the ways in which circuits of departure, arrival, and return in selected poems, function as sites from which complex, interconnected identities are produced. The region is commonly defined as a space of migratory flows, which are both permanent and impermanent, and characterized by frequent returns 'home' (Trotz & Mullings, 2013, p. 154).

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Instructive Episodes: The Shifting Positions of the Jamaican Diaspora in Canada

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SKU: JEDIC-14-1-2

This paper is interested in the ways in which the everyday experiences of Jamaican Canadians function as accumulated moments that mark their collective journeys across time and place, and reveal the complexity of their dual relationship between Jamaica and Canada. Specifically, the paper uses five uniquely Canadian episodes or incidents, occurring in each of the five decades between 1970 and 2012 (the 50th anniversary of Jamaica's independence from Britain) to examine how Jamaican Canadians claim the right to not just legal, but also social citizenship.

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Transitioning from GSAT to CSEC: A Longitudinal Study on the Impact of Literacy Development of Students in Jamaican Primary School on their Performance in CSEC English A

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SKU: JEDIC 13-1-7

The aim of this study was to establish how well students' GSAT language arts scores predicted their future performance on CSEC English A and to determine the impact of students' level of literacy, based on their GSAT language arts score, on their performance on CSEC English A. Using a longitudinal methodology, the performance of four cohorts of students was traced from primary through secondary schools. The results revealed a strong correlation between performance on the GSAT language arts and CSEC English A.

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Examining the ‘Discourse’ behind the Grade Four Literacy Test: Evidence from Two Primary Schools in Jamaica

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SKU: JEDIC 13-1-6

This paper forms part of a larger research study which examined the role of discourse in the changes made to the administration of the Grade Four Literacy Test (G4LT) in 2009 in Jamaica. The literacy test was modified from a classroom-based assessment to a high-stakes nationwide examination. While the broader study focused on changes at the policy level, and how the test changes were discussed in the print media, this paper will focus on how the modifications to the G4LT influenced changes at the level of the school.

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A Review of Studies on the Implementation of Literacy 1–2–3 in Jamaican Primary Schools

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SKU: JEDic 13-1-5

Based on the Language Experience and Awareness approach, the Literacy 1–2–3 (L1–2–3) was designed for use in the Language Arts Window in a constructivist teaching/learning environment in Jamaican primary schools. Based on a review of studies on L1–2–3, this paper examined the extent to which characteristics of the innovation, local characteristics, and external factors impacted the effectiveness of its implementation.

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