Jamaica

Armed conflict destroys hope of education for millions of world's children – UN report

2 July 2013 – Classrooms, teachers and pupils will continue to be seen as legitimate targets unless there is tougher action against human rights violations, an overhaul of global aid priorities and strengthened rights for displaced people, a new report by the United Nations educational agency warns, urging action on behalf of 28 million children out of school in the world's conflict zones.

EduFocus # 14: Camp Summer Plus Expansion

Camp Summer PlusUSAID/Jamaica in collaboration with the Ministry of Education implemented Camp Summer Plus 2012, an intensive, rigorous five-week academic programme that began on July 9, 2012.

EduFocus #17 JAMAICA’S PROGRESS TOWARDS EQUITY AND QUALITY

JAMAICA’S PROGRESS TOWARDS EQUITY AND QUALITY: HOW ARE WE DOING IN THE EDUCATION SECTOR?

Jamaica has been steadfastly tackling the issues that impede progress towards offering quality education for each child. Having recognised the significant role education plays in national development, it is critical to monitor how well Jamaica is doing in achieving the standards and outcomes that are synonymous with a good education system.

Clement T. M. Lambert and Lorna Down

Jamaican policy makers have prioritized literacy improvement as a matter of urgency within the educational milieu. This has become even more intense during the past decade with initiatives being mandated and implemented to promote this cause. One such initiative is the establishment of literacy research and development centres in two teacher-training colleges with a prime mandate to prepare a special group of teachers to extend literacy improvement efforts in Jamaican schools. While there has been some degree of controversy over the official title of these teachers in training, the name “literacy specialists” has been commonly used to describe the trainees. Studies have been commissioned within the Jamaican context to look at literacy and the Jamaican literacy milieu (e.g., Bryan and Mitchell 1998). However, a study to create a coherent profile of the literacy specialist has not been undertaken. This article is seen as an initial step in providing this profile. Its purpose is fourfold: it explores the literature on literacy specialists; attempts to create a profile of these specialists for Jamaican schools based on the views of selected stakeholders; seeks to position the literacy specialists within the context of the literature and the realities of the Jamaican situation; and explores the implication of such a profile for literacy programmes in Jamaican teachers’ colleges and literacy centres. This presentation will also include a discussion on the origins of the literacy specialist programmes in Jamaica.

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Beverley Carter

Introduction


The barrage of new trends and new foci in language teaching and learning can create a sense of unease among language educators, pulling them in many directions, as linguistic, cultural, technical, and educational considerations compete for time and space in their conceptual frameworks. It is a feeling shared by all those who are engaged in second language acquisition (SLA). Indeed, the burgeoning of knowledge in this discipline has made the field “virtually impossible to ‘manage’ ” (Brown, 2000: ix), as the profession tries to integrate findings from testing, bilingual education, discourse analysis, sociolinguistics, pragmatics, and intercultural communication—just to name a few of the sub-disciplines that enrich SLA.


A second issue that arises when we focus on trends in the field is the question of whether it is all a matter of bandwagons, fads, and crusades: all promising, but not always delivering, greater efficacy in classroom-based learning. A clear consequence of this is that a fair degree of scepticism attends new claims for instructional effectiveness. Kumaravadivelu (1994) suggests however, that the profession’s resolve to move beyond the search for a panacea has led to a new dynamic which he labels the “post-method” condition, namely, the choice of principled eclecticism over any single method. Brown’s contention that, “our research miscarriages are fewer as we have collectively learned how to conceive the right questions” (2000:ix) also addresses the field’s concern with adopting more critical approaches to research and application in foreign language education.


Reviewing the trends in foreign language education promises to be a rather complex matter. In order to keep the discussion to manageable proportions, this article has opted to examine three areas that are among the most discussed in the literature: the integration of technology, the role of affect, and the role of metacognition in language learning. Although the article devotes considerable attention to the literature on technology in foreign language education, technology is but one trend deserving of our attention. No review of current trends and issues can fail to address the place of technology in the current foreign language education curriculum. The article argues, however, that as we try to keep pace with new research and curricular innovations, adopting a stance of principled electism requires us to look at some other trends and issues likely to impact on classroom practice. While the article will look at technology, affect and metacognition as separate strands in enhancing student learning, it is their incorporation in an approach to language learning premised on learner autonomy that is ultimately advocated.

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Education and Economic Transformation

Education is a basic human right and considered by many as the key tool for national development. It is assumed that the most successful economies in the world are those that invest the most in its human resources.

Understandably the world’s largest, wealthiest and most successful national economies share all of the following characteristics:
• Excellent education systems
• High levels of investment in research and development
• Strong links between industry and educational institutions
• Ability to translate research into products and services that sell.

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.

Just In Time Course Design Workshop

Designing is an activity that people engage in to improve the quality of their subsequent creations and this is exactly what this Just-In-TIme Course Design workshop will be about.
 
Three themes will be explored as we sharpen our skills in course design:

    Learner-Centred Teaching
    Constructive Alignment
    Educative Assessment

Location

Centre for Excellence in Teaching and Learning (formerly the IDU) - upstairs Inter-Faculty Lecture Theatre
UWI, Mona
Jamaica
JM
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.

 

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