Showing posts with label BJC Bahamas. Show all posts
Showing posts with label BJC Bahamas. Show all posts

Sunday, August 18, 2013

...the dismal results of the 2013 Bahamas Junior Certificate (BJC) and Bahamas General Certificate of Secondary Education (BGCSE) exams; incompetents leaving school ...and The Bahamas' draconian Immigration laws


Education in The Bahamas


Results Do Not Augur Well For The Future


Tribune242 Editorial:




DESPITE the government’s increased spending on education, public schools continue to release more students into the community without the required skills in reading, writing and arithmetic.
 
It is true that there is high unemployment, but it is also true that jobs exist that can’t be filled by many of those unemployed because they do not have the required skills.
 
Today, the government released the dismal results of the 2013 BJC and BGCSE results.  In the past several years, embarrassed by the dropping grades, the government has refused to release the national grade average.  However, we were told that those amazing grades were still hovering between D and D-.
 
Education Minister Jerome Fitzgerald seemed desperate to find at least one spark of hope, but the best he could do was note a few subjects that inched up from C- to C or D to D+.  Not good enough to sustain a growing country, crying out for qualified Bahamians.
 
Although Mr Fitzgerald was not concerned about the national average, he was concerned that youth leaving grade 12 were not “functionally literate or numerate”.
 
Mr Fitzgerald said that such a situation was a major concern to him, and his ministry. Of more importance, however, is the major concern for this country.
 
With incompetents leaving school, and draconian Immigration laws, government can talk about major investors coming in, but how are they to operate without a qualified labour force?  Is the Bahamas to tread water until its citizens measure up, or is someone going to make the Immigration Ministry aware of the realities of its labour force, and the urgent need to supplement it with more qualified people of whatever nationality.  The private schools cannot keep businesses supplied with the staff they need, public schools will have to start pulling their weight.
 
“Our concern,” said the Education Minister, “is that 30 per cent continue to fall through the cracks and not do well – that’s at the BJC level.  By the time they get to the BGCSE level, we have, what we know, is almost 50 per cent of students who leave only with a leaving certificate – which means they don’t meet the requirement to graduate.”
 
All this certificate means is that each morning they walk through the front door, shout “present” when their name is called, and each afternoon they leave through the back door.  In the interim, they fail to take any education with them.  In other words, that certificate is only their attendance record.
 
These are the young people the country should worry about.  They apply for a job, a worthless certificate in hand, as proof of qualifications.  When turned down, they complain that they are being discriminated against — a foreigner is filling the post.  The tragedy is that these students believe that this worthless piece of paper is a door opener to any job they might desire.  It seems they are the only ones who don’t know that it might have been smarter to have left their certificate at home, and try to charm their way through an office door on “mother’s wit”.
 
At one time, we had good teachers — both Bahamian and foreign, but more foreign, because in certain subjects there were not enough Bahamians — sometimes there were none.
 
And then the Immigration crunch came.  Foreign teachers were no longer recruited so that Bahamians who were qualifying in education could be accommodated.  Some of these were good, some were mediocre, but others, as in all walks of life, just did not cut the mustard. Regardless, however, they entered the classroom.
 
With these unacceptable results, the first consideration has to be the teachers.  Are they of the calibre to inspire the children to learn?   Are they truly dedicated teachers who have a real interest in the success of their students, or are they clock watchers who are just treading water?
 
Then one has to look at the size of the classroom and the calibre of students being mixed together.  Are the academic students being held back by others who would prefer learning a trade?  If so, then these classes in fairness to both types of students should be divided — one concentrating on academics, the other on whichever skills a student might have a bent for.
 
The curriculum has also to be studied to make certain that it is wide enough to graduate an educated person.  Reading, reading and more reading on a variety of subjects – including the history of these islands – should be encouraged.  And high on the list, Ethics should be taught in all schools, as well as the duty of a good citizen.
 
And finally, those who make immigration decisions for schools and businesses have to be more realistic and not hold the country back to accommodate their idealistic dreams of what the work force should be, but is not.
 
Between poor school results and an immigration department out of tune with the needs of the country, The Bahamas faces an uphill struggle.
 
August 16, 2013
 

Friday, August 5, 2011

Poor education results persist in Bahamian schools... Most students continue to average D’s and E’s


Education in The Bahamas


Poor education results continue

Students average D in English and E in math in BGCSEs

KRYSTEL ROLLE
Guardian Staff Reporter
krystel@nasguard.com




Student performance declined in more than half of the 27 Bahamas General Certificate of Secondary Education (BGCSE) exam categories, with students continuing to average D’s and E’s, respectively in English language and mathematics, according to statistics released by the Ministry of Education.

According to Education Minister Desmond Bannister, who addressed the media at a news conference at the Ministry of Education, 34.3 percent of the 5,373 students who took the English language examination received a grade of C or above, while only 24.6 percent of the 5,200 students who took the maths BGCSE exam received a C grade or above.

That means that 65 percent of the candidates who sat the English language exam received a D grade or below and 75 percent of students taking the maths exam received a D grade or below.
Those two subjects were highlighted as areas of challenge by Education Director Lionel Sands.  The ministry yesterday only released selected portions of the 2011 BGCSE and Bahamas Junior Certificate (BJC) exam results.  Last year at this time it released the entire results reports for both exams.

“The subjects that we are most concerned with are the maths and English language,” Sands said. “These have perennially been problem subjects for us and we have been working very hard to ensure that the problems that we are confronted with, that we deal with them in terms of our instructional programs every year.”

In the government school system, teachers could teach up to 105 students for maths and 120 for English, Sands said.

The Department of Education does not have a sufficient compliment of teachers to teach the subjects of maths, physics, chemistry and several other technical areas.  Sands said the ministry relies on bringing in teachers from abroad.

Other subjects where there was a decline in performance include: art and design, biology, economics, French, geography, keyboarding, music, office procedures and religious studies.  The average exam grades were not provided for those subjects.

There were improvements recorded in 11 of the BGCSE subjects tested including: literature, book-keeping and accounts, carpentry and joinery, clothing construction, combined science, chemistry, physics and Spanish.

Results in graphical communications remained unchanged from 2010.

Bannister also provided information on the subjects of physics, Spanish and biology.

He said 62 percent of the candidates received a C or above in physics; 65 percent in Spanish; and 39.5 in biology.

In total, 937 candidates received at least a C grade or above in five or more subjects, which is a new record, according to Bannister.  In 2010, there were 921 candidates who achieved that mark; and in 2009 there were 834 candidates who received the higher grades.

Bannister added that 1,554 candidates received five or more BGCSEs with a D grade or above, which is a slight decrease as compared to 2010.  That year, 1,582 students received a D or above.

Bannister insisted that D is an average grade.

“We commend our students’ achievement and wish them continued success in their academic pursuits,” Bannister said.

According to Bannister, 7,327 candidates registered to sit the BGCSE exams, a slight increase compared to the 6,960 candidates registered in 2010.

Regarding the BJCs, approximately 9,015 candidates registered to sit the exams.

Bannister said the average for five of the 10 BJC subjects improved when compared to 2010.  These subjects included: general science, health science, social studies, and technical drawing. The fifth subject was not named.

Results declined in English language, maths and religious studies, according to Bannister.

Aug 04, 2011

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