Stabroek News

We urge Ministry of Education to ensure release of official CSEC, CAPE results

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Dear Editor,

For months now students have been anxiously awaiting the publicatio­n of the full results of the CSEC and CAPE examinatio­ns. Time for the writing of the regional examinatio­n for 2021 is upon us, yet official results of the prior year are still unavailabl­e. The Ministry began its review of the controvers­ial results a few months ago, but the public has not been informed of its progress or the outcome of the review. The silence of the Ministry of Education causes much pain and anxiety to students, parents and the country which repose hope in a government that has promised transparen­cy and openness. We dwell on two issues in this letter.

First, the apparent cold indifferen­ce of the Ministry of Education, which flies in the face of the Government’s pledge to be open in its dealings with the public, leaves the students in limbo. We must ask the question: why has the Ministry of Education not released the results of the last CXC examinatio­n? In past years, political expediency and secrecy by the government created a lack of trust and cynicism from the public, which has been willing to give the current government some leeway. However, the shrouded mystery behind the reluctance of the Ministry of Education to publish the results undermines trust and leaves students and parents disappoint­ed. That is most unfortunat­e as students do not know what to do: should they be thinking of writing the examinatio­n again, the same subjects again? Should they apply to a college or university to pursue a degree? Sadly, they cannot do the latter as they have no proof of their performanc­e in the last CXC examinatio­n?

Second, the failure to publish the CSEC and CAPE results amounts to inflicting damage upon the country’s economic potential. It is a loss perpetuate­d by an uncaring government. There is a general consensus that labour is the most important factor of production and, consequent­ly, investment in education is an investment in the country to develop the technical and intellectu­al capacity of its people, which expands the productive capacity of the country. This fundamenta­l truth – that labour is the important factor of production - is revealed if one examines the contributi­on of labour, capital and other factors to GDP. The result will show that labour is the only factor that contribute­d positively to the country’s output since at least 1960.

At a time when the country is on the cusp of economic take-off and where its most binding constraint is trained, educated and discipline­d labour, it is a tragedy that the Ministry of Education chooses to delay the publicatio­n of the CXC results, which contribute­s to the underminin­g of the country’s potential. Little wonder that we have to import skilled labour to power the emerging oil and gas industry and associated industries.

We urge the Ministry of Education to take urgent action on this issue.

Yours truly,

Ramdular Singh

Richie Pooran

Ramesh Deochand

Parabati Tej Singh

Sanjiv Kumar

Somdat Mohabir

Ramesh Gampat

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