Jamaica Gleaner

Christall Byfield’s passion for education

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CHRISTALL BYFIELD is a very dynamic individual who sets very high standards of achievemen­t for herself.

The 30-year-old educator has created history by being the youngest person to be appointed principal at the St Ann-based Carl Rattray Staff College, where she is tasked with guiding the training and developmen­t of the country’s correction­al officers.

Byfield, who has a bachelor’s degree in education from The Mico University College, is the second female principal to serve the correction­al training institutio­n.

She is also the first person from outside the ranks of the Department of Correction­al Services to head the college since its inception in the 1970s.

Byfield credits her tenacious spirit and strong belief in God as the driving forces behind her career successes to date.

“I have had a very victorious life in the Lord. God has a very important place in my life. I look to God for his leadership principles. At each step of my journey, I have had various successes and each of them would have come together to keep me accomplish­ing,” she said.

The educator, who hails from Ocho Rios, St Ann, began her teaching career at Parry Town Primary School in Ocho Rios, where she spent 10 months as a classroom teacher.

Byfield then moved on to become a literacy specialist, working alongside teachers within primary schools in St Ann to improve the literacy performanc­e of students.

Her outstandin­g track record as a literacy specialist caught the attention of the principal and board of Ferncourt High School in Claremont, St Ann, where she was tasked with improving the literacy standard at that institutio­n.

CHALLENGE ACCEPTED

“Ferncourt High was having some issues with their language performanc­e and I was asked to go and join that team [Ferncourt High] to assist with interventi­on to allow them to get to that point of the national standard. I took up that challenge,” she says.

A past student of St Hilda’s Diocesan High School in Brown’s Town, St Ann, Byfield notes that her passion for impacting lives and imparting knowledge to those around her led to her forging a career in the field of education, following in her mother’s footstep.

“I remember persons normally would say the brightest crayons in the box don’t normally go into education ... and I would say, ‘So then, who will teach our students?’ That was the motto of my mom and that became my motto as well. So, that is the reason I went into the field of education. I believe that we are the ones who make doctors, we are the ones who make every other profession. So, I believe the most brilliant persons should become teachers,” she said.

At the helm of the correction­al training institutio­n for just one year, Byfield plans to ensure that all those who enter the institutio­n will leave equipped and ready for service at the island’s penal facilities.

Byfield says she takes an inclusive approach in the execution of her duties at Carl Rattray Staff College, noting that she strives to build on the standards that have been set by her predecesso­rs.

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