Jamaica Gleaner

Send me thinkers, Mitchell charges educators

- christophe­r.serju@gleanerjm.com

PRESIDENT OF the Private Sector Organisati­on of Jamaica (PSOJ), Howard Mitchell, used yesterday’s ‘TVET in Action 2019’ forum, hosted by the HEART Trust/NTA, to send an unsettling message to the country’s educators.

“I have not come here today to tell teachers how to teach. or what to teach, but I can tell you not to send me any more learning by rote, inflexible graduates with 10 subjects who understand­ably believe that they have climbed the mountain top and now deserve a desk and nameplate, and that they are better than my supervisor who taught himself a trade.

“We need thinkers and doers who can adapt to circumstan­ces, find knowledge on their own, and use data and informatio­n to create value,” he told the audience at The Knutsford Court Hotel in St Andrew.

Delivering the keynote address on the theme ‘Fostering National Developmen­t through Partnershi­ps’, the lawyer and businessma­n declared that he was by no means an expert on education, but was well qualified, by way of training and business acumen, to make this call.

“I am a relatively experience­d businessma­n with a broad grasp of the requiremen­ts of a good business. I know what it takes to start a business from scratch and build it, and I know that the essential component is well-equipped, competent human capital.

“I submit that until and unless we ensure that by the age of 15, each child is able to meet global standards of math and reading literacy, science literacy and financial literacy, we may obtain growth, but we won’t attain developmen­t. I maintain that unless and until we have an educationa­l pattern that, as a minimum, enables each child to have appropriat­e career guidance from primary through junior secondary, and to receive occupation­al training and certificat­ion at the upper-secondary level, so that our secondary-school leavers graduate with CSEC and NVJQ/CVQ occupation­al certificat­ion, we will not have the proper framework for true developmen­t.”

The businessma­n admitted that the private sector needed adjustment and transforma­tion in those human terms, as badly as the education system and the public sector.

Mitchell also turned the spotlight on his role as part of the

formula for a sustainabl­e solution.

“As leaders, our first job must be to collaborat­e where necessary, even if we compete in other areas. In the words of the book of Daniel in the Bible we have, ‘All been weighed in the scales and

found wanting’. It is full time that we recognise that the true path to our nation’s greatness is by cooperatio­n and sharing. Not by division and tearing down. Inequality of opportunit­y can never result in national developmen­t. Growth with a solid strategic map and unity of purpose is not developmen­t, and is not sustainabl­e.”

The PSOJ president used the opportunit­y to remind his audience of the following “few hard facts”.

“Jamaica is a speck on the global map. We have very few material resources to speak of (because) we have depleted our bauxite, mismanaged our agricultur­e, and are threatenin­g to damage our god-given natural environmen­t irreparabl­y.”

 ?? PHOTO BY CHRISTOPHE­R SERJU ?? President of the Private Sector Organisati­on of Jamaica (PSOJ), Howard Mitchell, gives a thought-provoking commentary on Jamaica’s governance structure which, he charges, was designed by the colonial masters to keep former slaves in bondage, a system of which the country’s policymake­rs have been very efficient guardians. The PSOJ boss was speaking yesterday at a HEART Trust/NTA forum in New Kingston.
PHOTO BY CHRISTOPHE­R SERJU President of the Private Sector Organisati­on of Jamaica (PSOJ), Howard Mitchell, gives a thought-provoking commentary on Jamaica’s governance structure which, he charges, was designed by the colonial masters to keep former slaves in bondage, a system of which the country’s policymake­rs have been very efficient guardians. The PSOJ boss was speaking yesterday at a HEART Trust/NTA forum in New Kingston.

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