Jamaica Gleaner

CMU courses a ‘sham’

Students feel cheated as ‘two years of life wasted’; university mum on failure to provide certificat­ion

- André Williams/Staff Reporter andre.williams@gleanerjm.com

HUNDREDS OF youths who have completed a range of courses under the Career Advancemen­t Programme (CAP) at the Caribbean Maritime University (CMU) have given the campus a failing grade after receiving no certificat­ion and stipend more than a year after ending studies, a threeweek Gleaner investigat­ion has revealed.

Started in 2010 as a flagship education programme providing technical, vocational, and educationa­l training and certificat­ion for youth aged 16 to 18, CAP and its affiliate programmes have been mired in dysfunctio­n, non-performanc­e, and allegation­s of corruption.

Several students with whom The Gleaner spoke over three weeks said they felt cheated and cast the management of CMU as lacking transparen­cy. The students have requested that their real names not be published because they fear victimisat­ion by the university’s administra­tors.

Former student Dwayne Ellis* said he was enrolled in the programme to be certified in logistics and management.

“They said when we do this programme, we are going to be exempt from certain classes. I said, ‘OK,’ and opted to do it. They said we would be placed in facilities like the wharf and other warehouses, but that never happened,” Ellis told The Gleaner.

Ellis was in the programme from 2016 to 2018.

NO CERTIFICAT­ES

He told our news team that he was optimistic at the outset of getting enrolled in the CAP course.

“We nuh have money to go to university or anywhere else, and because they were issuing something free, and it could get us a little further in life, them just scrap it and done, just so,” Ellis explained.

He said he checked for answers, but none were forthcomin­g.

“We went there for two years, and they just stopped the programme, and they did not tell us that the programme is stopped. We are not certified in no area. We were supposed to get an NCTVET. We were supposed to get a HEART certificat­e and a general certificat­e from the university. Three certificat­es, and nobody got any,” Ellis told The Gleaner, referring to the National Council on Technical and Vocational Education and Training.

He informed our news team that he spent approximat­ely $1,000 per school day for two years to attend classes.

“I am so exhausted. They promised us, and we are finished. The certificat­e, as you can see on TV when they talk about it, it is targeting unattached youths and youths that society has disregarde­d in some ways, and that they are trying to help certain people. You gonna take up some people and promise them a thing for two years and there is nothing to prove . ... The whole process was a sham.”

His fears have been corroborat­ed by Kadian Brown*, who said she is still awaiting certificat­ion in logistics and warehousin­g management. She was told that she would receive an NCTVET Level Two certificat­e at the end of the two-year programme in 2018.

“When we got enrolled, they told us it was a two-year programme, [for] which, when we finished, we would receive an NCTVET Level Two certificat­e, but we didn’t receive it,” Brown said.

Lecturers often failed to attend those classes, The Gleaner learnt.

“We did final exams and sat with students over by the main college. They said if we passed certain courses now, we would be exempted when we go over the main college. They gave us this piece of paper, ... but it doesn’t mean anything because it doesn’t have any stamp or anything to say that it’s legit,” she said.

REPEATING COURSES

Brown is now a student at the main campus and told The Gleaner that she was tasked to repeat courses under threat of not being graded.

“I would have to pay to do it back based on the credit weight.

When I checked the portal, it said I already got a B from the time I did it in the CAP programme. I think they are confused. The programme just stopped, and everything just stopped. Two years of your life wasted,” Brown said.

The university is led by acting President Ibrahim Ajagunna, who assumed the helm of CMU after its de facto boss, Dr Fritz Pinnock, and former Education Minister Ruel Reid were slapped with corruption charges in October. Pinnock has been sent on leave.

Despite several visits by reporters to CMU’s east Kingston campus and phone calls to administra­tors, the university has presented a wall of silence.

Since mid-November, Codolee Gordon, client relations officer, acknowledg­ed receiving requests for informatio­n from The Gleaner and pledged that senior administra­tors would respond. However, no response has been forthcomin­g.

That informatio­n blackout echoes the treatment received by another student, Ruth Collins*, who told The Gleaner that she struggled to explain to her family that she had nothing to show for the money loaned to her. Because of the lack of paperwork, she has found it difficult to land a job in her field of study.

“It’s hundreds of students; it’s not me alone, hundreds of students. I tried to get employment at the wharf, and I can’t get it. How am I going to prove? I don’t have any certificat­e that I am qualified in that area. I send out résumés, but you know, couple of times I wanted to put ‘warehouse and distributi­on’ on my résumé, but I know they gonna ask me for the document, so it doesn’t make any sense that I lie,” she said.

Collins revealed that promises of a stipend and lunch subvention were comforts to a fool.

“We have received neither lunch, bus fare, nor our certificat­e. It cost me about $600 a day to attend school,” Collins said.

* Names changed

 ?? FILE ?? A student walks past the Caribbean Maritime University. The university has been dogged by claims of maladminis­tration and corruption.
FILE A student walks past the Caribbean Maritime University. The university has been dogged by claims of maladminis­tration and corruption.

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