Jamaica Gleaner

More graduates but fewer jobs – educator

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JAMAICA CURRENTLY boasts a literacy rate of 88 per cent, with 19 per cent of the population earn-ing first degrees, educator Denworth Finnikin noted. This is a major increase in comparison to 20 years ago when persons graduating with first degrees were only three per cent. As a nation, Jamaica graduates approximat­ely 40,000 individual­s from high schools annually.

Finnikin, the national TVET director at the Ministry of Education, pointed out that though the country is producing more graduates, there are still job vacancies available and persons are still unemployed. The reasoning behind this phenomenon is that even though local employers shortlist and interview applicants with impressive résumés and good grades, those applicants are unfortunat­ely unable to perform.

“This is a mockery of the education system. We are putting out more graduates and employers are rejecting them,” he said recently at Northern Caribbean University’s Career Fair 2018.

Finnikin added that graduates have mastered the theory aspect of the job, but are yet to convert the theory into practice. Among the many reasons Jamaicans fail at securing and retaining jobs is the decline in basic employabil­ity skills. The skills include, but are not limited to, attendance and punctualit­y, analytical and interperso­nal skills, risk analysis, consistenc­y in developmen­t and quality service, and marketing.

“We cannot become a developed country by 2030 if we don’t change our mindset and our attitude,” he stressed.

 ??  ?? Denworth Finnikin, the national TVET director at the Ministry of Education.
Denworth Finnikin, the national TVET director at the Ministry of Education.

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