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INTRODUCTION
In 2003, the OECS Ministers of Education requested that research be conducted to investigate factors that lead to relatively high rates of indiscipline in school and suggest policy options. This request grew from rising concerns expressed by education system stakeholders in all OECS countries over issues of growing verbal and physical violence and disruptive classroom behaviour, all of which impair the capacity of the education system to effectively accomplish its main aims. In response to this request, the OECS Education Reform Unit (OERU) undertook this comprehensive study, building on its previous research work. The objectives of the study were:
· Describe and analyze the prevalence, nature, and sources of school discipline problems inOECS schools, with special emphasis on violence (any type of violence involving pupils,teachers, parents or others that affects the school environment)
· Identify policy implications and formulate recommendations to OECS Ministers ofEducation for actions aiming to 1) prevent, 2) reduce opportunities for, and 3) effectivelymanage school discipline problems.
Criterion‐referencedexaminations
May/June : CSEC General and Technical Proficiency; CAPE
Which curriculum?
The ideal curriculum – what scholars believe should betaught;The formal curriculum – what is written down in ministrydocuments;The perceived curriculum – what teachers say they areteaching;The operational curriculum – what observers see beingtaught in classrooms;The experiential curriculum – what the studentsexperience in their learning.
Executive summaryProposed 10-year agenda for embedding curriculum reformsand harmonization in schools
This paper presents curriculum reform as a significant change in the cultureand practice of teaching. It suggests that the school curriculum is dynamicand can only succeed if it fully involves the participation of teachers. Thepaper thus proposes curriculum development as a strategy for teacher andschool improvement. The strategy is envisaged as growing from the work ofthe Eastern Caribbean Education Reform Project and the OECS EducationReform Unit. The aim of any large-scale plan for school and teacherimprovement, based on that strategy, should be that every teacher will beboth involved in and empowered by the changes that are underway. Thefollowing agenda is proposed as a means by which the original vision of amore harmonized curriculum in the territories of the OECS can be effected.
Curriculum Development and Harmonization
Huge reforms attemptedNeed to implement these reformsFocus more on the classroomHarmonized frameworkKISS – common attainment targets/LOsLook at networking, on line publishing Support for schoolsAssessment for learning
Education:
The necessary Utopia Looking ahead Jacques DelorsTensions to be overcomeDesigning and building our common futureLearning throughout life: the heartbeat of societyThe stages and bridges of learning: a fresh approachGetting the reform strategies rightBroadening international co-operation in the global village
Education:the necessary Utopia Jacques DelorsLooking ahead.Tensions to be overcomeDesigning and building our common futureLearning throughout life: the heartbeat of societyThe stages and bridges of learning: a fresh approachGetting the reform strategies rightBroadening international co-operation in the global village
PREAMBLE
This draft (IT) ICT Policy for Education is based on the Government'srecognition of knowledge as a necessary basis for sustainable humandevelopment.
The Policy therefore seeks to define the roles of all parties in the new smartpartnerships of the public, private and community sectors required to drivethe far-reaching changes needed to achieve knowledge for all in the newInformation Age.
GOALS AND OBJECTIVES
Goals and objectives.
(1) The Minister shall, subject to available resources, establish and pursue for the education system general and specific goals and objectives as provided in subsections.
(2) The general goals and objectives which the Minister shallestablish and pursue are -
(a) the establishment of a varied, relevant andcomprehensive educationa
BACKGROUND
The OECS Education Reform Unit (OERU) has deferred the decision on whether or notGeneral Pedagogical Information (GPI) the software used in the Education ManagementInformation System (EMIS) pilot project should be rolled out to the entire education inSt. Lucia and to other education systems in the sub-region. This deferment followedcareful consideration of the report on the evaluation of the EMIS pilot project and thestage at which this evaluation was done, that is, prior to the generation of key school andnational reports.
In meantime, the OERU has decided to draft, through this consultancy, policies andguidelines for the procurement of EMIS solutions in order to increase the likelihood ofsuccess of future EMIS implementations that are undertaken by ministries of education(MOEs) in isolation and to promote the need for compatibility among EMIS solutionsselected by various MOEs.
The OECS Education Reform Unit has, over the years, supported a series of majorreforms in education in collaboration with the Ministry of Education (MOE) in each MemberState. The Eastern Caribbean Education Reform Project (ECERP), with financial assistancefrom the Canadian International Development Agency (CIDA), has implemented a number ofinitiatives aimed at strengthening the capacity of Eastern Caribbean States to plan and implementeducation reform through sub-regional cooperation. To this end, two such initiatives involve theidentification and use of a set of core education indicators and a sub-regional EducationManagement Information System (EMIS) for the OECS. These two initiatives provide the“framework and mechanisms” which we can use to monitor the performance of education in theOECS.