The Ministry of Education is seeking greater partnerships with schools and private-sector businesses. This was announced by Education Minister Nyan Gadsby-Dolly on Tuesday at the cook-off rounds of the I-EAT competition sponsored by the Ministry of Education and by Nutrien, at the Preysal High School.
Gadsby-Dolly said young people are not taking full advantage of the opportunities available to them.
“The question is what do we do about it as a country because if we allow our young people to go astray then we are affecting the future of T&T and education is the biggest opportunity that is afforded to our young people but our education has to look different in 2024 from how it looked in 1960, 1965, because our children are different, our society is different.”
Gadsby-Dolly said the Ministry of Education cannot transform the education system without the assistance of the community and corporate T&T.
“We need the help of corporate T&T, civil society, we need the help of everyone to deal with our problem that we are facing and in this regard the Adopt-a-School programme was conceptualised to formalise the collaboration and partnership with the Ministry with corporate T&T,” she said.
She noted young people participating in educational activities augers well with their participation in academic activities.
“Our children, our students need experiences, they need to do different things and that's through education. Education is not about the certificate, it's about preparing citizens for life, and in T&T we want to develop the ideal T&T citizen.”
Over 70 primary and secondary schools participated in the I-EAT programme.
Only secondary schools participated in the cook-out rounds of the event. The five finalists in the cook-out round include Parvati Girls Hindu College, Morvant Laventille Secondary, Mucarapo West Secondary, Siparia West Secondary and Biche Secondary.