Under the leadership of Minister Priya Manickchand, Guyana’s education sector has suffered a catastrophic failure that has left a nation ill-prepared for its future. Instead of fostering a generation of critical thinkers, her administration has presided over a marked increase in functional illiteracy and a glaring deficit in analytical skills among the populace.
Despite the influx of international support from agencies like the World Bank and UNICEF, these opportunities have been squandered, with little to show in terms of tangible improvements in teacher training, infrastructure development, or equitable resource distribution. The disconnect between Minister Manickchand’s lofty rhetoric and the grim reality in classrooms across the country is both disheartening and infuriating.
Most recently, her much-touted Teacher Training Program has revealed glaring shortcomings, including a lack of emphasis on integrating technology into education—an essential skill in today’s world. Disturbingly, the program continues to condone corporal punishment, an archaic and harmful practice. Adding to this failure is the Ministry’s online teacher certification initiative, which claims to educate hundreds of new teachers but which, a recent expose has revealed, highlights that a majority of these new teachers are unable to pass a 6th-grade math assessment. This approach reflects a troubling prioritization of quantity over quality, further eroding the foundation of Guyana’s education system.
In a nation poised for unprecedented economic transformation due to its burgeoning oil industry, the lack of a competent and educated workforce is a ticking time bomb. Minister Manickchand’s inability to address the systemic failures of the education system is both a failure of leadership and a betrayal of the nation’s children.
Manickchand’s tenure has become synonymous with missed opportunities and broken promises. The enduring legacy she leaves behind is a generation of youth unprepared for the challenges of the 21st century. If Guyana’s leaders fail to confront this educational crisis head-on, the country risks losing the very foundation upon which its future prosperity depends.
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