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  • More women, youths at UWI

    Career & Education

    BY LUKE DOUGLAS Sunday Observer reporter
    editorial@jamaicaobserver.com

    Sunday, September 09, 2007


    THE 'feminisation' of the region's premier tertiary education institution - the University of the West Indies (UWI) - is continuing in earnest, with males accounting for only 18 per cent of the new students registered at the Mona campus for the 2007/08 academic year.

    The population at the institution is also getting more youthful. According to UWI Mona's new principal, Professor Gordon Shirley, 68 per cent of the new students registered were 20 years old or younger, compared to 56 per cent of those who fell into that age group last year.

    New medical student of the University of the West Indies (UWI), Mona, Hnin Hnin Oo (left) meets Vice-Chancellor, Professor E Nigel Harris at the welcome and matriculation ceremony at the Jamaica campus last Thursday. Sharing in the occasion is new campus registrar Dr Camille Bell-Hutchinson. Hnin Hnin, who did the symbolic signing of the register on behalf of her fellow new students, is a graduate of Campion College who received eight distinctions in the Caribbean Advanced Proficiency Examinations (CAPE). She previously earned eight distinctions in the Caribbean Secondary Education Certificate (CSEC) while at St Mary High School. She was born in Burma, now called Myanmar, and moved to Jamaica with her parents when she was 10 years old. Her father is a surgeon.

    Shirley, who was addressing students at the university's matriculation and welcome ceremony last Thursday, also noted that the number of new students had grown from 1,800 last year to 2,300 this year.

    Underscoring what he described as the "incontestably high standard" of the institution, Shirley noted that "the UWI degree is the standard of excellence in education in the (Caribbean) region".

    Meanwhile, the principal noted that as part of the strategic reform of UWI, there would be an overhaul of the entire curriculum over the next two to three years. The recommendations coming out of this reform process, he said, would be implemented a year after its completion.

    The principal encouraged the new students to pursue graduate programmes at UWI on the completion of their degrees.

    Also speaking at the function was UWI Vice Chancellor, Professor E Nigel Harris, who expressed dissatisfaction at the level of integration among students from the different campuses.

    To help address this, the vice chancellor said that the university had developed the Caribbean Integration Programme, which would allow students registered at the Mona campus to spend up to one semester at another UWI campus, doing courses in keeping with their programme of study.

    He noted that during the last academic year, more than 38,000 students were enrolled across the entire university, which opened its doors with 33 medical students at Mona in 1948.

    Beyond that, Harris said that the number of students enrolled at UWI had grown by 100 per cent in the last five years, and that the Mona and St Augustine campuses were about equal in their number of students.

    Long-time campus registrar, Anthony Falloon, used the occasion to announce his retirement, and introduced to the gathering the new campus registrar, Dr Camille Bell-Hutchinson, who chaired the programme.
    Last edited by Karl; September 9, 2007, 11:27 AM.

  • #2
    Originally posted by Exile View Post
    Career & EducationBY LUKE DOUGLAS Sunday Observer reporter editorial@jamaicaobserver.com
    Sunday, September 09, 2007


    THE 'feminisation' of the region's premier tertiary education institution - the University of the West Indies (UWI) - is continuing in earnest, with males accounting for only 18 per cent of the new students registered at the Mona campus for the 2007/08 academic year.
    The population at the institution is also getting more youthful. According to UWI Mona's new principal, Professor Gordon Shirley, 68 per cent of the new students registered were 20 years old or younger, compared to 56 per cent of those who fell into that age group last year.
    New medical student of the University of the West Indies (UWI), Mona, Hnin Hnin Oo (left) meets Vice-Chancellor, Professor E Nigel Harris at the welcome and matriculation ceremony at the Jamaica campus last Thursday. Sharing in the occasion is new campus registrar Dr Camille Bell-Hutchinson. Hnin Hnin, who did the symbolic signing of the register on behalf of her fellow new students, is a graduate of Campion College who received eight distinctions in the Caribbean Advanced Proficiency Examinations (CAPE). She previously earned eight distinctions in the Caribbean Secondary Education Certificate (CSEC) while at St Mary High School. She was born in Burma, now called Myanmar, and moved to Jamaica with her parents when she was 10 years old. Her father is a surgeon.
    Shirley, who was addressing students at the university's matriculation and welcome ceremony last Thursday, also noted that the number of new students had grown from 1,800 last year to 2,300 this year.
    Underscoring what he described as the "incontestably high standard" of the institution, Shirley noted that "the UWI degree is the standard of excellence in education in the (Caribbean) region".
    Meanwhile, the principal noted that as part of the strategic reform of UWI, there would be an overhaul of the entire curriculum over the next two to three years. The recommendations coming out of this reform process, he said, would be implemented a year after its completion.
    The principal encouraged the new students to pursue graduate programmes at UWI on the completion of their degrees.
    Also speaking at the function was UWI Vice Chancellor, Professor E Nigel Harris, who expressed dissatisfaction at the level of integration among students from the different campuses.
    To help address this, the vice chancellor said that the university had developed the Caribbean Integration Programme, which would allow students registered at the Mona campus to spend up to one semester at another UWI campus, doing courses in keeping with their programme of study.
    He noted that during the last academic year, more than 38,000 students were enrolled across the entire university, which opened its doors with 33 medical students at Mona in 1948.
    Beyond that, Harris said that the number of students enrolled at UWI had grown by 100 per cent in the last five years, and that the Mona and St Augustine campuses were about equal in their number of students.
    Long-time campus registrar, Anthony Falloon, used the occasion to announce his retirement, and introduced to the gathering the new campus registrar, Dr Camille Bell-Hutchinson, who chaired the programme.

    Big problem, there needs to be concerted effeorts to balance the sexes. males need affirmative action...otherwise we have a big roblem down the road.

    Comment


    • #3
      man this post is almost as crazy as your "Bruce will detribalise Jamaica" post
      Karl commenting on Maschaeroni's sending off, "Getting sent off like that is anti-TEAM!
      Terrible decision by the player!":busshead::Laugh&roll::Laugh&roll::eek::La ugh&roll:

      Comment


      • #4
        Willi this is more than affirmative action, this is the wholesale "ethnic cleansing" of the black race. Which black male leads the fight for human rights the world over?

        IF you control dem with the media and the education system along with guns inna dem own yard then you wont' have to worry about deporting them from England.

        I read in the paper where a reader said that "crime fighting" should have been higher on the two parties agenda.

        http://www.jamaica-gleaner.com/glean.../letters1.html

        However they have us 'distracted" with everyday mundane crap.

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