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Teaching that ‘develops very strong critical thinking skills’ lacking- Harrigan-Underhill

- said VI can learn from countries like Singapore & Finland
Director of the HLSCC Institute of Education, Sandy M. Harrigan-Underhill said the local school system is missing is teaching in a way that develops very strong critical thinking skills; however, this is not unique to the Virgin Islands. Photo: Facebook
Talk show host Cromwell Smith aka Edju En Ka; believes the talk that the local school system is not adequately equipping students with sometimes basic skills to function effectively in the workplace may be a ploy by businesses to import labour. Photo: Facebook
Talk show host Cromwell Smith aka Edju En Ka; believes the talk that the local school system is not adequately equipping students with sometimes basic skills to function effectively in the workplace may be a ploy by businesses to import labour. Photo: Facebook
BAUGHERS BAY, Tortola, VI- Businesses in the Virgin Islands have sometimes complained about graduates from the local school system not being adequately equipped with basic skills to function effectively in the workplace.

For talk show host Cromwell Smith aka Edju En Ka; however, it may be a ploy by businesses to import labour.

Mr Smith; nevertheless, posed the question to former Principal of Elmore Stoutt High School (ESHS) and Director of the HLSCC Institute of Education, Sandy M. Harrigan-Underhill on the show ‘Umoja’ on ZBVI 780 AM on February 28, 2022.

Harrigan-Underhill said she has heard the statement by some businesses but it was difficult for her to assess the accuracy of it without any kind of data from a structured survey.

“As a business education teacher, I have heard it time and time again.”

New way of teaching needed- Harrigan-Underhill

Harrigan-Underhill admitted; however, that what the school system is missing is “teaching in a way that develops very strong critical thinking skills, and it is not just the BVI. It is not something that is unique to the BVI education system. It is in the United States, for example, and other countries.”

She mentioned that countries like Singapore and Finland have done a marvelous job in their education system and there are other countries that the VI can use as a model.

She said this includes using a sort of STEM method, “which would take Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics and use the principles of engineering, which is based on problem-solving using critical thinking skills.

“So they use the engineering model and they advance that as the basic underlying principle as to how they would teach in every discipline, whether it is Math, English or Science.”

Additionally, she said teaching should be made more student-centered.

According to Harrigan-Underhill, recent studies and best practices show that students learn best in a student-centered classroom that is designed for them to solve the problem. “And when you give them the problem to solve they have to come up with solutions and that whole experience forces them to tap into their critical thinking skills.”

Training required

The Director of HLSCC Institute of Training noted that there are teachers in the current system who are trained to teach using the STEM method and some teachers have been using it; “But if we want to establish a consistent pattern of how we do things, and a standard, training would be required.”

She said everything is a work in progress and she is certain the local education experts are currently putting plans in place to change the way students are taught.

Harrigan-Underhill also said the HLSCC Institute of Education will play “a very big role in that because even the way we would educate educators has to now underscore the importance of changing the traditional ways of thinking. So that would be a big role for the Institute of Education.”

21 Responses to “Teaching that ‘develops very strong critical thinking skills’ lacking- Harrigan-Underhill”

  • Stupes (08/03/2022, 11:48) Like (21) Dislike (0) Reply

    I left high school as a teacher because of a certain woman. Was never ever on the side of the teachers and was actively involved in their victimization- never in their enrichment. I watched her severely chastise this teacher til she started tearing up. She soon left too. I’d never forget that as long as I live. Many teachers have tried to step out the box to be firmly placed back in. Trust, they’re not really for the youth.

    • SMH (08/03/2022, 12:51) Like (22) Dislike (9) Reply
      The Caribbean people on a whole are very skilled in critical thinking and solving problems, but always overlooked because of jealousy or the notion that outsiders are smarter.
      • OK but… (10/03/2022, 10:57) Like (0) Dislike (0) Reply
        BVI politics and policies suggest that, if your assertion is true, that elected politicians routinely leave those skills at home.
  • 456 (08/03/2022, 11:49) Like (3) Dislike (51) Reply

    She will make a great minister of education

    • @ 456 (08/03/2022, 13:22) Like (21) Dislike (1) Reply
      Yeh in Dominica
    • @456 (08/03/2022, 14:43) Like (29) Dislike (0) Reply
      Not She! She was very much a part of the problem at ESHS! Their resume’ looks good on paper but the way they deal with people who are not a part of their clique is very troubling!
  • asking for a friend (08/03/2022, 13:03) Like (7) Dislike (0) Reply
    Why was she in vg behind funny man bar hopping
  • 10 - 4 (08/03/2022, 16:05) Like (4) Dislike (9) Reply
    Since you saw her then you should have asked her. I’m quite sure she would have given an appropriate response.
  • mhm (08/03/2022, 16:27) Like (6) Dislike (9) Reply
    You can see critical thinking is lacking just by watching the vaccination percentages.
  • HMMM (08/03/2022, 17:29) Like (10) Dislike (0) Reply
    All you have to do is look at the spelling and grammar in a lot posts and you’ll see that a lot is lacking.
  • don (08/03/2022, 18:54) Like (3) Dislike (0) Reply
    She was in the system for a few years. Why didn't she do something about it?
  • Stealth (08/03/2022, 19:18) Like (8) Dislike (1) Reply
    The BVI education system, indeed the region in general, was/is heavy on rote memorization, ie, history events and dates…..etc, but light on critical and rational thinking. The students have the talent and potential but they are victims of the process, the system. Some students excel overseas but too many falter as result of a lack of strong critical and rational thinking. This lack of critical and rational thinking is also evidenced at home. The education system needs a comprehensive revamping. The above “Round Rock” mentality still exist in the BVI, along with self-discrimination.
  • Gen Z (09/03/2022, 06:22) Like (1) Dislike (0) Reply
    @Stealth, what is “Above Round Rock” mentality? Is that an old time talk?
    • Stealth (09/03/2022, 17:33) Like (1) Dislike (0) Reply
      @Gen Z, my grandfather is Silent Generation (er), the generation between the Greatest Generation and Baby Boomer. Per my grandfather, in the early days (40s, 50s, early 60s), senior civil servants, teachers and police from the Leeward Islands, ie, Antigua, Anguilla, St.Kitts and Nevis and Montserrat were assigned to the BVI. The assignments cause some friction between the expats and locals. The friction was not because the people were expats but because some of the expats acted superior and rub locals the wrong way by asserting that they were on island because they (locals) were not capable. Thus, the term above Round Rock took on a negative connotation.

      Some of the above Round Rock mentality is still resident in the BVI. Many BVIslanders still have a sense of inferiority and tend to promote expatriates over locals. If the BVI wants to achieve any sense of empowerment and control of its own destiny, the people must unite to do it. Others are not going to do it for us.
      • @Stealth (10/03/2022, 07:06) Like (1) Dislike (0) Reply
        @Stealth, nothing change. What is old is new. Some still bring the same attitude. But it is Virgin Islanders fault, for we tear down one another, hoping that others will bring the BVI self-empowerment. No. Empowerment is a collective exercise. For others to stay powerful and influential, they have to keep you down. For example, Blacks being inferior species was a lie but to support the lie they had dehumanized, subjugate and exploit Blacks to sustain the lie. Blacks progress is the biggest threat to the superiority lie. We must pull the boat together in unison for empowerment. Shed the old enslaving conditioning, for it shackles you. Stop internalizing the conditioning.
  • Basic Math Skills (09/03/2022, 07:39) Like (2) Dislike (4) Reply
    Every eshs grad I’ve tried to hire could not pass a simple test of basic math. Critical thinking would be nice but I’ll settle for the basics for now.
    • Undercover Observer (09/03/2022, 14:36) Like (3) Dislike (0) Reply
      Every project, every process, is built on a strong foundation. Education is a building block, building on what is already known and possessed. Back in the day, chiren had to learn how to do sum, learn the 12 times table. Learn how to spell. Learn how to write composition and diagram sentences. Students should graduate from with at least basic skills. Very few students should be graduating now as functional illiterate. The territory cannot progress at this rate. Who to blame parents, school, government, churches, TV, IPad, cellphone, etc.
  • Really? (11/03/2022, 20:48) Like (1) Dislike (0) Reply
    Teachers that challenge the system and their students are made to feel uncomfortable until they leave. Parents complain and hound the minister because a teacher demands that her students show up to class on time, hand in work on time, come to class with their text, wear their uniform correctly etc. She is seen as a problem teacher becsuse she does not give into the nonsense thst keeps our children from excelling. All these things that some parents coin as 'what that have to do with learning' does hsve to do with learning. Don't try to understand just leaveeducation to the experts. Remember the wax-on wax-off scene in the movie Karate Kid? The child did not see the point in the exercise until much later. When they graduate and get hired in the bank will some of you go to the bank and try to have their supervisors fired for upholding the rules of the bsnk? Are you going to go on social media and bash the bank because your child wants to wear the banks uniform how they want and can't? YOU PARENTS ARE THE REASON YOuR CHILD IS NOT WHERE HE OR SHE NEEDS TO BE. Let the schools do their job and stop complaining. You chose to put your child in a particularschool then follow the damn rules, or leave!!
  • not she (14/03/2022, 11:11) Like (0) Dislike (0) Reply

    She need to stay in Altanta. She's nothing but trouble and mess.  Why didn't she di it when she was principal? 



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