Policy Issues in Selecting Students for Higher Education in The Bahamas, 1975-1989

Authors

  • Eleanor Thompson The College of The Bahamas
  • Joyce Thompson The College of The Bahamas

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.15362/ijbs.v8i0.25

Abstract

A shared experience of developing countries is the compelling need to "catch up". Perhaps in no other area is this need so keenly felt as in education for the underdeveloped systems of education, a legacy of the colonial era, have proven to be incapable of making the necessary contribution to national and economic development. In an attempt to compensate for the past deprivations and inequities, policy makers seek to formulate and implement in their respective countries, educational policies which have as their goal the democratization of all levels of the education system. In these countries, in most instances, the democratization of higher education has created a demand so great that it has outstripped available supply. Further, it has given rise to the need to reconcile equality of access with the maintenance of standards of excellence. As a result, many countries have attempted this reconciliation through their selection procedures for admitting students to institutions of higher education (UNESCO Report, 1989). In developing countries national institutions of higher education face complex issues in the selection of students seeking admission. These issues are related directly to national education policies or emerge from the need of the institutions to be responsive both to societal demands and national priorities, within a context of resource constraints. This paper presents a discussion of some policy issues in the selection of students at the College of The Bahamas during the early period of its existence (The College is the sole state-funded institution for tertiary-level education in the Commonwealth of The Bahamas). Major issues examined were concerned with the reconciliation of: 1) equality of access with the maintenance of standards of excellence; 2) freedom of choice in programme selection (implicit in democratization) with the national imperatives of manpower needs. It will be the position of this paper that in developing countries, such as the Bahamas, issues in the selection of students for higher education emerge primarily from the national education policy which has as its goal the provision of equal higher education opportunities for all citizens. Selection issues come to the fore when the attempt is made by educational administrators to translate the broad principles of such a policy into practice. Often, the experience is that, when implemented, the policy has the opposite effect of that intended and, therefore, corrective action is considered necessary to redirect the goals of the policy or to redefine the policy itself.

Author Biographies

Eleanor Thompson, The College of The Bahamas

Research Fellow Research Unit The College of The Bahamas

Joyce Thompson, The College of The Bahamas

Senior Lecturer History Department Division of Social Sciences The College of The Bahamas

References

Adderley, P. L. (1989, July). Opening address. First In-country Workshop for Subject Specialists. Nassau, Bahamas [Unpublished manuscript]

Bethel, K. M. (1991). Higher education in The Bahamas. In W. Wickremasinghe (Ed.), Handbook of world education: A comparative guide to higher education & educational systems of the world (pp. 43-56). American Collegiate Service.

Coakley, L. N. (1975, June 26). Communication to Parliament on the report of a review team on the Bahamas education system entitled Educational development in an archipelagic nation]. Government Printing.

College of The Bahamas Act (1974) Bahamas (Ch. 37). https://dloc.com/AA00063315/00001

College of The Bahamas. (1974, December 3). Proposal to establish an Associate Degree : Academic Board Paper AB 75-01. [Unpublished policy document].

College of The Bahamas. (1989). Admissions statistics for 1987, 1988 and 1989 [Unpublished data].

Grindle, M. S. (Ed.). (1980). Politics and policy implementation in the Third World. Princeton University Press. http://www.jstor.org/stable/j.ctt1m323qj

Hayden, H. (1967). Higher education and development in South-east Asia. UNESCO and the International Association of Universities.

Husen, T. (1977). The community: Its nature and responsibilities. In S. K. Bailey (Ed.), Higher education in the world community. American Council on Education.

Irvine & Brooms. (1970). Report on the system of education in The Bahamas. [Unpublished document]

Leys, C. T., Waines, W. J., & Watts, G. E. (1968). Report on the development of a College of the Bahamas. University of the West Indies.

Ministry of Education and Culture. (1973). Focus on the future: White paper on education.

Proposed Policy for the Continued Development of The College of The Bahamas. Ministry of Education and Culture, Nassau, Bahamas, 1979.

Speech from the Throne at the Opening of Parliament. December 2, 1974. Commonwealth of The Bahamas.

UNESCO International Bureau of Education. (1989, January 9-17). International conference on education: 41st Session, Geneva: Final report. http://hdl.voced.edu.au/10707/42582

Downloads

Published

2008-02-18

How to Cite

Thompson, E., & Thompson, J. (2008). Policy Issues in Selecting Students for Higher Education in The Bahamas, 1975-1989. International Journal of Bahamian Studies, 8, 49–61. https://doi.org/10.15362/ijbs.v8i0.25

Issue

Section

Original Articles