
HEART/NSTA Trust Digitises Courses in CARICOM TVET Pilot
The HEART/NSTA Trust has digitised three of its Level Two courses under a pilot programme initiated by CARICOM to standardise Technical and Vocational Education and Training (TVET) across Member States.
Jamaica, Grenada, Barbados, and Trinidad and Tobago participated in the pilot.
The digitised programmes were uploaded to the Agency’s Moodle platform and have been available for delivery since May 18, 2026, across designated HEART/NSTA Trust institutions.
They include Waxing Technology Level Two at the HEART College of Beauty Services; Tiling Level Two at the HEART College of Construction Services; and Baker and Cake Technology Level Two at the HEART College of Hospitality Services.
Addressing the CARICOM TVET Digitalisation Project Closing Summit on May 27 at The Jamaica Pegasus hotel in New Kingston, HEART/NSTA Trust Managing Director, Dr. Taneisha Ingleton, emphasised the urgency and national importance of the initiative.
“As of July 2025, the Statistical Institute of Jamaica’s labour force data shows that approximately 25.5 per cent of Jamaica’s youth are not in employment, education or training. For HEART/NSTA Trust, that figure carries the weight of institutional responsibility. It is a mandate to expand access, strengthen flexibility and ensure that pathways to skills and certification reach those who need them most,” she stated.

Dr. Ingleton added that this development expands opportunities for skills training through asynchronous delivery, enhancing access and certification while increasing flexibility, participation, completion rates, regional reach, and self paced learning.
The Managing Director advised that by March 2027, HEART/NSTA Trust will digitise at least 10 additional programmes.
Vice Chair of HEART’s Board of Directors, Rayharna Wright, welcomed the partnership and reaffirmed the Board’s commitment to expanding accessible TVET delivery for Jamaicans.
“As a Board, we are especially encouraged by what this project signals for governance and institutional transformation. Digital TVET delivery strengthens reach. It allows us to extend learning opportunities beyond traditional physical limitations. It creates conditions for greater continuity, stronger learner support systems, enhanced quality assurance and more consistent delivery standards across institutions,” she said.
Deputy Programme Manager at the CARICOM Secretariat, Dr. Denise Stoney James, expressed gratitude to the development partners for their support in strengthening regional capacity.
“The platform that we have built and the educators that we have equipped are a result of strong partnership and shared vision,” she said.
Funding for the pilot was provided by GIZ (Deutsche Gesellschaft für Internationale Zusammenarbeit), the development agency of the Federal Republic of Germany.
Syndicated from Jamaica Information Service · originally published .
Legal context · powered by Jurifi
Get the legal angle on this story. Pick a prompt and Jurifi's AI will explain it using Jamaican law.
AI replies are based on Jamaican law via Jurifi. Not legal advice.
Other coverage

Education Minister Confident In HEART/NSTA Trust’s New Leadership
Ministry of Education and Youth
Bunting wants changes to HEART-Trust to reflect needs of evolving workforce Opposition Spokesman on Productivity, Efficiency and Competitiveness, Peter Bunting, has called for the HEART/NSTA-Trust to be transformed to meet the needs of a constantly evolving workforce. Bunting made the call on June 3 during his contribution to the Sectoral Debate in the House of Representatives. He described HEART as a “training institution whose curriculum evolves on a multiyear cycle, in an environment where the relevant AI driven technology changes every few months”. “This reality demands a fundamental rethink of workforce development policy. HEART has made important contributions to Jamaica’s development, but it was designed for a different era. The pace of technological change now requires continuous workforce adaptation,” Bunting added. He reminded that the Opposition has stated repeatedly that the time has come to transform HEART into a workforce development funding institution. “Rather than attempting to deliver training directly in every field, HEART should increasingly support employer-driven training initiatives, matching private sector investments in workforce development and allowing workers access to accredited training providers. “Such a model would ensure that training resources are aligned with actual labour market demand and not institutional assumptions about future labour demand,” he said. According to the opposition spokesman, “We must move from labour supply to talent supply. The winners over the next decade will be the countries that transform their workforce the fastest”.
Jamaica Observer
Bunting wants changes to HEART-Trust to reflect needs of evolving workforce
Jamaica Observer
Be Smart, Choose HEART/NSTA Trust Today. #skills #employment #training
HEART/NSTA Trust (Video)Watch
Force Focus | JDF Monthly Review – April 2026
JDF — Jamaica Defence Force (Video)Watch