Shortwood Teachers' College marks Research Day 2026 on 140th anniversary
Shortwood Teachers' College staged Research Day 2026 as part of its 140th anniversary celebrations, drawing students, lecturers, and guests to examine how inquiry can strengthen teaching and public life. The programme carried the theme Heritage and Horizons: Reimagining Research for Tomorrow and featured exhibitions, panel discussions, and student projects spanning departments such as mathematics, science, and library studies.
Speakers framed the day as more than an academic ritual. Participants said research should identify institutional and societal challenges, test responses, and move findings into practice. Several linked that approach to Jamaica's ongoing overhaul of pre-service teacher education, shaped by recommendations from the Jamaica Education Transformation Commission. Work through an oversight committee and subcommittees is reviewing matriculation standards, programme design, practical teaching experience, and standards for teacher educators so graduates can meet modern classroom demands.
Fourth-year students described research as central to stronger lesson delivery and to answering questions about how education is changing. Others stressed bridging knowledge gaps, building critical thinking in a data-driven environment, and distinguishing reliable information from AI-generated material. Mental health surfaced repeatedly: contributors argued that teachers and pupils need psychological readiness before learning can take root, and that mental wellness should sit alongside research skills in preparation for the classroom.
Male teacher recruitment and student safety also featured. One contributor said more men in schools offering positive role models could help reduce violent incidents affecting students. Susan Buchanan, representing the Belleview facility on Windward Road in Mona—described in the segment as Jamaica's only psychiatric hospital and a leading centre in the English-speaking Caribbean—spoke about advocacy work to educate the public on mental illness, spot early warning signs, and keep people supported in the community where possible.
Regional and policy voices urged Caribbean teacher-training colleges to set a global standard, deepen cross-island partnerships, and align studies with local realities rather than leaving reports unused in journals. Special education advocates called for research findings to reach schools during events such as disability awareness week and autism awareness month. College leaders said a strategic goal is to institutionalise a culture of research across STEAM, the arts, and TVET, using student work to inform policy in a data-driven institution.
Closing reflections tied the forum to national development aims, including Vision 2030, and to the need for funding, partnerships, and integrity so research shapes decisions rather than gathering dust.
Syndicated from PBC Jamaica (Video) · originally published .
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