Dem a waste people money build library !
Before dem dig up the cricket pitch and lay down a landing strip and teach people how fi fly !
Dead Paradigm thinking weighing down di school..
No mystery.. look at the kinds of non-visionary people dem spitting out..
http://www.jamaicaobserver.com/news/..._CHALLENGE.asp
Speaking of which.. mi tink dem seh black people guh deh.. mi ah look HARD inna dah picktcha and all NOW...
Ah Bwoy.
Before dem dig up the cricket pitch and lay down a landing strip and teach people how fi fly !
Dead Paradigm thinking weighing down di school..
No mystery.. look at the kinds of non-visionary people dem spitting out..
http://www.jamaicaobserver.com/news/..._CHALLENGE.asp
Speaking of which.. mi tink dem seh black people guh deh.. mi ah look HARD inna dah picktcha and all NOW...
Ah Bwoy.

(From left) Campion College students Leon McDonald, Ta-shan Adams, Shaniel May, Sherry Perrier and Aaron Ramsay smile for Career & Education's lens on a recent visit to the institution. (Photos: Naphtali Junior) It's an enormous challenge for the St Andrew-based co-educational institution of 1,450 students which has an annual budget of $149 million. Of this amount, Government contributes $124 million, leaving the school's administration to collect $25 million from auxiliary fees, donations from the private sector, alumni and parents, rental of its premises and other fund-raising activities.
BARRETT... many schools that people do not consider to be rich have better infrastructure than we do "The perception that Campion is a rich school is very strong. Perhaps that was the case in the past when we had a powerful parent body which enabled the school to fund itself. Now a growing percentage of our student body comes from working-class families," principal Grace Baston told Career & Education on Thursday.
A section of Campion College's campus in St Andrew, where efforts are currently being made to safeguard the institution's financial future and, by extension, the quality of education it delivers to students. "Campion is successful because of the quality of its teachers and what I call a smooth transition in leadership," Reid said. "Each leadership team has built on what was there before. Mr MacKay (John MacKay, Reid's predecessor) laid the foundation with such things as employing a Dean of Discipline and a Dean of Studies, and the use of data to inform instruction. These practices have been entrenched at Campion for more than 30 years and the Ministry (of Education) is adopting some of them now."
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