Trinidad and Tobago: the technical training institutes
by N.J. MASSON
Four hundred and fifty three man-months of technical aid to
Trinidad and Tobagos two state-controlled technical institutes were
provided under the auspices of the European Development Fund (EDF) over the
period September 1978 to June 1989.
This took the form of assignment of 12 technical agents: five to
the John S. Donaldson Technical Institute (JSDTI) located in the capital city,
Port of Spain, in the north; and, seven to the San Fernando Technical Institute
(SFTI) in the City of San Fernando in the industrial south, roughly 50
kilometres away.
The latest model of SFTI which 50 its doors in 1980 is the
successor entity of two precursor institutes. The first of these was the Junior
Technical School which was transmuted as it were into the predecessor institute
of its current version in the mid 1950s. Its northern counterpart commenced
operations in the first quarter of 1963, long after it was built but less than a
year after Trinidad and Tobago had achieved political independence. While
perhaps not as spectacular a metamorphosis as SFTI the latter underwent
significant physical and organisational expansion by way of absorption of the
staff and facilities of the former USAID-sponsored Changuaramas Trade School in
1964, and later by the construction of a technical teacher-training facility
opened in 1979 for teachers of so-called specialised craft subjects in the
senior comprehensive schools of the general education system.
Both institutions fall under the direct supervision of an
organisational unit of the Ministry of Education, namely, Division of Vocational
and Technical Education and Training which also, in effect, functions as de
facto secretariat of the National Training Board, a non-statutory body entrusted
with a great deal of responsibility but with very little teeth.
In the early 1960s the institutes provided a wide variety of
courses at primary (craftsman) and middle manpower (technician) levels,
employing various kinds of vocational and technical organisation, e.g. full
time, day release, part-time day, evening, and so on. These were principally in
industrial and commercial and to a lesser extent in distributive and home-making
occupations, but also included, in the case of JSDTI, was a professional course
in land surveying, long since projected into the hallowed halls of academia at
the University of the West Indies, St. Augustine.
What the course of education and training, not to mention
industrial, development would otherwise have been, is perhaps a subject worthy
of serious study by those who write about the history of education, and
industrialisation, but suffice it to say that implementation of the new policy
measures meant that the technical institutes were to phase out their
craftsmens courses to the comprehensive school system and to expand and
deepen technician education and training programmes. The technical institutes
would have had to phase out their trade courses in any event as was initially
planned, but in the new order of things, mirabile dictu, occupational education
and training was to be incorporated into a general education milieu as a matter
of policy.
This then was the backdrop to the advent of EDF technical
assistance to the two institutes, sought in order to assist generally with the
introduction of new middle-level courses, inauguration of teacher training at
JSDTI and also to assist in the final commissioning of the spanking new
technical institute of the industrial capital and to set it on a path of
perdurable development. It was ushered in at JSDTI in September 1978,
specifically for the design and conduct of an upgrading course for supervisors
and engineering assistants engaged in the highway engineering section of the
Ministry of Works, Transport and Communications and concurrently for the
planning of an education and training course, for civil engineering technicians,
not hitherto offered in Trinidad and Tobago. It began at the former SFTI in
January 1979 when an instructor in welding technology assumed duties as a member
of the teaching establishment there but who, in the circumstances of
commissioning of the new institute, became quite heavily involved, more so than
in teaching, in the work of supervising the selection, reconditioning and
installation of laboratory and workshop equipment for practical work in welding
and fabricating, and heat treatment technology.
By the time the last agent left more than 10 years later, the
institutes between them had received in addition, but excluding technical
teacher training, assistants in the following: architectural drafting, quantity
surveying, automobile technology, industrial instrumentation, mechanical
engineering, production engineering, civil engineering, air-conditioning and
refrigeration technology and building construction.
Mandates of technical agents
Overall, the objectives of technical assistance were promoted on
the basis of individual contracts between agents and the European Association
for Cooperation. The relevant mandates reflected an interesting farrago of
duties from which one common element emerged, namely, responsibility for
teaching, but some agents were to become more heavily involved in this than
others.
Other duties correlated with technology transfer were included
to varying degrees. In the case of four agents, all mandated duties were exactly
the same as those stated in the job descriptions of regular full-time teaching
staff, and for these same agents there were no specifically assigned
responsibilities for curriculum development; nor were there any indications that
they had to train counterpart staff in any way whatsoever; they were teachers,
plain and simple, according to their remits. The job outlines of six other
agents included a specific responsibility for assistance with training either or
both counterpart teaching and ancillary support staff, the latter being either
laboratory technicians or workshop attendants; and they also had a
responsibility for assisting with curriculum development.
The average period of attachment of the technical agents was
approximately three years; the longest tour roughly was nine years. The
contractual periods of five agents were extended on more than one occasion in
the case of at least two of them. Although mandates invariably designated agents
as being assigned to one or other institute, some agents undertook work in both,
by request.
Impact of technical assistance
In the industrial cycle, raw materials are transformed into
finished products by the application of capital and skilled manpower (engineers,
technicians, craftsmen and the like). Considering an analogy of this dynamic
cycle in the world of occupational preparation is the typical scenario:
unskilled manpower (the raw materials) being transformed behaviourally into
skilled manpower (finished products) by means of the employment of capital
assets and the technical and technological capability (including the brains and
the skills) of the instructional staff. Training may thus be regarded as part of
the construct of the elusive concept, technology transfer. As in the case of
industry, where efficiency of any particular technology may be assessed by
estimating value-added for specific configurations of capital and manpower mix
(typically, value-added per worker and value-added per unit of capital
employed), we could similarly attempt to assess the efficiency of technology
transfer in a training situation. This could be done by determining, say, output
of skilled workers per man-hour of training, and numbers of skilled workers
trained per dollar of capital employed or as in this case, per dollar or ecu of
technical assistance provided.
The major benefits of technical assistance were projected to be
derived from transfer of technology to the local trainers of the new courses
being introduced. The kind of analysis referred to in the foregoing was rendered
impossible, however, because, with the exception of a few agents who kept
detailed records of their work, the necessary dates were unavailable. In the
circumstances, therefore, only an account is given of those aspects of
technology transfer as they relate to: (i) training of trainers and ancillary
staff; and, (ii) training needs in terms of curriculum design and associated
infrastructure.
Training of local trainers and ancillary staff
As far as limited institutional training resources permitted,
technical agents were assigned local counterpart teaching staff or ancillary
staff or both, sometimes even when this was not specifically indicated by
mandate, but more often than not on the basis of Hobsons choice. Suitably
qualified staff to teach, let alone serve as effective counterparts were, to put
it mildly, extremely thin on the ground. And in the majority of cases the local
staff assigned had little or no industrial experience and hardly any practical
skills. Under-staffing also meant that agents were frequently called upon to
perform marathon sessions of classroom teaching, leaving very little time for
anything else; so much chalk and talk that vital laboratory
demonstration exercises for example had often to be cancelled. Altogether, 12
trainer counterparts were assigned but at the time of writing only eight of
these were still in teaching at the institutes.
Constraints upon performance
The major factors which militated against the impact of
technical assistance were:
Because of the unavailability of local full-time staff, caused
by inability to fill vacancies or for other reasons, it became necessary for
some agents to undertake substitute teaching apart from meeting their own
teaching commitments, resulting in some cases in student contact instruction of
25 h-30 h per week. This excessive teaching load allowed little time for
anything else, with consequent losses in transfer-of-technology benefits. Staff
shortages also created difficulties with scheduling of training sessions with
counterpart staff.
Because of either the unavailability of equipment or acquisition
of unsuitable equipment, practical work including hands-on
training suffered with resultant diminution in the impact of teaching and
technology transfer. Training also suffered because of poor accommodation,
specifically the northern wing of JSDTI.
The absence of a fellowship component operating in concert with
technical assistance to supplement the work of technical agents with local
trainers, resulted in delays in implementing proposals for succession planning -
and deepening of the technology-transfer process.
Lack of coordination in implementation of technical assistance
Although there were present at the same time in Trinidad and
Tobago and for fairly long periods of time several agents involved in the work
of the two technical institutes, no attempts on the part of either governmental
or EEC agencies were made to integrate their work in a coordinated frame such
that the institutes might have derived the most from the efforts of the agents
acting in concert as one unit as opposed to individual inclination. Two examples
stand out: development of the education and training programmes for construction
and air-conditioning and refrigeration. Such a mechanism might have undoubtedly
reduced, if not altogether eliminated, the open conflicts between agents which
arose in the field over a number of technical issues.
Problems arose where the contracts of agents whose
responsibilities focused on teaching, ended before courses did, thereby
necessitating approaches to relevant authorities for extensions which did not
always come in a timely manner. Thus agents performances were adversely
affected.
By any reasonable standard of assessment, it could be concluded
that the John S. Donaldson and San Fernando Technical Institutes fairly
benefited from the technical assistance sponsored by the European Communities
over the period 1978 to 1989.
As these institutes move to the status of schools of advanced
science and technology, there can be little doubt that further technical
assistance from the EEC and possibly also from other multilateral and bilateral
agencies will be required in order that they may be restructured.
The experience gained from this, the first wave of technical
assistance, should serve as guidance for avoidance of glitches and pitfalls and
suggests that in the mounting of successor schemes, planning and implementation
should be done on the basis of a cooperative project involving the institutes,
relevant governmental agencies, representatives of industry and the local office
of the Delegate of the Commission of the European Communities, and which would
include twinning arrangements with suitable education and training institutions
abroad.
N.J.M.