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Education

Ministry of Education launches 2024 Season of Scholarship Applications

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Providenciales, Turks and Caicos Islands, 6th March, 2024– The Ministry of Education, Youth, Sports and Social Services would like to announce the launch of the 2024 scholarship application season which opens on March 11th 2024. This initiative offers invaluable opportunities for Turks and Caicos Islanders to apply for scholarship opportunities within the Ministry’s priority areas.  For more information on our priority areas please visit our website at https://gov.tc/scholarshipsecretariat

Estimated awards within each award category as follows: –

  • Standard Financial Assistance ………………………………………………….(55) including:

o    Cadet Financial Assistance …………………………………………………(2)

o    The TCI Hope Award …………………………………………………………..(2)

o    Intl. Associate’s Degree / A-Level awards ……………………… (3)

o    TCICC Academic Excellence Award …………………………………..(7-preselected)

  • Athletic Financial Assistance ……………………………………………………..(3)
  • National Scholars Awards ………………………………………………………….(4 -preselected)
  • Special Needs Students Financial Assistance Award ……………(2)
  • BWIC – GCE Advanced Level …………………………………………………….(3)

Explanatory notes in the link provided above outlines the criteria for each award category.

Our new application method

Our new application method for financial assistance marks a departure from traditional email or paper submissions; all applications must now be submitted exclusively through tcig-nefa.grantplatform.com/. Utilizing the Good Grants platform, an internationalized grant-making platform, applicants can easily apply online by clicking the provided link.

Dates

  • Application deadline: 30th May, 2024 at [11:59 pm] [EST]
  • Please note the application deadline, this date is final and there will be no extensions provided for the initial submission. The system will automatically prevent application submission after the deadline.
  • There is an extension date for the below documents IF NECESSARY up to June 30th.
    • Acceptance Letter
    • Transcript
  • Successful applicants will be notified in early August 2024.

Support

If you have any questions about the application process, please contact the Scholarship Secretariat Unit by email to [scholarshipsecretariat@tciedu.tc]. DO NOT SEND APPLICATION SUBMISSION TO THIS ADDRESS.

  • You may edit your application after submitting, up until the deadline date.
  • Please make sure all your personal details are entered accurately, including contact details, so that we may contact you if your application is successful.
  • You are allowed to submit to more than one category, as long as the work submitted meets the criteria. However you can only be awarded 1 award.
  • You can use the ‘copy’ feature to create a copy of your application and change the category as required.

Caribbean News

More Than 100,000 Candidates Registered for 2025 CXC Examinations

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Kingston, Jamaica, April 15, 2025 – More than 100,000 candidates from across the region have been registered to sit more than 600,000 subject entries in the Caribbean Examinations Council (CXC) May/June 2025 external tests.

This was disclosed by Registrar and Chief Executive Officer (CEO), Dr. Wayne Wesley, during a hybrid press conference on Tuesday (April 15), which coincided with the start of this year’s examination period.

It gets under way with the customary oral exams in modern foreign languages, including Spanish, French and Portuguese.

Dr. Wesley informed that the CXC team has worked hard to ensure that all is in place for the successful administration of the examinations, and offered best wishes to all the candidates.

“This will be another mammoth undertaking by CXC, but we are equal to the task. This is the culmination of many months of sacrifice, learning, studying and preparation. I encourage all our candidates to apply themselves and give their best effort. As you approach these examinations, remember to be cool, to be calm and to be confident that your preparation will take you through. You’ve got this,” he said.

Meanwhile, Dr. Wesley advised that, effective 2026, all examinations administered during the January sessions will be offered electronically, either as e-assessment or hybrid e-assessment.

“In situations where candidates are unable to write their examinations electronically, they will be accommodated in the May/June sessions, where both paper-based and e-assessment will be administered,” he said.

Dr. Wesley assured that CXC will continue to execute its digital transformation strategy, specifically relating to the electronic assessment.

Meanwhile, CXC’s Director of Operations, Dr. Nicole Manning, informed that written exams for the 2025 Caribbean Secondary Education Certificate (CSEC) and Caribbean Advanced Proficiency Examination (CAPE) tests commence on May 1. These will end on June 6 for CSEC and June 11 for CAPE.

 

Contact: Chris Patterson

Release: JIS

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Education

DRCS HOSTS 2ND ANNUAL NATIONAL HIGH SCHOOL SPEECH COMPETITION

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L-R (Anique Archer, Hon. Rachel Taylor, Rerriana Nikes, Damian Missick, Hon. Otis Morris, and DRCS Staff)

Providenciales, Turks and Caicos Islands – Tuesday, 8 April 2025: The Department of Rehabilitation and Community Supervision (DRCS), in proud partnership with the Rotary Club of Providenciales and Toastmasters International, hosted its 2nd Annual High School Speech Competition under the theme: “Turning Setbacks into Comebacks: The Power of a Second Chance.”

There were eight (8) schools from across the Turks and Caicos Islands that participated in this year’s event. These students spoke with eloquence, conviction, and compassion as they explored the importance of offender rehabilitation and the transformative power of second chances.  The top three winners of the competition were:

  • 1st Place: Reriana Nikes – Clement Howell High School
  • 2nd Place: Anique Archer – Maranatha Academy
  • 3rd Place: Damian Missick – Louise Garland Thomas High School

Director of Rehabilitation, Mr Jaron Harvey, shared his pride in the students and the broader mission of the event: “This competition is a reflection of how deeply our young people understand the issues of justice, rehabilitation, and redemption. Their words challenge us to build systems that don’t just punish, but also restore. Seeing students from every island come together to speak so boldly about second chances and rehabilitation reminds us why we do this work. The future of our country is in good hands.”

Minister of Public Safety and Utilities, Hon. Otis Morris, said: “I extend congratulations to all the students who participated in this year’s competition. You represented your schools and your islands with distinction, and your voices added incredible depth to this national conversation. The theme of this year’s event speaks directly to the heart of justice and hope. We all make mistakes, but none of us are beyond the reach of grace. Rehabilitation is not solely about punishment; it’s about helping individuals find their way back to society as better people. When we support rehabilitation, we address crime at its root and create a pathway for true transformation.”

The 2nd Annual Speech Competition reflects DRCS’s ongoing mission to change the national narrative around rehabilitation and to foster youth engagement in the national dialogue on crime.  As part of the Department’s observance of Second Chance Month, the competition serves both as a platform for student expression and as a call to action for the wider community.

The Department extends special thanks to all participating schools, teachers, judges, partners, and sponsors who made the event a success.

CAPTIONS:

1st insert: DRCS Staff and Hon. Otis Morris

2nd insert: L-R (Hon. Otis Morris, 1st Place Winner- Rerianna Nikes, Mrs. Roma Stubbs President of Rotary Club of Providenciales,

and Hon. Rachel Taylor)

3rd insert: Participants of the Speech Competition

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Education

Speech Competition Speech: Looking Beyond the Past—The Power of Second Chances

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By A’Navia Mantock- H. J. Robinson High School

 

Good morning, everyone, picture this, you’re teetering on a cliff’s edge. Wind SCREAMING in your ears, rocks cracking under your soles. One misstep and you’re gone-swallowed in the round by the dark. Now, swap that cliff, for your life—your future.ONE mistake, ONE slip and it’s over, not because you fell but because no one threw you a rope. —hanging in the balance because of a single mistake.

Imagine a world where your worst day is your only day. A world where your worst moment is the only thing people remember about you. Who’d survive that? Not me. Not you. Not a soul in this room.

The truth is, we all make mistakes. Some big, some small, but none of us are perfect. Yet, too often, society is quick to judge and slow to forgive. We define people by their worst decisions instead of their potential for growth. But history, and even our own experiences, prove that people are more than their failures.

A powerful example of this is found in the life of King David yes, the Goliath-slaying, harp-strumming legend.

He wasn’t just a great leader—he was also deeply flawed.

In fact, it’s not just ancient kings or Thomas Edison or Oprah Winfrey, but right here, from Middle Caicos, we’ve got Wilkie Arthur—son of the soil, proof in the living flesh. Prison stamped his past, and when he walked out, the world didn’t care he’d changed. Doors slammed. Jobs? Pity gigs, not real shots. But Wilkie didn’t sulk—he hustled. Though he had changed for the better, society still judged him by his past. Opportunities were scarce, and the few he received were not based on qualifications but on pity. Yet, he embraced them with gratitude.

A few months after his release, journalist Deandra Hamilton, recognizing his firsthand courtroom experience, invited him to freelance journalism covering court & crime for her newspaper. Around the same time, a kind-hearted woman at a hotel offered him a job washing dishes at night. Long hours at Subway Café, scrubbing dishes, and late nights with Magnetic Media, typing up court reports with cramped hands, brought little pay but immense wisdom. These experiences, though short-lived—one lasting a few months, the other a year—gave him a sense of purpose and some sort of financial stability at the time.

Encouraged by these small but significant steps, Mr. Arthur took a leap of faith, secured his business license and is now the face of Eagle Legal News Network. Today, he stands as an exceptional investigative journalist, impacting not just individuals but our entire nation. His journey of redemption has taken him beyond local recognition to international platforms like NBC, ABC, CBS, and Fox News.

More than just a success story, he is a testament to the power of second chances—investing in the youth, sharing his journey, and proving that a person’s past does not define their future, he’s rewriting the script, lifting our youth, showing the past isn’t the final word.

That’s also exactly what the Department of Social Development believes in—giving young people a real chance to rise above their past and build a brighter future. Through safe and supportive residential facilities, mentorship programs, and hands-on vocational training, they provide not just a second chance but the tools to make it count. Whether it’s counseling, life skills training, or simply having someone believe in them, these initiatives help young people regain confidence, break free from old cycles, and step boldly into new opportunities, because at the heart of it all is a simple truth: everyone deserves the chance to rewrite their story.

Now let’s talk about the game-changer—the Department of Rehabilitation and Community Services. This isn’t just bureaucracy at work; this is transformation in action. While some see second chances as a risk, this department sees them as a necessity. Because real rehabilitation isn’t about watching from the sidelines—it’s about rolling up your sleeves and doing the work. Anger management, substance abuse recovery, conflict resolution—these aren’t just programs, they’re lifelines. They’re proof that people aren’t defined by their worst mistakes, but by their courage to change. And when we invest in that change? We don’t just rebuild lives—we rebuild communities. That’s how you turn a system of supervision into a movement of second chances

Only imagine if all these individuals had been judged solely by their lowest moments—how much greatness would the world and this country have missed out on?

Society writes people off with permanent ink but a second chance is written in pencil ready to be rewritten at any time.

Why do we chain people to their yesterday? A kid’s mistake at 16 shouldn’t bury them at 60. If we only see where they’ve been, not where they’re headed, we’re stealing talent, dreams, redemption—the blood this world needs to thrive.

Second chances are not just about receiving them—they are about giving them. We all have the power to see the best in others, to lift them up instead of tearing them down.

We don’t drown in our mistakes; we drown when others refuse to let us swim back to the surface.

So,——- let’s challenge ourselves to do better. Let’s stop defining people by their worst days and start believing in their best ones. Because the greatest success stories don’t come from those who never failed, but from those who refused to be defined by their failures. The past is a chapter, not the whole book it’s time to turn the page. Thank you.

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