博客

  • Police visit SDA school for World Boys Day

    Police visit SDA school for World Boys Day

    To mark the annual celebration of World Boys Day, two officers from the St. Joseph District of the Commonwealth of Dominica Police Force (CDPF) – Sergeant Gachette and Constable Jules – recently paid a special visit to Western District Seventh-day Adventist School. The on-campus engagement centered on connecting with students, with targeted attention to the school’s population of young boys, according to an official release published by the CDPF.

    During their interaction with students, the law enforcement officers delivered talks centered on core life values that lay the foundation for healthy adulthood. Key topics included the critical role of personal discipline, respect for rules and authority, consistent positive conduct, and the long-term impact of intentional, constructive choices made during youth. Beyond sharing guidance, the officers also offered encouragement to the boys in attendance, urging them to stay focused on their educational and personal goals, maintain mutual respect for peers and community members, and work toward growing into accountable, contributing citizens of Dominica.

    In its official statement, the CDPF reaffirmed its longstanding commitment to building stronger, more trusting bonds between police and local communities. This school visit forms part of a broader portfolio of proactive community policing projects, mentorship opportunities, and youth outreach schemes designed to leave a constructive, lasting mark on the lives of Dominica’s younger generation. “Together, we can help shape a brighter future for our youth,” the statement emphasized.

    Observed globally every year on May 16, the International Day of the Boy Child – often referred to as World Boys Day – was created to shine a spotlight on the unique challenges boys face around the world, while elevating conversations around their health and overall well-being. The annual observance also serves to recognize the meaningful, often underrepresented contributions boys make to their families, local communities, and societies at large. Events like the CDPF’s school visit align with the day’s core mission by investing in boys’ development and creating spaces for open, supportive engagement with trusted community leaders.

  • Pope Leo XIV Apologises for Church’s Historic Role in Slavery

    Pope Leo XIV Apologises for Church’s Historic Role in Slavery

    In a groundbreaking step that marks the clearest acknowledgment of institutional wrongdoing to date, Pope Leo XIV, the global leader of the Roman Catholic Church, has delivered the strongest papal apology in history for the Church’s centuries-long entanglement with the transatlantic slave trade and systems of human enslavement.

    The unprecedented apology was included as a core passage in the pope’s first-ever encyclical, *Magnifica Humanitas* (translated as “Magnificent Humanity”), a major teaching document released publicly on May 25, 2026. In the text, Leo XIV openly admits the Vatican and global Church leadership failed morally on the issue of slavery, acknowledging that for hundreds of years, Church authorities did not just remain silent but often actively legitimized systems of subjugation that targeted and enslaved non-Christian populations across the globe.

    “For this moral failure, and for the centuries of unspeakable suffering that this practice inflicted on millions of people, I sincerely ask for pardon in the name of the entire Church,” the pope wrote, adding that the legacy of enslavement remains “an open wound in Christian memory that we can no longer ignore or minimize.”

    The encyclical also lays out a detailed historical accounting of the Church’s complicated relationship with slavery, confirming that medieval ecclesiastical institutions themselves owned enslaved people, and noting that the Church only issued a “formal, absolute, and universal condemnation” of the practice in the 19th century under Pope Leo XIII.

    While previous popes including John Paul II and Francis had publicly condemned slavery and offered apologies for historical complicity in injustice, analysts and religious scholars note that Pope Leo XIV’s statement is unprecedented in its explicit acceptance of institutional responsibility by the Vatican as a governing body. Many observers view the apology as a landmark step toward reckoning with one of the darkest chapters in Christian history.

    Beyond its address of historical injustice, *Magnifica Humanitas* also turns to contemporary ethical challenges, including the unregulated growth of artificial intelligence and emerging forms of economic exploitation embedded in today’s global supply chains. The pope issued a warning that these modern systems risk repeating the dehumanizing harms of historical slavery if global leaders and institutions do not put human dignity at the center of policy and innovation.

  • Pope Leo Warns AI Could Fuel Warfare

    Pope Leo Warns AI Could Fuel Warfare

    In a landmark first major theological address that marks one of the Vatican’s most forceful engagements with emerging technology to date, Pope Leo XIV has sounded an urgent alarm over the unregulated expansion of artificial intelligence, warning that ungoverned AI development could dramatically escalate global conflict if left to operate without strict ethical oversight.

    Released on May 25, 2026, the 235-page encyclical — titled *Magnifica Humanitas*, or “Magnificent Humanity” — lays out a comprehensive framework for governing AI, pushing back against concentrated control of the transformative technology and demanding the strictest possible ethical limits on its use in military applications. The pontiff argues that AI should not remain concentrated in the hands of a small circle of powerful corporate or geopolitical actors, a structure that he says risks exacerbating inequality and raising the stakes of international confrontation.

    Beyond AI policy, the encyclical upends long-held religious teaching on armed conflict, declaring that the traditional Christian concept of “just war” is no longer fit for the modern era. Pope Leo stresses that military force may only be justified when used in the strictest definition of self-defense, pointing to the persistent, catastrophic harm that unregulated violence and weapons inflicts on innocent civilian communities worldwide.

    The pontiff emphasizes that AI’s influence already extends deep into the fabric of global society, reshaping how individuals make choices and how communities function. Rejecting the common argument that AI is a morally neutral tool, he writes that the technology inherently carries the values, priorities, and biases of the developers and groups that build and control it. To counterbalance these risks, the encyclical calls for a sweeping set of reforms: robust legal oversight of AI development, proactive protections for workers whose jobs are displaced by automation, more equitable distribution of the economic benefits generated by AI, and binding safeguards to protect core human dignity.

    Pope Leo also takes direct aim at transhumanist and posthumanist ideologies, which advocate for merging human biology with machine technology or overcoming inherent human limitations through technological innovation. He argues that these movements erode the core value of human life as it exists naturally, a position that aligns with longstanding Vatican teachings on the integrity of the human person.

    Political and religious analysts have widely framed the encyclical as a defining statement for Pope Leo’s papacy, cementing the Vatican’s role as a leading moral voice in the global conversation about AI governance amid rapid, often unregulated advances in the technology. The document arrives as policymakers around the world grapple with how to balance AI’s transformative potential for public good against its growing risks to security, equality, and human autonomy.

  • Cepal earns call-up to West Indies fast bowling camp

    Cepal earns call-up to West Indies fast bowling camp

    A rising young cricket talent from Saint Lucia is set to get a career-defining opportunity to showcase his skills on a regional stage, after earning an invitation to Cricket West Indies’ prestigious Fast Bowling Assessment Camp scheduled to run from June 1 to 11, 2026, at Antigua’s Coolidge Cricket Ground and High Performance Centre in St John’s.

    Cepal, a gifted right-arm fast bowler, will join a cohort of the most promising young pace bowling prospects from across the Caribbean at the 10-day development program. All on-site training and evaluation sessions will be led by Ottis Gibson, a highly respected Cricket West Indies pace bowling consultant who boasts an impressive resume as a former international Test player and a World Cup-winning head coach.

    The assessment camp was developed as a targeted initiative within Cricket West Indies’ player development framework, focused on identifying emerging fast bowling talent, evaluating their current skill sets, and providing tailored support to nurture their growth ahead of future red-ball and white-ball international and domestic cricket competitions.

    Cepal’s invitation to the camp came after a working visit to Saint Lucia earlier this year by Ramesh Subasinghe, head coach of the West Indies Academy. Subasinghe traveled to the island to run professional development workshops for coaches at the Saint Lucia Cricket High Performance Centre, helping upskill local instructors to better support emerging young athletes across the country.

    While on island, Subasinghe also attended multiple local competitive matches to scout for new talent, including the final of the national PM Cup, where Cepal took home the tournament’s Most Valuable Player award for his standout bowling performances. That on-field display caught Subasinghe’s eye and secured the young bowler’s spot at the upcoming regional camp.

    In an exclusive interview with local publication St Lucia Times on the sidelines of the player draft for the upcoming Clash of the Leatherbacks domestic tournament, Cepal shared his excitement about the once-in-a-lifetime opportunity. Cepal, who will lead defending champions Snapping Strikers in the Babonneau-based competition as captain, said he feels deeply grateful for the backing he has received from his local cricket community.

    “I feel really good, you know. Just playing with Babonneau, the players are always backing me. Just being able to go out there and execute my abilities, I just feel really good,” Cepal told reporters.

    Jervaughn Charles, head coach of the Babonneau Cricket Team, has worked with Cepal since the bowler was a primary school student and still coaches him on the Babonneau senior side. In an interview, Charles highlighted that the young bowler’s greatest competitive strength has always been his unflinching fearlessness and willingness to take calculated risks.

    “I believe one of the things that really stands out to me is his fearlessness. I remember Joshua in primary school, and me being a teacher there. I actually bowled to Joshua, and he had this fearless attitude where I remember he dil-scooped me over the school one day in primary school. And it just goes to show that he’s not afraid to take risks and put in the hard yards. And when other persons are afraid to execute their skills, Joshua is always ready to do what he has to do,” Charles said.

    Charles added that he hopes Cepal’s breakthrough selection will serve as motivation for other young aspiring cricketers across Saint Lucia to adopt the young bowler’s strong work ethic and courageous approach to the game. Off the pitch, Cepal comes from a family deeply rooted in public service and cricket: his father Cyrus Cepal serves as District Education Officer for District One, as well as a local cricket administrator and umpire, while his mother Dr. Samina Cepal is a noted public health specialist and author. Cepal’s older brother Dhan Raj Cepal, who was also a rising cricket prospect, passed away in a 2019 car accident.

  • Hundreds flock to Truck Up Food Carnival

    Hundreds flock to Truck Up Food Carnival

    Over the weekend of May 23, the halls of Wildey Gymnasium transformed into a buzzing hub of flavor, music and community connection, as hundreds of attendees flocked to the opening of the three-day Truck Up Food Carnival, Barbados’ one-of-a-kind celebration of mobile culinary culture.

    This year’s gathering marked the fifth iteration of the popular event, and the very first time it has been hosted at the Wildey Gymnasium venue. More than 45 vendors took part in the multi-day festival, ranging from established food truck operators to emerging pop-up culinary startups, alongside a full lineup of live entertainment, interactive games and activities designed to entertain guests of all ages. Charlin Skeete, a representative of the event organizing Truck Up team, described the festival as a one-of-a-kind Barbadian experience that weaves together food, live music, creative innovation and local entrepreneurship under one roof.

    From its inception, the Truck Up Food Carnival was built with a clear core mission: to lift up mobile food operators, small food truck businesses and emerging culinary entrepreneurs by giving them expanded public visibility and direct access to large, diverse crowds of hungry attendees. Over the years, what started as a niche gathering has evolved into the country’s largest and most anticipated celebration of food, culture and local entertainment, drawing thousands of attendees and drawing dozens of vendors and performing artists year after year.

    Skeete framed the festival as far more than a fun weekend outing for locals and visitors. For Barbados’ small business ecosystem, it serves as a vital platform that drives opportunity, sparks creative innovation, and fuels broad-based economic activity. Year over year, the event has seen consistent growth: larger attendee turnouts, stronger grassroots community buy-in, and rising participation from young, first-time culinary entrepreneurs looking to build their customer base.

    Beyond the direct benefits to participating food vendors, the festival creates widespread employment opportunities across a range of connected sectors, Skeete explained. Positions are generated in event production, on-site security, passenger transportation, hospitality services, marketing and communications, technical event support, sanitation and logistics, distributing economic benefits across multiple local industries.

    This ripple effect of local economic activity is particularly meaningful at a time when prioritizing support for domestic businesses and keeping consumer spending within the Barbadian national economy is a critical priority for the country’s growth, Skeete noted. Beyond its economic impact, the festival also carries deep cultural significance, serving as a showcase for the diversity, creativity and evolution of Barbados’ homegrown food culture. Attendees can sample everything from time-honored traditional Bajan favorite dishes to cutting-edge modern fusion cuisine, giving local chefs and food entrepreneurs space to display both authentic traditional flavors and exciting new culinary innovations side by side.

    Today, the Truck Up Food Carnival holds a permanent spot on Barbados’ growing calendar of major cultural and entertainment events, drawing equal enthusiasm from local residents and international tourists visiting the island. What makes the event truly unique, Skeete emphasized, is that it stands as the only festival of its specific kind in Barbados, blending the casual, accessible energy of mobile food culture with high-quality live entertainment and a warm, inclusive community atmosphere. Beyond the food, guests had the chance to enjoy a packed schedule of extra activities throughout the weekend, including full live music sets from local performers, DJ sets, competitive road tennis matches, fun foodie challenges, group games, and a wide selection of family-friendly activities for guests of all ages.

  • Regering zoekt nieuwe economische kansen via Brazilië en Dominicaanse Republiek

    Regering zoekt nieuwe economische kansen via Brazilië en Dominicaanse Republiek

    Suriname’s President Jennifer Simons is set to depart on Wednesday for two days of official working visits to Brazil and the Dominican Republic, with a clear agenda centered on expanding economic cooperation, advancing agricultural development, boosting tourism growth, and strengthening regional connectivity. The head of state outlined the key priorities of the trip during a press briefing held on the morning of May 25, noting that the visits are designed to unlock new investment inflows, expand trade access for Surinamese products, and strengthen the country’s key strategic economic sectors.

    Simons confirmed that substantive preparations for talks with Brazilian authorities have been underway for months, led by Suriname’s cabinet ministers working in coordination with their Brazilian counterparts. One of the top infrastructure priorities for Suriname is the development of a shorter direct shipping route between the two countries. A more efficient shipping connection would allow cheaper imported goods to reach Suriname faster, while also cutting export costs for Surinamese producers looking to access markets across the Mercosur trade bloc.

    Beyond maritime connectivity, the Surinamese delegation will also push for improved air links and deepened agricultural collaboration. A key meeting is scheduled with Brazil’s leading agricultural research agency, Embrapa, to advance cooperation on agricultural development and food security. Suriname is specifically seeking technical support, training programs, and knowledge sharing to modernize its domestic agricultural sector.

    A particularly urgent topic on the agricultural agenda is the current cassava disease outbreak that has impacted large swathes of Suriname’s agricultural production. Simons noted that Brazil is actively developing disease-resistant cassava varieties, a solution that Suriname is eager to access. Cassava holds major strategic potential for Suriname, she added, supporting national food security, creating opportunities for domestic agri-processing, and opening new export revenue streams.

    Border security and cross-border monitoring also feature prominently on Brazil’s meeting agenda. Suriname aims to expand joint security cooperation, including enhanced cross-border region monitoring and increased information sharing to address transnational illicit activities. Talks will also cover developments in the aviation sector, including potential Brazilian support for Suriname’s national carrier, the Surinaamse Luchtvaart Maatschappij (SLM).

    In a key announcement, Simons confirmed that representatives from Suriname’s private sector will be included in the official delegation. She emphasized that meaningful progress on trade and investment requires joint action from both the public and private sectors, with business leaders on the ground to capitalize on new opportunities as they emerge.

    Following the visit to Brazil, Simons will travel to the Dominican Republic, where talks will focus primarily on tourism development and agro-economic partnership. The Dominican Republic has built one of the Caribbean’s most robust and successful tourism sectors, and has already expressed clear interest in deepening bilateral cooperation with Suriname.

    Suriname’s government is keen to explore interest from Dominican investors in developing new tourism projects across Suriname. Simons noted that Suriname offers a distinct tourism product compared to more traditional Caribbean vacation destinations, creating natural opportunities for complementary partnership that benefits both nations.

    In the agricultural sphere, Suriname aims to leverage regional cooperation to open new export markets for its domestic agricultural goods. Simons stressed that foreign direct investment is a critical requirement to unlock the full growth potential of Suriname’s tourism sector, which remains underdeveloped relative to the country’s natural assets.

    Multiple memorandums of understanding and cooperation agreements are currently in preparation to be signed during the two visits. Simons clarified that these are not formal state visits, but results-focused working visits dedicated entirely to advancing economic, social, and strategic bilateral cooperation. The Surinamese head of state is scheduled to return to Paramaribo on June 2.

  • China sends emergency food to Cuba amid deepening crisis

    China sends emergency food to Cuba amid deepening crisis

    The Caribbean island nation of Cuba, already grappling with deepening food insecurity and crippling power outages driven by a decades-long tightened United States economic blockade, has received the first shipment of 15,000 metric tons of rice from China as part of a broader 60,000-ton humanitarian food assistance initiative.

    Per coverage from Greater Belize Media, the rice cargo docked in Havana over the recent weekend. Chinese Ambassador to Cuba Hua Xin characterized the delivery as the largest single food assistance package China has dispatched to Cuba in recent years, emphasizing that the contribution embodies the longstanding solidarity and reciprocal support that binds the two sovereign nations.

    Cuba’s energy crisis has deteriorated sharply in recent months, creating cascading challenges for daily life across the country. Betsy Díaz, Cuba’s Minister of Domestic Trade, confirmed that despite persistent fuel shortages that disrupt logistics, government agencies are prioritizing rapid distribution of the newly arrived rice to reach all segments of the civilian population.

    Spanish national newspaper El País has documented the severity of Cuba’s energy collapse: the country’s national power grid has suffered seven full system failures over the past 18 months, including two major blackouts in March alone, with some communities left without electricity for as long as 24 consecutive hours.

    While a Russian oil tanker carrying more than 700,000 barrels of fuel was allowed to enter Cuba by U.S. authorities in late March, temporarily easing fuel and power shortages, the limited supply was exhausted within just a few weeks. By May, the country’s economic and living conditions had worsened again, according to El País’s reporting.

    Compounding these humanitarian struggles, Cuba is facing renewed political tensions with the United States. Earlier this week, thousands of Cuban citizens assembled outside the U.S. Embassy in Havana to voice public support for former Cuban President Raúl Castro, after U.S. authorities unsealed criminal charges against Castro linked to the 1996 downing of two civilian aircraft operated by a Cuban-American exile group.

    On Sunday morning, current Cuban President Miguel Diaz-Canel published a post on X, the social platform previously known as Twitter, extending his profound gratitude to China for this demonstration of solidarity.

    The current escalation of the U.S. blockade against Cuba was recently advanced by former U.S. President Donald Trump, with restrictions tightened starting in January, the same month the U.S. deployed armed forces to detain and extract Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro, per the original reporting context.

  • HAPI Continues Home Transformation Programme for Vulnerable Families

    HAPI Continues Home Transformation Programme for Vulnerable Families

    A collaborative community housing improvement program in Antigua is earning widespread acclaim for its tangible impact on low-income residents, delivering upgraded, safer living spaces while fostering renewed optimism for participating families. The transformative project, spotlighted in a recent social media post from the community group Adoptafamily Ragguette, brings together a diverse coalition of partners spanning the national government, private sector actors, civil society, and the prison service to address substandard housing conditions for vulnerable households.

    In its public acknowledgment of the effort, Adoptafamily Ragguette extended gratitude to every contributing stakeholder, naming Prime Minister Gaston Browne as a key supporter alongside Rawdon Turner, the country’s Minister of Urban and Social Transformation. Other recognized contributors include community advocate Mary Baltimore, the Antiguan corporate sector, and a cohort of inmates from His Majesty’s Prison, who lent hands-on labor to the renovation work.

    Visual documentation shared alongside the post offers striking evidence of the project’s results, side-by-side before-and-after shots that showcase the dramatic changes to one family’s home. The upgrades completed include full interior repainting and comprehensive improvements to the home’s exterior, turning a neglected, unsafe structure into a dignified living space.

    In its statement, Adoptafamily Ragguette emphasized that the initiative extends far beyond physical construction. “The transformation is real,” the post affirmed, noting that the program is “building more than houses” — it is laying the foundation for lasting hope for families that have long struggled with inadequate housing.

  • Piton Malta is title sponsor for Lucian Junior Carnival

    Piton Malta is title sponsor for Lucian Junior Carnival

    A new landmark public-private partnership is set to shape the future of Saint Lucia’s most prominent youth cultural celebration, after leading brand Piton Malta signed on as the official title sponsor for the 2026 Lucian Junior Carnival. The partnership was formalized recently when Piton Malta representatives presented a ceremonial cheque to the Carnival Planning and Management Committee (CPMC), launching a collaboration that will underpin one of the country’s most important youth-focused creative arts initiatives.

    This collaboration marks more than just a financial agreement: it reflects a shared commitment to safeguarding Saint Lucia’s vibrant cultural heritage and fostering active youth participation in the nation’s iconic carnival traditions. It also highlights the growing impact of cross-sector collaboration between private enterprises and cultural organizers in sustaining and growing the island’s dynamic creative and cultural industries.

    Underpinning the 2026 iteration of the event is the theme “More Than a Festival: A Movement for the Next Generation”, which frames the Lucian Junior Carnival not only as a platform for young artistic expression but also as an educational initiative. The event is designed to introduce the island’s youth to the artistic, economic, and social foundations of Saint Lucia’s unique carnival heritage, nurturing the next generation of cultural stewards.

    Tamara Gibson, Chairperson of the CPMC, welcomed the new partnership, emphasizing that sustained corporate backing is critical to advancing national cultural programming. “Lucian Junior Carnival remains one of the foundations of our carnival product because it allows young people to develop an appreciation for our culture from an early age,” Gibson explained. “We are pleased to have Piton Malta on board as Title Sponsor for 2026, and we look forward to working together to continue strengthening the Junior Carnival experience.”

    Representatives from Piton Malta echoed the enthusiasm, noting the brand’s excitement to contribute to a initiative that delivers tangible, long-term impact on Saint Lucia’s youth development.

    The sponsorship funding will go directly toward supporting the full slate of key events scheduled for the 2026 Lucian Junior Carnival. The calendar kicks off with the National Carnival Schools Tour, running from May 18 to May 29, 2026. Following the tour, the National Primary and Secondary Calypso & Soca Competitions will take place on June 4 and 5, with the National Schools Panorama Competition scheduled for June 6. The celebration will culminate in the popular National Junior Parade of the Bands, set to take place on July 12.

    Beyond supporting existing signature events, the partnership will also launch a new in-school training program. The initiative is designed to help Saint Lucian students build practical, marketable skills tailored to the needs of the modern creative economy, while reinforcing the role of the Lucian Carnival as a core pillar of national cultural expression.

  • COMMENTARY: Read Across Jamaica Day media bliss or impactful

    COMMENTARY: Read Across Jamaica Day media bliss or impactful

    Across education systems worldwide, a troubling gap has emerged: boys are consistently falling behind girls in reading and literacy proficiency, a trend that experts warn risks long-term harm to academic outcomes and social development if left unaddressed. International standardized assessments, including the Progress in International Reading Literacy Study (PIRLS) and the Programme for International Student Assessment (PISA), have documented steady declines in average male literacy scores across dozens of countries in recent years, with the gap particularly stark in Jamaica.

    According to a landmark report from the Jamaica Education Transformation Commission (JETC), chaired by Professor Orlando Patterson, the majority of Jamaican primary school students struggle with basic literacy. Data from the 2019 Primary Exit Profile (PEP) exam, the national assessment for final-year primary students, underscores the scale of the crisis: 33 percent of students are either completely unable to read or only possess very basic reading skills, 56 percent face similar barriers to writing, and 58 percent cannot effectively locate and extract information from written texts.

    Beyond simple word recognition, true literacy relies on reading comprehension — an area where the vast majority of struggling students face their biggest challenges. Experts trace part of this negative attitude toward reading to deep-rooted cultural associations: for generations, many children were ordered to read as a punishment for misbehavior, framing the activity as a punitive chore rather than an enjoyable or rewarding pursuit. This perception persists for many students today, and it hits boys especially hard.

    A major driving force behind boys’ declining reading performance is the persistence of harmful cultural stereotypes that frame reading-intensive subjects like English Language, English Literature, and History as “soft” or feminine pursuits, in contrast to “hard” STEM fields such as mathematics and physics that are widely perceived as more rigorous and masculine. Former educator Kurt Hickling, who has researched gender disparities in literacy, notes that this stereotype is reinforced by data: girls outperform boys at nearly every education level globally in reading habits and comprehension, mirroring broader gender gaps in academic literacy. While girls typically gravitate toward fiction and long-form reading for pleasure, boys often prefer visual media such as comics, heavily illustrated books, and non-fiction — a difference that learning environments rarely accommodate.

    One-off public awareness events have also been called out for failing to deliver lasting change. Critics note that Jamaica’s annual Read Across Jamaica Day, held during Education Week, has become little more than a photo opportunity that generates positive media coverage for participants but does nothing to address the underlying crisis for the hundreds of struggling readers enrolled in Jamaican schools each year. After media attention fades, most schools return to the same under-resourced, complacent systems that allowed the literacy gap to widen in the first place. Each academic year, hundreds of underprepared primary students transition to secondary school, unable to engage with the requirements of the National Standards Curriculum, trapped in a cycle of underachievement.

    Experts argue that closing this gap requires intentional, gender-specific intervention that addresses structural barriers and cultural stereotypes. In an era dominated by short-form, AI-curated bite-sized content, educators must meet boys where they are: most boys are tactile, visual learners who process information differently from the pace and structure that current education systems are designed for. While systemic gender discrimination has disproportionately harmed women and girls for centuries, advocates point out that rigid gender norms also create unique disadvantages for boys. Many boys experience their school environment as inherently feminized, and boys who prioritize academic excellence are often ridiculed as effeminate by peers and even adults in communities where male academic achievement is devalued. Forcing active, tactile learners to sit confined in a classroom for five to six hours a day runs directly counter to how boys naturally learn, creating a cycle of disengagement that starts early and worsens over time. True gender equality, experts emphasize, requires challenging and dismantling destructive stereotypes for all genders, not just addressing one side of systemic inequality.

    To reverse the trend of declining male literacy, experts have outlined a series of targeted solutions. An inclusive education system must meet the unique needs of all students, including creating safe, non-judgmental spaces for boys to engage with reading without stigma. Communities must also reevaluate the harmful social norms that glorify “dunce culture” — a widespread attitude that frames academic underachievement as cool or desirable, particularly for boys — and redefine success to value literacy and education.

    A core recommendation is “de-feminizing” the education system to remove barriers that discourage boys from engaging with reading. If left unaddressed, widespread male underachievement risks fueling the spread of toxic hyper-masculinity that further harms communities. Hickling proposes targeted literacy sessions that bring boys together with male peers in controlled learning environments, a structure that encourages more active interaction with reading material. He also calls on textbook publishers to integrate more graphics and visual elements into learning materials to align with boys’ preference for visual content, and to incorporate physical movement and multimedia learning activities that hold the attention of tactile learners. Above all, improving literacy outcomes for boys requires consistent, intentional effort rather than one-off ceremonial events.

    As award-winning author Kate DiCamillo once noted: reading should never be presented to children as a boring chore or an obligation. It should be offered to them as what it is: a precious gift that expands the mind, opens new worlds, and enables personal growth.

    Wayne Campbell is an educator and social commentator focused on how development policy intersects with culture and gender issues. Kurt Hickling is a former educator currently with the Charlotte Area Transit System.