CXC charts a digital future for Caribbean learners

The Caribbean Examinations Council (CXC) has unveiled an ambitious digital transformation roadmap, targeting complete digitization of all examinations within the next three to five years. This strategic shift will commence with a partial digital rollout during the January 2026 sitting, marking a significant milestone in the region’s educational assessment evolution.

Registrar and CEO Dr. Wayne Wesley confirmed that over 10,000 candidates will participate in the January 2026 Caribbean Secondary Education Certificate (CSEC) examinations through digital and hybrid assessment formats. Immediate preparations are underway for the May-June 2026 examinations, which will involve more than 100,000 candidates and exceed 600,000 subject entries as the organization accelerates toward full digital implementation.

Concurrently, the Council’s Board of Governors has endorsed comprehensive disaster-response protocols to ensure educational continuity during crises. The six-step business recovery framework, currently activated in Jamaica following Hurricane Melissa, enables coordinated responses to hurricanes, floods, volcanic eruptions, or civil unrest. The protocol includes modified examination arrangements for severely affected schools, adjusted school-based assessments, waived late registration penalties, and extended submission deadlines until June 15, 2026.

CXC has also introduced updated regional literacy and numeracy benchmarks alongside revised standards for the Caribbean Primary Exit Assessment (CPEA). These publicly available resources, benchmarked against international measures, define competency requirements for proficiency and aim to enhance learning outcomes across primary and secondary education levels.

In a significant inclusion initiative, the Council is advocating for the adoption of the WIPO Marrakesh Treaty through regional ministries of education. This effort aims to guarantee accessible learning materials for visually impaired and print-disabled students. For the 2025 examinations, special arrangements were provided for more than 3,400 candidates with visual impairments and other special needs, reaffirming CXC’s commitment to equitable participation for all learners regardless of ability.

Dr. Wesley emphasized CXC’s renewed vision to ‘ignite the potential and shape the future of our Caribbean people,’ highlighting the organization’s five-decade legacy as a CARICOM treaty body dedicated to advancing educational opportunities across the region.