‘Education is the gateway to another world’

NEW ROADS, Westmoreland — On a landmark Friday ceremony, Jamaica’s Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of National Security and Peace Dr Horace Chang opened a purpose-built digital learning centre at New Roads Primary School, his childhood alma mater, tying the expansion of rural educational access directly to the nation’s ongoing push for lasting community peace and poverty reduction.

The new facility, a fully fitted 20-seat computer laboratory, fulfils a pledge Chang first made back in 2007. Equipped with high-speed Starlink Internet connectivity arranged through the Universal Service Fund, the lab is designed to expand educational access for young learners in this rural Westmoreland community, where opportunity gaps between rural and urban areas have long limited student outcomes. Alongside the lab, Chang also donated three laptops for teaching staff and new cricket equipment for the school’s student body, framing the entire initiative as a long-term investment rather than a one-off gesture.

Speaking to an assembled crowd of students, educators, parents and local community leaders, Chang explained that the recent renaming of his portfolio to the Ministry of National Security and Peace signals a policy shift: while investments in law enforcement have delivered tangible progress, building lasting peace requires equal investment in education and youth development. “We can say without hesitation, today, Jamaica is safer than it was three years ago, and I commend the police for the effort,” he noted. “But that leaves space for much more structured activity in our communities, and part of that is our education field.”

Chang emphasized that education remains the single most sustainable path to breaking intergenerational cycles of poverty, reducing social dysfunction, and opening pathways to upward mobility. A graduate of New Roads Primary who went on to attend Cornwall College and the University of the West Indies, the veteran lawmaker drew from his own experience to argue that a student’s starting point in life does not determine their potential. “Education is the gateway to another world, a world of improvement, better quality of life, to achieve your dream and success,” he stated.

The new digital centre, he added, leverages technology to narrow the rural-urban opportunity divide, drawing on positive outcomes from similar computer labs he has previously installed across other constituencies, including Glendevon Primary School in St James North Western, where the technology has driven measurable improvements in literacy, numeracy and overall student performance. “The idea is to demonstrate that with technology we can reach them [students], and provide the teachers with those tools that will help them to get across to the students that will educate them, build them, develop more human resources,” he explained. “This is not only about giving back to my community, which is important, but to also send a message that we’re in a world today where we can use technology to reach anywhere in Jamaica. And we can offer opportunities to everyone, whether it’s sports, academia, development of our students’ talent at any point in Jamaica. We just have to have the commitment and the willingness to invest.”

Local and national education leaders echoed calls for the school community to steward the new facility to maximise its long-term impact. Westmoreland Eastern Member of Parliament Dr Dayton Campbell urged attendees to protect the investment, noting that Chang’s rise from humble local roots to national leadership is proof that students in rural communities can achieve any goal they set. “It means that you can grow wherever you are planted. There is absolutely nothing to invalidate your dreams,” Campbell said.

Rhoda Moy Crawford, Minister of State in the Ministry of Education, Skills, Youth and Information, thanked Chang for his generous donation and stressed that protecting the facility is a shared responsibility that supports public safety as well as education. “All of us have to put our hands together to protect this investment,” she said.

New Roads Primary Principal Coreen Tennant-James called the digital learning centre a transformative addition for the school, noting that expanding access to digital tools will help both students and educators build the skills needed to thrive in an increasingly digital global economy. “We express heartfelt gratitude to everyone who contributed to making this dream a reality,” she said. “Your investment in education is truly an investment in the future of our children. And, to our students, this laboratory is for you. Use it wisely, allow it to inspire creativity, learning, and excellence.”