MONTEGO BAY, St James — Jamaica’s education system stands at a pivotal juncture as it develops its 2025–2035 strategic plan, with Montego Bay Community College Principal Dr. Darien Henry advocating for a fundamental reorientation toward systemic resilience and educator support. Speaking at the University of Technology’s Teacher Education Summit, Henry emphasized that resilience must transition from being an individual burden to an institutional responsibility.
Henry drew upon MBCC’s experience during Hurricane Melissa to illustrate how catastrophic events expose structural vulnerabilities, transforming rather than merely interrupting educational operations. He revealed that teachers frequently served as stability anchors amid chaos, often while managing personal crises and operating in suboptimal conditions.
‘The education sector cannot continually expect educators to function as pillars of stability without reinforcing the structures that support them,’ Henry asserted. ‘Resilience encompasses operational, emotional, and profoundly human dimensions that demand policy-level solutions.’
The academic leader detailed MBCC’s crisis response framework, which incorporated remote management protocols, enhanced communication channels, and a two-phase recovery strategy prioritizing stabilization before restoration. These measures, he noted, were consciously designed to mitigate uncertainty and preserve staff welfare.
Henry specifically called for formal policy mechanisms addressing teachers’ psychosocial needs, arguing that well-being must be institutionalized rather than relying on informal collegial support. He positioned educator welfare as a performance indicator directly linked to educational effectiveness and system stability.
As a presidential candidate for the Jamaica Teachers’ Association, Henry’s recommendations align with his broader campaign focus on strengthening professional support systems and elevating educators’ status. He concluded that resilience represents an ongoing practice during reconstruction rather than a destination achieved after recovery.
