As part of JTEC’s mandate to strengthen Jamaica’s tertiary education sector, we engage in developing policy and research papers that inform decision-making at both the national and institutional levels. This work involves:
Reviewing the macro environment to identify trends and emerging issues.
Analysing developments in education, the economy, and the labour market.
Monitoring technological change and its impact on teaching, learning, research, societal engagement, and workforce needs.
Conducting stakeholder surveys to capture valuable feedback from students, educators, employers, and other partners.
Reporting on institution’ performance with regard to key metrics critical to sustainable development.
Evidence-based recommendations supporting economic growth, social development, and the long-term strengthening of Jamaica's tertiary education sector at the national policy level.
Clearer understanding of labour market needs, enabling institutions to design and offer relevant programmes that produce graduates equipped to meet real industry demands.
Measurable improvements in institutional governance, programme quality, and student services, driven by performance data and research findings across all regulated institutions.
Early identification of emerging challenges enabling institutions and policymakers to take proactive, targeted measures rather than reactive responses to systemic issues.
Policy and research efforts today lay the groundwork for a stronger, more responsive tertiary education sector that meets Jamaica’s economic and social aspirations for generations to come.
An education system adaptable to global trends, technological advancements, and shifting workforce requirements of the 21st century economy.
Alignment between tertiary education outputs and evolving industry needs and national priorities, producing graduates who contribute meaningfully to Jamaica's development.
Ongoing quality improvements grounded in empirical evidence, creating a culture of continuous improvement rather than compliance-only standards across all institutions.
Stronger tertiary institutions are contributing to innovation and human capital growth, enhancing Jamaica's competitiveness in the regional and global knowledge economy.