About the Event
The Regional Symposium and Policy Dialogue on Transforming Education will take place from 2-4 October 2024 at the Ritz-Carlton Hotel, Cayman Islands.
Hosted by the Caribbean Development Bank (CDB) in collaboration with the Caribbean Community (CARICOM), the Organisation of Eastern Caribbean States (OECS) Commission, UNESCO, and UNICEF, this event will bring together over 150 regional leaders, educators, and policymakers for thought-provoking discussions, expert presentations, and collaborative sessions aimed at addressing the most pressing challenges facing the Caribbean education sector.
Held under the theme “Understanding, Leveraging, and Unlocking Our Full Potential”, the symposium will focus on leadership transformation, revamping teaching and learning methods, and expanding access to quality education. Key areas of focus are:
- Inclusive, equitable, safe, and healthy schools
- Learning and skills for life, work, and sustainable development
- Teachers and the teaching profession
- Digital learning and transformation
- Financing education
The agenda will explore decolonising education, AI in education, building a culture of social and emotional learning, and the role of education in creating healthier societies, as well as other pressing issues impacting regional education systems.
Regional leaders will use these discussions to develop the Agenda for Action, a consensus-driven roadmap for transforming education across the Caribbean.



Angel Caglin is the Executive Director of the Caribbean Innovation & Leadership Lab (CILL) and a dynamic speaker known for her engaging presentations on educational innovation, leadership, equity and inclusion. She currently leads the IDRC funded project ‘Capacity building for gender equity and inclusion in Caribbean Schools’ which aims to improve gender responsive and inclusive teaching and learning by creating safe learning spaces for boys and girls. With over 20 years of experience Angel has served in various roles, including teacher, instructional coach, and Curriculum Specialist. Her work spans several impactful educational initiatives, such as supporting the Peace Corps Eastern Caribbean Primary Literacy Project and serving as a National Focal Point for the OECS/USAID Early Learners Programme (ELP). Additionally, she coordinated the IDRC-funded "Social Innovation in Education in the Caribbean" project, which led to the establishment of the Caribbean Innovation & Leadership Lab. Through CILL, she supports initiatives administered by the OECS Education Development & Management Unit, and by partners committed to the transformation of education.
Born and raised in the rural community of Port Mourant, Guyana, Anjalie developed most of her personality traits and cultural instinct as an active Hindu. She was born in the early 2000s and was later diagnosed with a visual impairment. However this didn’t stop her from gaining what she aimed for. With her impairment she gained the top student position for her school at the National Grade Four Assessment, and a position at the esteemed President College.
Dr Anton De Grauwe is an internationally recognized expert in educational policy, planning, and management. He started his career as a secondary school teacher in Grenada (between 1986 and 1989), and worked for some 25 years, until 2021, at the UNESCO International Institute for Educational Planning, as a researcher, a trainer, a facilitator, a project manager, and a resource mobilizer. Through technical support and strategic advice to many governments and through academic research, he has gained expertise in various themes, such as school supervision (the topic of his PhD thesis), monitoring and evaluation, decentralization, and the effective functioning of educational administrations. Much of his recent work consists in collaborating in the design and implementation of education policies and plans, playing an active part in policy dialogue, between policy-makers and technical staff, and between national and international officials. He has world-wide experience, with his most recent work taking place in Cambodia, Guinée, Ethiopia, Fiji, Macedonia, Guyana and the Windward Islands.
As a proud citizen of Trinidad and Tobago, Mrs. Antonia Tekah-De Freitas has served the nation’s education system as a primary school educator for thirty-four years. Active involvement in education trade unionism for the past twenty-five years has allowed Mrs. Tekah-De Freitas the opportunity to represent educators and students at various levels. In her tenure as First Vice President of the Trinidad and Tobago Unified Teachers’ Association (TTUTA), she was instrumental in expanding the scope of professional development and leadership training programmes for educators. She eventually served in the office of President of TTUTA, with the distinction of being the organization’s very first female President. Meaningful collaboration on the creation and implementation of education policy has been the bedrock of her service.
Asha Bailey is a dedicated educator and leader with over 20 years of experience in the field of education. Currently serving as the Principal of St. George’s Anglican Junior School in St. George’s, Grenada, Asha has a passion for fostering academic excellence and creating inclusive learning environments.
Barbara Landon is a clinical neuropsychologist (pediatrics), community psychologist, and co-founder of Saving Brains Grenada and the Caribbean Center for Child Neurodevelopment at the Windward Islands Research and Education Foundation (CCCN @ WINDREF) in Grenada, where she is a research fellow and emeritus professor at St. George’s University. As an implementation researcher, her work is focused on early childhood neurodevelopment and the prevention of adverse childhood experiences, including corporal punishment and gender-based and family violence. As a clinician she has worked in numerous settings including counseling, neurorehabilitation, hospital, and private practices. As an educator she has taught graduate courses in psychology, bioethics, and behavioural science; she is a founding faculty member of SGU’s Master’s in Clinical/Community Psychology program, and a guest faculty member at Anton de Kom University’s Master’s in Caribbean Psychology in Suriname. She is an internationally certified Conscious Discipline (CD) instructor, and has taught a Caribbean version of CD, a brain-based, trauma-informed adult education curriculum, to teachers and parents in Grenada and several other island nations since 2009. She is co-author of the Grenada Learning and Memory Scale (GLAMS), the first neuropsychological measure developed by Caribbean nationals in and for the Caribbean region, and co-editor of the upcoming special issue of the Caribbean Journal of Psychology on decolonizing behavioural science. Although born and educated in the US, she feels more at home in the Caribbean, and has lived in Grenada since 2008.
Assumed the post of Director General, of the Organisation of Eastern Caribbean States (OECS) in May 2014. In this capacity he is responsible for driving the regional integration thrust towards a single economic and social space involving eleven Eastern Caribbean States.
Mrs. Dionne Gill is currently the Data Analyst in the Ministry of Education, Barbados. She has worked in this capacity for close to twenty years; gaining valuable experience in managing, advising on and providing solutions for data collection, collation, analysis and reporting for decision-making.
Elena Smith has been a teacher for the past thirty nine years at St. Ignatius Roman Catholic Primary School in Belize City. Immediately upon entering the profession, she joined the Belize National Teachers’ Union (BNTU). A few years later, she was elected to serve as Secretary of her district branch of her union and six years later, as the Branch president. She served on that Executive for twenty consecutive years after which she was elected as the union’s National President from 2017 to 2023. Smith also served as Administrative Secretary then General Secretary of the National Trade Union Congress of Belize(NTUCB). She has represented the BNTU on the Belize Teaching Service Commission, the Belize Board of Teacher Education as Vice Chairman, the National Council on Education as Vice Chairman and as its Lead Negotiator with the Government of Belize. Smith also served as Senator representing the NTUCB from 2016 to 2024 where she was a member of two Senate Special Select Committee investigations and member of the Public Accounts Committee. Additionally, she has represented the Congress on the Wages Council, The National Council on Technical and Vocational Training as well as the OSH Committee. Smith has represented her union regionally and internationally. She has been recognized with numerous awards including Teacher of the Year, Trade Unionist of the Year and most recently Member of the British Empire, a recognition given by the Government of Belize. Smith currently serves as an Administrator at St. Ignatius School. She holds a Master’s degree in Education with a focus on Reading from Bridgewater State University in USA.
Germain Anthony is a Senior Technical Specialist – Education at the Education Development Management Unit (EDMU) within the OECS Commission. He is an educator with 32 years’ experience in the sector. Mr. Anthony is a trained teacher and holds a degree in Computer Science and Management. He completed a Master’s program in Design for Interactive Media in London (2012). Mr. Anthony served as the National Focal Point for the Commonwealth of Learning in Saint Lucia for several years.
Dr. Hector Montenegro, President/CEO of Montenegro Consulting Group, LLC, has been a Senior District Advisor for the Collaborative for Academic, Social and Emotional Learning (CASEL) and currently works with districts and administrators nationally and internationally on systemic implementation of SEL and parent engagement. He is also a Senior Associate for Margarita Calderon and Associates (MC&A) and provides training on instructional strategies for English Learners (EL), leadership development for administrators, language and literacy, instructional coaching, and parent engagement. Dr. Montenegro has been a math teacher, principal, Chief of Staff for the DC Public Schools and Superintendent of three school districts in Texas. He is an internationally recognized speaker and presenter of 100s of workshops, leadership development seminars, retreats, keynote speeches and webinars on SEL and on effective instructional strategies throughout the US and abroad in over 23 countries. He has been an educational advisor to Chile, Peru, Guatemala and Saudi Arabia through the U.S. State Department and Ministries of Education. He also serves on several national boards including New York City's Leadership Academy (TLA), Transformative Educational Leadership (TEL board chair) and the Parent-Teacher Home Visits (PTHV) program. Dr. Montenegro was one of the founding members of the Association of Latino Administrators and Superintendents (ALAS) and is the Co-Facilitator of the ALAS Superintendent's Leadership Academy (SLA). He is a volunteer for the Fruit Tree Planting Foundation working on tree planting projects in Brazil, El Salvador, Peru, Guatemala and Uganda. He obtained his masters from Stanford University and doctorate from the University of Texas at Austin.
Joseph South is the Chief Innovation Officer at ISTE + ASCD. He is an internationally recognized educational technology leader focused on evidence-based learning transformation. Joseph leads cross-sector initiatives that include helping thousands of educators prepare the next generation of AI designers, increasing the quality of ed tech products in classrooms by working with both solution providers and education leaders to make better buying decisions, and certifying educators in the ISTE Standards. He serves on the steering committee of TeachAI.org and the advisory board for AI4K12.org.
Joshua Andall is a transformative leader at the forefront of integrating artificial intelligence (AI) into education across the Caribbean. As a key contributor to UNESCO's policy guide on AI in the Caribbean, Joshua has played a critical role in shaping how AI is applied responsibly in education to meet the region’s unique needs. His innovative approach has helped ensure that AI supports inclusivity, access, and quality education, particularly for underserved populations.
He is US Navy Veteran, Aviation Ground Support Equipment Technician with over 20 years of experience in the education and training sector with a wide range of experiences from Instructor to Campus President leading to executive (C-Suite) leadership servicing as Divisional Vice President of Operations overseeing eleven (11) college campuses across Florida, Texas, Oklahoma, Arizona and New Mexico in the United States of America.
With a passion for youth empowerment, leadership and organization development, Latoya Swaby-Anderson has over twenty (20) years’ experience in education, learning development and project management, with a mandate to unearth and strengthen individual competency and optimize organizational capacity and impact.
Dr Lidon Lashley has been working in the field of teaching and teacher education for the past 21 years. He is a Senior Lecturer, Department of Foundation and Education Management and an immediate past Assistant Dean in the Faculty of Education and Humanities. Dr Lidon Lashley is currently the Director of the University of Guyana’s Early Childhood Centre of Excellence (UG-ECCE). He is the Chairman of the University of Guyana Inclusivity Diversity and Equity Task Force. Lidon is the holder of a Trained Class One Grade One Teachers’ Certificate from the Cyril Potter of Education where he graduated in the top percentile of his cohort. He also returned to the college and lectured for a while. Lidon has a Bachelor of Education (Distinction) from the University of Guyana; Masters of Education (GPA 4.0) - Curriculum and Instruction from the University of Guyana; Masters of Arts - Special and Inclusive Education (Merit) from the University of Roehampton, United Kingdom and a PhD Special and Inclusive Education (Pass Without Corrections) from the University of Roehampton, United Kingdom. Lidon is a Commonwealth PhD Scholar and also a Certified Accounting Technician, Institute of Commercial Management, United Kingdom. Lidon’s research interest lies in the area of Early Childhood Education, Curriculum Development and Special and Inclusive Education. Dr Lidon Lashley is also the independent author of Two books namely, Guyana’s Child Fighting to Be Free and Computer Aided Instructions In Mathematics. He also co-authored a third book with Dr Michelle Semple-McBean on Sociodramatic Play in Guyana and a Fourth book on Inspirations for the Guyana Conference of Seventh Day Adventists. In addition, Dr Lashley has over twenty-five (25) research papers published in international peer-reviewed academic journals. Dr Lidon Lashley and Dr Michelle Semple-McBean created the Mock Teaching Model being utilize by the University of Guyana and Cyril Potter College of Education for Teachers’ Practicum. Dr Lashley also have written several technical reports on education development in Guyana. He co-lead the team that that wrote the University of Guyana’s Inclusivity, Diversity and Equity Policy. Dr Lashley designed the Southern Inclusion Framework and the Inclusive Education Checker. As an educator, Dr Lashley continues to pioneer special and inclusive education innovations in Guyana.
Dr. Lois George is a Senior Lecturer at The University of the West Indies, Mona Campus in Jamaica, where she teaches mathematics and mathematics education courses within the School of Education. She also serves as the Programme Coordinator of mathematics education at the undergraduate and graduate levels.
Dr. Maria Ziegler currently works as a Gender Specialist at the Caribbean Development Bank (CDB). At CDB she focuses on integrating gender equality considerations into infrastructural investments in sectors such as water, roads, energy, agriculture and education. Dr. Ziegler also gained gender expertise working for the German KfW Development Bank. For KfW, her professional portfolio also covered other intersecting and cross-cutting themes to include human rights, inclusion of persons with disabilities and poverty and inequality. At both institutions she worked on developing strategy and tools as well as building capacities and advocating for gender equality internally and at the client level. Before working as a Gender Specialist, Dr. Ziegler was employed by the Think Tank German Institute of Development and Sustainability (IDOS), formerly called Deutsches Institut for Entwicklungspolitik/German Development Institute and served in this position as policy advisor to the policy planning staff of the German Ministry for Economic Cooperation and Development advising on inter alia the overall development concept of the Ministry “Minds for Change” and the Sustainable Development Agenda.
Melissa Bradley is a dedicated educator with over 23 years of experience in Belize's educational system, significantly shaping policies and practices. She holds a Master's in Educational Leadership from the University of North Florida and is nearing the completion of her PhD in Language Literacy and Culture at Oklahoma State University. Her academic journey has fueled her commitment to educational reform and innovation. Melissa's leadership extends beyond the classroom, with roles on the school board and as an executive member of the Belize National Teachers Union. She has actively participated in various committees, advocating for equitable education. As a published author and artist, she brings creativity and intellectual depth to her work. Through "Literary Luminaries," a literacy club she founded, Melissa fosters a community that views literacy as a transformative experience. Her leadership, scholarship, and creative endeavors inspire colleagues and students toward academic and social excellence.
Neil is passionate about helping governments, development partners, and educational institutions to reform education systems to enable people and societies to achieve their full human potential. Having worked in education in developing countries across the globe for over 30 years, Neil recognizes that there are no simple formulae for educational reform; each context is unique, as are the people who inhabit it. Thus, providing service to initiatives focused on education reform requires willingness to listen and understand what is most important, combined with a patient conviction that transformation, no matter how difficult it may seem, is possible. Neil has travelled extensively through the developing world conducting research on educational policy, higher education, TVET, distance education, education management information systems (EMIS), and educational technology for a range of organizations, governments, and donors. He works with OER Africa as the project’s OER Strategist and is also currently consulting to the World Bank and the inter-American Development Bank on a range of project activities across Africa, Asia the Pacific, the Caribbean, and Eastern Europe.
Dr. Neva Pemberton is a passionate education planner dedicated to transforming education in the Caribbean. She spearheaded education planning in St. Kitts and Nevis from 2011-2020, developing the highly-regarded 2017-2021 Education Sector Plan. In 2020, Neva received an Exemplary Leadership Award from the Government of St. Kitts and Nevis for her valued contribution to education development. Currently, Neva is a self-employed consultant providing full-time education specialist services for the Caribbean Development Bank, where she lends expertise on Bank-financed education projects at the national and regional level. Prior, she worked as a technical specialist for the Organisation of Eastern Caribbean States Commission Education Development Management Unit. As a consultant, Dr. Pemberton has undertaken several education planning consultancies with the Global Partnership for Education (GPE), the World Bank, UNICEF, and UNESCO International Institute of Educational Planning (IIEP). Dr. Pemberton holds a Ph.D. in International and Comparative Education from UCLA and a Postgraduate Certificate in Advanced Education Sector Planning from UNESCO IIEP.
Prof. Paloma Mohamed is the eleventh Vice Chancellor of the University of Guyana. She is a full Professor of behavior and strategic communications noted as a futurist scholar for her work on change in both humans and human systems. Her recent work on the effects of technology on human life systems is of international interest. She is the first woman to lead the University in its 61-year history. She is also the first woman to be appointed Vice Chancellor at any University in the Anglo-phone Caribbean. Her visionary leadership spearheaded UG’s dynamic Blueprint 2040 which is leapfrogging the University into an academic entity of national and regional criticality. Prof. Mohamed has authored 9 books and produced over 25 films and documentaries. Prof. Mohamed been awarded two Presidential Medals in 2012 and in 2015 as well as A City of New York Award for Culture in 2013. In 2015, she became the first woman Caribbean Laureate for Excellence in Arts and Letters, considered the Nobel prize of the Caribbean. Prof Paloma Mohamed Martin is a beloved teacher and humanist who has been variously referred to as a servant leader and a Titanium Butterfly.
Hailing from the multi-island state of St. Vincent and the Grenadines, Rianka Chance is of Garifuna descent and deeply rooted in her cultural heritage, which has shaped her commitment to addressing both global and local issues affecting vulnerable communities. A recent graduate of the SVG Community College, Rianka is a passionate advocate for youth empowerment, mental health, education, and climate change, with a strong dedication to creating lasting societal change.
Vanessa Burke is a distinguished leader in youth development, serving as the CARICOM Youth Ambassador for the Cayman Islands and the Dean of the Regional Corps. Raised in the Cayman Islands, Vanessa has dedicated over five years to advancing initiatives that empower and uplift the youth of her community and beyond.
With over 22 years as an educator, Dr. Verna Knight works as a full-time lecturer with the University of the West Indies at the Cave Hill Campus, with responsibility for the development, review and delivery of educational programmes in Social Studies, as well as the post graduate programme in Social Context and Education Policy. She also serves as the Coordinator for the Bachelor of Education programme both in the School of Education franchised through the Teacher Training Colleges in St. Lucia, and St. Vincent and the Grenadines; as the newly appointed Academic Coordinator for the Associate Degree in Education programme of the Eastern Caribbean Joint Board of Teacher Education.; as the Assistant Coordinator of the Caribbean Educational Research Center (CERC) at the UWI, Cave Hill Campus; and as the current Co - Chair of the Caribbean and African Studies in Education (CASE) SIG in the American Education Research Association (2023-2025).