Categories: HeadlinesLocal

Ti Mamai Events director calls for more investment in children

Beekeepers in training!

[dropcap]A[/dropcap]nyone who has ever struggled to find a first-rate carpenter, reliable plumber or a skilled tile mason in Saint Lucia can tell you what a headache that particular journey generates.
Not even considering that there is no local registry of skilled tradesmen it would appear that our people are all on the fast track to becoming lawyers and doctors. It’s still mind-boggling then to consider the mess that is our justice system and the perennial shortage of doctors and other medical personnel at our hospitals and health centres.

But back to our problem of finding skilled tradesfolk. It seems to stem from a young age when children are asked what they would like to become. The first thing to roll off the tongue is being a doctor or a nurse. Perhaps it is because doctors and nurses appear so frequently in their young lives and they are delighted that there is someone who can make other people feel better; perhaps it is conditioning by parents who believe these are the highest and noblest professions.

Either way, a children’s events company, Ti Mamai Events, undertook this summer to introduce its summer camp participants to the wide range of professions that abound in our world and hardly get a mention. For three weeks, Eliza Francis-Victor, director of the Vieux Fort-based company, took children aged 5 to 10 to visit several firms and organizations in Vieux Fort, Soufriere and Castries in an effort to encourage her charges to keep an open mind about the many jobs that people do around them to keep the island running.
The children made stops at the Office of the Prime Minister, Baron Foods, Hewanorra International Airport and the MET office, Great Vision Designs television studio where they recorded a brief talk show as hosts and guests, STAR Publishing, Alpha and Omega Lab Services, Coconut Bay Beach Resort and Spa, LUCELEC power station and the Atlantic Shores Riding Stable.

Other visits included a local farm where they began their own seasoning pepper garden, a beekeeping farm where some got to hold a bee for the first time, and a dive centre. There were also fun trips to Tet Paul and La Tille Waterfall.

Mrs Francis-Victor said she chose the theme ‘Jobs We Do’ for the summer activity in an effort to engage the children in learning about people who make the world work.

Related Post

“Ti Mamai Events is all about children and hosting wholesome experiences for them. We seek in every activity to help them learn while they are having fun,” said Mrs Francis-Victor. “We keep them occupied during the school break and also we hope this camp will get them reading and thinking about the jobs people do. We want them to feel and know that they can accomplish, with hard work, any task they set for themselves and, in the process, make our island a better place to live.”

She continued: “But to ensure our future is brighter, we must invest much more in our children; invest in their education, not just academic, but ensure they develop a keen sense of learning and exploring. Let’s stop paying lip service and truly put the money where it matters: in our children.”

Professions in which the participants said they would like to engage include medical: becoming a doctor, paediatric brain surgeon; plus a paleontologist, veterinarian and artist.

Mrs Victor expressed deepest gratitude to everyone who ensured the success of the camp by allowing the students to visit and taking time to speak with them. For more about Ti Mamai Events, check FaceBook.

Eliza Victor

Recent Posts

Is St. Lucia’s Miami-based Consul General Another Casualty of the Silly Season?

For certain lucky Looshans, Coral Gables is a home away from home! Read More

3 days ago

When it comes to keeping us safe from imagined disasters PJP is still our safest bet!

For those who can only talk about who I horn or who horn me, if you wish to make that… Read More

4 days ago

Was St. Jude Handing Over Ceremony Based On the OKEU story?

Kenny Anthony described the new St Jude as Saint Lucia’s most expensive unfinished project! Read More

4 days ago

THE LOST HALF DECADE AND WHY THE SLP SHOULD NOT BE RE-ELECTED

St. Lucia deserves better! The people deserve leadership that prioritises hospitals over political theatrics, real development over cash-for-votes gimmicks, national… Read More

6 days ago

The Better and Safer Choice: PJP

Maya Angelo advises that when people tell and show you who they are, you should believe them.  Over their years… Read More

7 days ago

‘What if I should praise someone from our community who is a rascal, a drug trafficker or other bad example for our people?’

Our most important job, as a government and as regular citizens, is to bring about a change in the general… Read More

2 months ago

This website uses cookies to improve your experience. No personally identifiable information is stored.