Trinidad and Tobago vs Jamaica
Side-by-side comparison of how these places approach childhood.
Trinidad and Tobago
Trinidad invented the steel pan โ the only acoustic instrument created in the 20th century.
Children learn pan from primary school, and school steel bands compete in nationally televised competitions.
Jamaica
Jamaican children grow up hearing patois at home but must write exams in Standard English.
This linguistic duality creates a unique bilingual childhood where code-switching is mastered early.
Trinidad and Tobago
Trinidad's education system is unique: government-funded schools are run by religious denominations โ Catholic, Anglican, Hindu, Muslim, and Presbyterian boards all operate public schools. The SEA exam at age 11 determines secondary school placement.
Jamaica
Jamaica's education follows the British model with primary, secondary, and sixth form levels. The Grade Six Achievement Test (GSAT, now PEP) determines secondary school placement. Traditional high schools are highly competitive and tiered.
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