Debe High School

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Debe High School
Seize the Day
Location
M2 Ring Road
Debe, Trinidad

Coordinates 10°13′3″N 61°27′3″W / 10.2175, -61.45083
Information
Principal Romeo Gunness
Age 11 to 18
Type Public/Government/co-educated
Established 2000

Debe High School is a high school first established in 2000. Co educated school and offers forms 1-6. It is situated in south Trinidad in Debe.The school's motto is Şeize the Day.

Contents

[edit] Campus

It is surrounded by a plantation of sugar cane. Located in Debe it is a quiet school of a population of 418 students and 43 teachers. Though situated in outside the urban area, Debe High has been highly noted for its discipline and high standards of education.

Debe High court yard
Debe High court yard

[edit] House System

The school has four houses: Red, Blue, Green, and Yellow.

[edit] School Struture

The school has six blocks.

  • The main student building which houses classes. Also houses a Technology Education Lab and a Physical Education room.
  • Administrative building - which has the staff room, Principal's Office, Vice Principal's Office, Safety Office, and Guidance Office
  • Hall
  • Student Centre - Which includes a library, reading room, computer lab, and AV room.
  • Toilet Block - also houses the school cleaning staff
  • Lab Block - houses three labs (Biology, Chemistry, and Physics) and a music room.

[edit] School Compostion

  • Students
  • Safety Officers - monitor school to ensure the safety of the students, removing and checking for any hazards on the school compound
  • Guidance Officer - helps students with problems and career guidance
  • Lab technicians
  • School prefects - students chosen by Deans to keep order
  • Librarians
  • Teachers
  • Guards
  • Cleaners
  • Principal and Vice Principal
  • Deans

[edit] Admission to College

Admission to College is determined by performance on a rigorous examination.

The current examination is the Secondary Entrance Assessment or SEA. The Division of Educational Research and Evaluation (DERE) and Division of Curriculum Development of the Trinidad & Tobago Ministry of Education describe the 3 hour 10 minute long SEA as "a mechanism that facilitates placement of students in secondary schools in Trinidad and Tobago". The SEA comprises three papers that must be attempted by all candidates: Creative Writing, Mathematics and Language Arts. The assessment covers the national curriculum for primary-level education for Standards Three to Five, the final three years of elementary instruction.

Presentation College tends to be an institution of first choice of the five prospective institutions each examinee is required to list in preferential order of interest prior to the exam. The five preferences are drawn from the totality of secondary institutions nationwide. A candidate is unlikely to gain admission to the College but for performance consistent with the highest examination percentiles.

The precursor to the SEA was the Common Entrance Examination or CEE. The CEE mirrored the SEA in several significant respects.

Students can also be transferred into the school after an entrance exam.

[edit] Extracurricular activities

Drama- Debe High is well known for its strong hold in the Drama Department making it several times in the finals of Drama Festival and also receiving many prizes.

Soccer - The Girls' soccer team has been the South zone champions many times. The soccer department is also well known as a strong force winning many championships in Trinidad.

Field Hockey

Other extra-curricular groups

RBTT Young Leaders Catholic-Christian Students' Movement (CCSM) Inter-School Christian Fellowship (ISCF)


[edit] Uniform

Girls are required to wear a navy blue skirt 2 inches under knee. Black shoes, black socks, a white belt on the waist, white shirt tucked in the skirt and a blue, silver, and red tie.

Boys are required to wear navy blue pants, white shirt tucked in the pants, black belt, and black shoes and socks.

[edit] Subjects

The school offers a wide variety of subject choices. Offer to forms 1-3 are Drama , Art , Maths English , Spanish , Physical Education Music , Lititure , Social Studies

Offered for 4-5 forms. Every child is required to choose 5 subjects out of 8 (other 3 are compulsory) to do in C.X.C. exams Compulsory subjucts

  • Maths
  • English
  • Lititure

Choices

  • Computer Science
  • Art
  • Geography
  • Agricultural Science
  • Principles of Accounts
  • Spanish
  • Social Stuides
  • Drama
  • Biology
  • Office Proccdures
  • Principle of Business
  • History
  • Chemistry

[edit] Education

Students of the College pursue a course of instruction leading to external examination under the authority of the Caribbean Examinations Council (CXC). After five years at the College - and in selected instances, four years - students sit the Caribbean Secondary Education Certificate (CSEC) examination in various fields of study.

The CXC was established in 1972 by agreement of regional governments seeking an effective and functional model through which to provide and assess a secondary education curriculum reflective of, and sensitive to Caribbean priorities and reality. As a body, the Council has an operative relationship with the University of the West Indies and the governments of fifteen (15) participating territories aside from that of the Republic of Trinidad & Tobago.

The CSEC examinations are the accepted and internationally recognised equivalent of the GCE or General Certificate of Education Ordinary Level examinations they replaced. For decades, examinees at Pres took GCEs set by the University of Cambridge Local Examinations Syndicate, now known as University of Cambridge International Examinations. However, a preceding generation of students took a version of Cambridge examination known as the Cambridge School Certificate, a precursor of contemporary GCE O'levels.

Students at the College first sat CXC exams (CSEC) in 1979. At that time, the subjects available for examination under CXC existed in limited number. The first group of examinees submitted to examination in the areas of English Language (English A), Mathematics and Geography, while also taking Cambridge GCEs in these three subjects and other subjects.

Gradually, the range of subjects offered by the Caribbean Examinations Council expanded until CSEC exams came to replace the traditional Cambridge GCE exams completely.

In everyday parlance, CSEC examinations are commonly referred to as CXCs because from 1979 to 1998 they constituted the only form of examination offered by the Caribbean Examinations Council. However, the Council later developed the Caribbean Advanced Proficiency Examinations (CAPE) examinations to replace the British Advanced level or A-level exams - as they are universally known throughout the British Commonwealth. The Council's rationale for the change was predicated on the same basis as that supporting the curricular adjustments leading to the introduction of the CSEC.

CAPE examinations are taken by students who have completed their standard secondary education (the CSEC) and who seek to continue their studies, beyond the minimum age for completion of compulsory education.

Students who wish to sit for the CAPE usually possess CSEC or an equivalent certification. The CAPE is the globally recognised equivalent of British A-levels. Students at the College formerly submitted to GCE Advanced Levels through the University of Cambridge Local Examinations Syndicate.

[edit] References

http://www.tntisland.com/schoolssec-tdad.html#sstdadd http://www.guardian.co.tt/archives/2004-10-14/sports1.html http://www.guardian.co.tt/archives/2004-10-14/sports1.html