
Alfred Carey: Lessons For Life
Recently retired from the teaching profession after more than 46 years in the
field, former Technical Institute instructor Alfred Carey beleives academics and
technology should be treated equally in education.
"Technical Institute
was important because the students got an opportunity. right at the very
beginning, not to see any difference between academics and the
trades,"he maintains. "In fact, there should be no division
between academics and technology. Both should form the basis for a well rounded
education."
Carey used woodwork "as a medium for teaching young
men how to think logically. The boys may have thought that we were instructing
them in carpentry, but we were, in fact, teaching them how to think and they, in
turn, developed an appreciation for how English, mathematics and the sciences
were interrelated with the trades."
Carey received his secondary
school education at the Berkeley Institute. Upon graduation, he left the island
armed with a Bermuda Government Scholarship to study at the Kingston Technical
School in Jamaica, where he obtained a City and Guilds Teaching qualification in
Building, mathematics and other subjects. Ironically, as a youngster, he was
interested in becoming a shipwright until his father talked him out of the
idea.
"My father was a carpenter who worked at Dockyard. He knew that I
wanted to be a shipwright, but he told me I'd never be able to throw all of
those planks around because of my slight build. So I decided to concentrate on
something else." he says smiling.
As a budding carpenter, Carey
learned his trade, during the summers, working at W.E.R.Joell's cabinet-making
shop, where he did refurbishing, among other things.
After returning home
from Jamaica, Carey taught woodwork at the manual training centre in St.
George's three days a week, while the remaining two days he taught in
Somerset.
Later, when a teaching position became available at the Technical
Institute, Carey joined the faculty there in 1961, approximately five years
after it had opened. "The school was started to provide technical training
to young men after the Dockyard closed, mainly in the trades, however, the
students received training for life which prepared them to work in any fields
they so chose." he says. "The boys could have their GCE's in
English, mathematics and technical drawing, and in other areas as well. They had
both the academic and technical approach to education and the people who came to
Technical Institute in ensuing years were of the same standard as those who went
to Berkeley, Saltus or Warwick Academy." Carey maintains.
Why, in his
opinion did the school eventually close?
"It closed because they wanted
to start the college. I guess the school was turning out too much of an elitist
student," Carey suggests, adding that none of the teachers at the
school, during that time, wanted to see the school closed.
Since Technical
Institute's closing, Carey claims that he has seen the effect upon the trade
industry on the Island.
"If Technical Institute had continued, it would
have served a very vital purpose because today the trades like carpentry,
masonry and plumbing are suffering. The older fellas are dying out and there are
no younger fellas to replace them."
Carey is currently putting
together a history of the Technical Institute. He has in his possesion the first
school bell and a number of other memorabilia associated with the
school.
"To be a teacher, you have to really enjoy the proffesion and
must have the ability to emphathise with all types of people," he
explains. "As a teacher, I was always interested in getting the fellas who
people said couldnt learn. They were always challenges for me, there is no such
thing as a student who can't learn. The secret lies in finding the key to unlock
the door to his mind so that he will respond."
A further indication
of Carey's teaching philosophy can be found in the words of a number of flyers
he had hanging on the walls of his office.
"A man who works with his
hands is a labourer ... a man who works with his hands and his head is a
craftsman ... but a man who works with his hands, his head and his heart is an
artist."
Marshall Minors: Motivated To Succeed.
Marshall Minors, Principal Highways Engineer in the Ministry or Works and
Engineering, welcomes the fact that serious consideration is being given to
reintroducing technical training in Bermuda's proposed new senior secondary
school.
"I'm pleased that there has been talk of reimplementing some of
the aspects that Tech had into the new senior secondary school. I think that
would be good becuase it is very difficult to find people with the technical
background who are really trainable," he explains.
"Usually the
reliance is on people who are already in the engineering profession, or already
studying engineering. But I think, even in trades such as masonry, carpentry,
construction and electrical, people are few and far between because kids don't
get the opportunity to get that grounding and I don't mean just one semester of
doing workshop. At Tech, we did that twice a week for five years. When you do
that, you come out being very friendly with technical equipment, whether it's
saws, machinery, or electrical equipment. You just have a good grounding in that
particular discipline.
"I believe that if Technical Institute existed today,
we wouldnt have the problem of trying to find well trained tradespeople and
technical proffesionals. The school would have served Bermuda well. Just look at
the people who came out of Tech at Belco, Telco, Cable and Wireless - people who
are almost at senior level of various companies."
Minors, who decided
to forgo an opportunity to attend Berkely in order to go to Technical Institute,
claims thathis decision to do so was directly related to the impressions that
older guys at Tech made upon him as a youngster.
"They seemed so well
organised and under control. They were also well-behaved guys who had an air of
sophistication as well. Also, the things that they were studying I found
interesting. They were doing physics and chemistry, but also material sciences
like metalwork, a little bit of electrical at an early age. Thats what really
impressed me. These guys were 14 years old, talking about circuits and, at that
point in Bermuda, electronics was the new technology in the
world."
After graduating from Tech, Minors pursued further studies
abroad in civil engineering and returned home to work in the Ministry of Works
and Engineering, where he has been employed for more than 20 years.
As an
engineer, he lists the Co-ed Facility, the East Broadway Road Scheme and St.
Brendans Hospital as some of his major accomplishments.
"Tech's
greatest contribution, in my opinion, was that it produced balanced people and
this was reflected in the education we received. It was an academic school, but
it had an emphasis on the technical trades. A lot of people are academically
inclined, but don't want to end up as lawyers or accountants. They wanted to do
something technicaly professional like architecture, environmental engineering
or marine biology. I'm sure there are teachers who thought I would not have
aspired to where I am today. But being at Technical motivated me and challenged
me to go as far as I could go."
Philip Pedro: High Aspirations
Philip Pedro claims that the value of a school like Technical Institute can
be seen in the conspicuous absence of of qualified Bermudian tradesmen in local
industries today.
"I think a school like Tech is sorely missed because
there is no school around today that is producing people to go into the trade
industries, although the guys who went into the garages from Tech didn't stay as
mechanics for the rest of their lives.
Everyone of those guys who came out of
Tech may have gone in as apprentices, but they were soon the managers of the
departments and the bosses running the offices. You'll find that throughout the
various garages in Bermuda. This was because of their academic grounding, as
well as the vocational training they received. So, I think that type of school
is definately needed and I highly recommend that we have a technical school
again on the Island."
Pedro, who is senior Vice President of Olympia
Capitol International, Inc., an investment management company, and also holds
the titles of president and general manager of other similar corporate concerns,
believes that the school may have been ahead of it's time.
"Basically,
when the school started, they may have been looking for people who were
mechanically inclined. I don't know whether it was an experiment or whether the
wanted blue collar workers to come out of the school, but most of the guys I
went to school with are extremely bright and had higher aspirations than
that," he explains.
"We had great teachers and I think it
surprised a lot of people the type of academic expertise that came out of the
school. It was amazing the amount of kids who were doing GCE's and going the
academic route while picking up trades on the side."
In fact,
according to Pedro, that was one of the unique aspects of technical that
originally attracted him to the school.
"I liked the idea of learning a
trade, while you were learning academics. Also as far as the trades were
concerned, we were learning the hteory and having an opportunity to apply the
practical. We learned electrical work, how to lay block, how to plaster walls
and most of the things at the school were built by the students. We built a
couple of the labs in the bcak of the school, mixed the concrete, poured the
floor and laid the block. Although we didn't put the roofs on, we took the block
up to wall plate. We not only learned something, but we had the opportunity to
put it into practice."
Pedro claims that those skills he learned at
Tech have served him well.
"It's been useful to me right up until
today, because owning a house, I've been building on and laying my own block, do
my own electrical and my own plastering. I do everything myself, and it's all
stuff I learned at Technical.
I'm a professional who's not afraid to get his
hands dirty."
Dennis Hart: Caring Was The Key
"I think that one of the worst things that happened in the education
system in Bermuda was when they closed Tech down becuase the school was just not
another technical school, says former student Dennis Hart.
"At
one stage, our academic passes, in terms of GCE's were on par with Berkeley and
Warwick Academy. We had some brilliant students and there was always that other
outlet where the guy who was not so academically inclined could be taught a
trade and still have the respect and dignity of a guy who went on to achieve
great academic heights. I think the educational system did our kids an injustice
by closing that school because, let's face it, everybody in Bermuda is not going
to end up being a doctor or a lawyer. There has to be an outlet for kids who can
work with their hands the technical sides of their minds.
"Until something is
done to bring back a school such as Technical, or, at the very least, integrate
that into the present system, I beleive our kids are really gonna be lost, I
really do." So says Hart, now manager of the Automtive Services
Department at Pearman Watlington.
Starting at PW's as a day release student,
while still in his fourth year at Tech, joined the company on a permanent basis
in 1964 as an apprentice after he graduated in the mechanical shop. Since then
he has worked his way through the ranks of the company to his present position,
which involves the general overseeing of mechanical repairs, body work and spray
painting.
And, it's quite obvious when talking with hart that he holds
Technical Institute in very high regard. "Well, I think that, most of the
guys who went to Tech, particularly in those early years, will tell you that we
really had a great sense of pride. Tech was supposed to be the other technical
school on the island, Cunningham's being the other," he explains.
"However, the thing that really set us apart was that academically, Tech
had some very high standards and we had teachers at that school who accepted no
less than excellent from us, people like Mr. Clegg in chemistry, Vivian Sweeting
in English and Dr. Clifford Maxwell with maths."
Hart also speaks
with particular admiration about another teacher, George Henderson. "Mr.
Henderson was our mechanical engineering teacher, but he wasn't just a teacher,
he was almost like a part time father to us. I guess we all went through a stage
when we might have thought we hated the man because he was such a perfectionist,
but he wanted so much for us.
"He got us involved in, not only becoming
qualified mechanics, but going as far as the technicans level. One of the things
he said to us and repeated throughout our studies was that he was there to teach
and he was going to make sure we learned." Hart recalls. "But he
didn't want to teach us the trade if all we wanted to be was, in his words,
spanner operators. He wanted to know that 10, 15 years down the road he wouldn't
be coming to our places of business and seeing us still on the workshop floor,
fixing cars. he wanted us to strive higher and this is something that all the
guys who went to Tech, in my era, and a few classes down, had instilled in
us.
Hart also claims that having older students to emulate as role
models and yardsticks of achievement made a positive and lasting impression on
him.
"One of the things that was good was that the older students tried
to exert their authority in a way that was always a motivating type of thing.
They were always motivating us to try and achieve a little bit more.
"If you
were slouching around in school, you might be given a little smack upside the
head and told that Tech boys don't walk around like that.
"Also, you had guys
like Ross Smith and Reg Minors, who some of the younger fellas looked up to
because they were tall, first of all, but also because they were achieving
certain things in their classes.
"I think going to that school and being
associated with the teachers there proved to be very beneficial to me,"
he points out.
"There was a strong male presence and, I believe, most
of us looked up to those male figures because a lot of us guys who went to Tech
actually came from single parent homes, so having that male figure was extremely
important to us.
"I also thought there was such a sense of caring, first, and
then educating. We were treated with respect and then they imparted the
education and the knowledge to us.
"In the end, I really think
that made for a good combination."
Lorin Smith is a regular contributor to RG Magazine. (Reprinted
with permission of RG Magazine)
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