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The Fourth Formers who excelled

Admin by Admin
August 28, 2025
in News
Mark Bandon of St. Stanislaus College.

Mark Bandon of St. Stanislaus College.

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This year Joshua Mc Arthur, who just turned sixteen years old who attend Queen’s College, came to national attention as he matriculated high school from Grade 10, formerly known as fourth form. He wrote the most subjects at this grade level nationally. He sat 9 subjects and earned Grade Ones in 8 of those subjects (Chemistry, English A, Mathematics, Physics, Physical Education & Sports, Technical Drawing Industrial Technology Mechanical and Industrial Technology Building) and a Grade 2 in Geography. This Vryheid’s Lust, East Coast Demerara boy received honorable mention and was present at the Ministry’s announcement of results. He will be going off to the University of Guyana to do Petroleum Engineering. Joshua’s older sister, Lateisha Mc Arthur is a Guyana scholar having earned second place in the country at Caribbean Advanced Proficiency Examination (CAPE) level 2024 and recently departed for the University of the West Indies (UWI) to do medicine on a full Government of Guyana scholarship.

Joshua McArthur of Queen’s College.

Joshua follows on the heels of Yeshua Huston who matriculated from Queen’s College last year (2024) at 15 years old from Grade 9 or third form by doing five subjects but through a private institution rather than through the school. Yeshua is now at the University of Guyana pursuing a Bachelor of Science Degree in Computer Science and is an avid cricketer who plays under 17 cricket for the Demerara Cricket Club.

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Joshua was joined at the release ceremony by Emray St Hill, a student from North Georgetown Secondary in Woolford Avenue who wrote six subjects, (English A, Mathematics, Office Administration, Principles of Accounts, Principles of Business and Social Studies), and earned three (3) Grade Ones, two (2) Grade Twos and one (1) Grade Three. He will be sixteen years. Mark Bandon, a Saint Stanislaus boy, who wrote 5 subjects and matriculated high school by earning five Grade Twos in English, Mathematics, Social Studies, Integrated Science and Information Technology has decided to pursue studies at the University of Guyana in Civil and Environmental Engineering.

Emray St. Hill of North Georgetown Secondary

With them at the release ceremony also was David Hackett, a Bishop’s High school boy, who wrote four subjects and earned three (3) Grade Ones in Mathematics, Office Administration and Principles of Business and a Grade Two in Economics. David will be going into fifth form to pursue sixteen (16) subjects in Grade 11.

Additionally, 14 children in Guyana wrote 3 subjects in Grade 10. Three of them earned Grade Ones in all three subjects. They are all of Queens College and are Juvell Atherly, 16 years old, who did Mathematics, Physical Education & Sports and EDPM, Arya Murli, 15 years old, who did Mathematics, English A and EDPM and Cassidy Singh, 16 years old, who did Mathematics, English A and Physical Education & Sports.

Three hundred and forty-one (341) children from across Guyana’s schools wrote various subjects in Fourth Form. Two hundred and thirty-five (235) of them entered for one subject while eighty-six (86) entered for two subjects and fourteen (14) entered for three subjects. Three (3) students entered for four subjects, and one each for 5, 6, and 9 subjects.

279 fourth formers entered for Mathematics with 271 of those or 97% of them passing with Grades 1-3 while 165 of them or 59% earned Grade Ones. One hundred and eleven children wrote English with 100% of them passing the subject with Grades 1-3, with 75 of them or 68% earning Grade Ones.

Electronic and Data Preparation Management (EDPM) saw the next

David Hackett of The Bishops’ High School

highest number of entries with 12 children writing and all 12 passing with grades 1-3 with a ohenomenal 9 of them receiving Grade Ones. Those 9 were all from Queen’s College and incidentally made up the first batch at this school to sit the subject at Grade 10 under the expert tutelage of Samantha Liverpool, now one of the school’s new Deputy Head teachers. Six children across Guyana wrote Principles of Business (POB), 5 wrote Physical Education & Sports and others wrote subjects such as Social Studies, Visual Arts, Industrial Technology, Physics and Economics.

Of the eighty six (86) children who wrote two subjects in Grade 10, thirty-two (32) of them earned grade ones in both subjects. They are from President’s College: Jewel Park (English A and Agricultural Science) and Christopher Richmond (Mathematics and English), from Saint Stanislaus College, Seyra Mc Pherson (Mathematics and English A ) and Jianna Hopkinson (English A, Human & Social Biology), from St Joseph’s High, all the children who earned Grades Ones in two subjects did so in Mathematics and English A. They are Shivraj Flood, Saskia Grant, Renita James, Isaiah Mc Alman, Gabriella Roderigues, Alicia Spooner, Princess Stephen, Ricardo Thakur. From Queen’s College, Vishun Basdeo, Kassia Dookie, Sarah Lewis, Kaitlyn Persaud, all of who did Mathematics and English A and Charisma Etwaroo and Adrian Playter who did Mathematics and Human & Social Biology, Shanee Kesney who did Mathematics and Physical Education & Sports, Makala Glasgow, Fatima Grant, Aditi Joshi, Himanshi Kumar, Obama Prosper, Jahzarra Ramdat and Kelsey Vyphius, all did Mathematics and EDPM. From St Rose’s High all of who earned grade ones in two subjects did Mathematics and English A and they are Naiara Budhram, Malka David, Samir Rasool, Collin Roberts, Vivek Singh, Samiya Wickham. 

Cassidy Singh (left), Juvell Atherly (middle) & Arya Murli (right), all of Queen’s College.

These exceptional results in the fourth year of high school, especially after missing all of Grade 6 and much of Grade 7 as a result of the COVID 19 school closure, is evidence of a resilient and diverse education system that caters to supporting both children who need more attention as well as to children who are specially talented and are interested in challenging themselves in various fields at an earlier age. These outstanding results also point to a support system in teachers and parents that combine to bring out the best in our children from a variety of schools. 

The results are trending upward at every level and this has been directly attributed to the resources that were made universally available by the Ministry of Education as well as a relaxing of the old rules that saw one fit for all being applied, rather than a system that catered for individual strengths and weaknesses. 

Things can only get brighter, and the Ministry of Education is excited at the prospects of individualized teaching and learning that President Irfaan Ali has touted to be rolled out in the next five years.

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