There is something deeply unjust about changing the rules when people are already halfway up the ladder.
That is precisely what the Ministry of Education has done with its new teacher promotion policy. After decades of service, thousands of teachers are now being told that the very experience that sustained them, and the system, no longer carries meaningful weight.
Under the new framework, trained teachers receive just one point for every five years of service. Under the previous system, they earned two points for every year. The difference is staggering. A teacher with 15 years of service who once accumulated 30 points will now receive just 3.
Some call this reform but it is a dismantling of value.
Policies like this are often dressed up in the language of modernization and professionalization. We are told that higher qualifications must be rewarded, that standards must rise, that the system must evolve. All of that is true. But what is also true, and too easily forgotten, is that no education system survives without experienced teachers.
Experience is not decorative. It is functional.
It is the teacher who knows how to manage a classroom when resources are thin. It is the teacher who mentors younger colleagues. It is the teacher who understands how to navigate the realities of children, communities, and schools in a way that no textbook can teach.
To reduce that experience to near insignificance is both misguided and reckless.
The consequences will not be abstract. They will be immediate and personal. Teachers who were on track for promotion will now find themselves pushed back or pushed out. Those approaching eligibility for benefits tied to years of service will see those opportunities slip away. Years of commitment, quietly and consistently given, will be rendered almost meaningless overnight.
And all of this has been advanced without meaningful engagement with the Guyana Teachers’ Union.
That alone should give pause.
Education reform cannot be imposed as a decree. It must be negotiated, especially when it affects the livelihoods and dignity of those who deliver education every day. When a Ministry chooses to sideline its teachers’ representative body, it signals not strength, but disregard.
The union has not rejected improvement. They have called for balance. A system that recognizes qualifications, yes, but also respects experience and performance. That is not an unreasonable position. It is, in fact, the only sustainable one.
Because there is a larger truth here.
If teachers feel devalued, they will disengage.
If they disengage, they will leave.
If they leave, the system will weaken.
And when the system weakens, it is not policymakers who suffer first. It is students.
The Ministry must step back from this.  Not to abandon reform, but to correct it.  Withdraw the current framework. Engage in genuine, structured negotiations with the Guyana Teachers’ Union. Design a promotion system that reflects the full reality of teaching, one that values both academic advancement and lived experience.
This is not a confrontation. It is a test of leadership. Â A Ministry that cannot listen cannot lead.
A system that does not value its teachers cannot succeed. Â And a country that ignores the people who educate its children is quietly undermining its own future.
