Executive Chairman of Cool Group of companies, Joe Issa, says he believes in promoting education because it is the surest way out of poverty, the scourge of all societies.IMG_0693

Issa, who has established charities as a conduit for giving back, has focused on education as it opens up opportunities for gainful employment, which provides the necessities for daily living – food, clothing and shelter.

However, he cautions that sometimes, depending on how enabling the business environment is, more is needed, such as a good education, creativity and imagination or even retraining in order to break completely, the cycle of poverty.

“Yes! Literacy and numeracy will take you somewhere in terms of getting a job, but you may not even need to be able to read, write and count for these low-paying jobs, such as digging holes and filling them back. And when all the holes have been dug and filled, what next is left to do? And that’s when the cookie crumbles.

“So, numeracy and literacy have their uses, such as in functionality: enabling you to follow directions in traveling, dosages in dispensing medicine, recipes in cooking and applications in using agricultural chemicals, etc. But beyond these, the mere ability to read, write and count is woefully inadequate,” says Issa.

In 1987, Issa founded “Educate the Children Fund to buy books for disadvantaged children in Jamaica and the wider Caribbean and a year later, he established the “Joe Issa/Holy Cross Scholarship Fund” to send students to university.

He describes a good education as one that does not merely enable school leavers to get a decent entry level job, but one which allows them to matriculate to higher education, such as college and university and get a profession.

As a civic-minded philanthropist who has hosted youth camps and disadvantaged children in the communities in which his businesses operate, Issa believes that schools must be progressive in order to churn out university-ready children.

With this in mind, he founded “Global Education 2000”, which has twined Jamaican schools with their counterparts in the United States. Several schools have benefited from these exchanges, including Three Hills All Age School in St. Mary, which was twinned with Broward Elementary School in Tampa, Florida.

Issa, who was pleased with the idea, said it’s a “major development which will see an exciting, rewarding exchange of cultural ideas and thoughts between students and teachers at both institutions.”

“Much of who I am today is due to my good fortune of having been able to access a good education and I wish nothing less for all Jamaican children,” Issa says.

Comments
  1. cyppes says:

    Ministry of Education launches ‘Our Children JA’ campaign

    BY: LOOP NEWS
    16:14, May 4, 2016
    1310 VIEWS

    The Ministry of Education, Youth and Information has launched a national public education campaign aimed at solidifying in the minds of the general public that every Jamaican child is our collective responsibility and must be treated as a national asset.

    The campaign, entitled ‘OUR CHILDREN JA’, was launched recently by Floyd Green, State Minister in the Ministry of Education, Youth and Information during a national broadcast at the start of Child Month which is being celebrated under the theme, “Healthy Children Build a Stronger Nation”.

    http://www.loopjamaica.com/content/ministry-education-launches-our-children-ja-campaign

  2. berpont says:

    Education Ministry Looks to Better Serve Children with Autism

    By Rochelle Williams April 18, 2016

    Minister of Education, Youth and Information, Senator the Hon. Ruel Reid, is looking to work more closely with the Jamaica Autism Support Association (JASA) to better address the needs of children with autism.

    “I want to invite you at your earliest convenience to have a sit down to examine how the great work of JASA can be enhanced through greater twinning with the mandate and work of the Ministry. I believe that all our children deserve an equal opportunity to learn,” he said.

    http://jis.gov.jm/education-ministry-looks-better-serve-children-autism/

  3. Hillary Mayberry says:

    Someone I know well told me that while lying on his hospital bed watching the news, he heard for the first time of an audit that had been done for the health sector, and which found deficiencies in a number of areas of the health care delivery system.

    He said, “I’m at the National Chest Hospital (NHC) in upscale Barbican where the lawns are mowed almost daily, the breeze is fresh and clean, the floor and toilets cleaned four times a day, medication is fairly adequate with some shortages of course, the staff is efficient, professional and caring, and meals are plentiful and served three times a day with good dietary foods, albeit tasteless, as hospital food goes, all under a relatively spacious facility. https://joeissadevelopment.wordpress.com/2015/10/01/health-audit-how-bad-is-it/

  4. Harry Brown says:

    “…Of Living To Achieve And To Give – The Joe Issa Narrative!”
    http://www.writerscafe.org/writing/Shiv556/1916310/

  5. Bryan Frost says:

    $1.5M Tax Threshold: Joey Issa Happy for Cool, Jamaican PAYE Workers
    http://www.writerscafe.org/writing/Shiv556/1926932/

  6. Opal Green says:

    International Businessman Joe Issa Supports Etiquette Tests for Prospective New Employees of Jamaican Corporations, Training to Add Value https://medium.com/@motein34/international-businessman-joe-issa-supports-etiquette-tests-for-prospective-new-employees-of-e8c5ba5b70f2

  7. Hillary Mayberry says:

    Personal and Corporate Responsibility: Giving Back is a Must – Joe Issa https://joeyissaphilanthropy.wordpress.com/2016/04/18/personal-and-corporate-responsibility-giving-back-is-a-must-joe-issa/

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