The Secretary-General has outlined four pillars designed to nurture Commonwealth students into future leaders.

The Secretary-General has outlined four pillars designed to nurture Commonwealth students into future leaders.
Patricia Scotland made the keynote speech at the Council for Education in the Commonwealth annual conference on May 22 under the theme 鈥極ur Commonwealth: A focus on student success鈥.
Speaking at the event in St George鈥檚 University, Grenada, she said: 鈥淪tudents who are educated to think creatively will have a distinctive advantage: they will be equipped to master new areas of knowledge.
"They will be able to collaborate across cultural and disciplinary boundaries and thrive in enterprises that have not yet even been invented. They will be at the forefront of innovation."
The Secretary-General took the opportunity to speak about the Commonwealth鈥檚 education programme, Learning For Life, designed to help governments respond to the needs of all learners but especially those students most at risk of multiple deprivations and vulnerabilities.
She then proposed four pillars towards a 鈥渃ommon wealth鈥 for Commonwealth students.
- Learning for life 鈥 with readily available skills-based training and higher education programmes that respond to market needs.
- Employment 鈥 as a focus for ensuring brighter prospects and widening opportunity within the global development agenda.
- Entrepreneurship 鈥 so that enterprise and innovation create employment and sustainable growth.
- Engagement 鈥 to encourage well-informed consultation and responsiveness to the needs and aspirations of all.
Host country Grenada was praised by the Secretary-General for recognising that it鈥檚 鈥測outh represents its wealth鈥.
She highlighted how the Grenada economy is expected to grow by 3.5 per cent in 2018/19 and that strong activity in the education sector is partly to thank for this.
The Secretary-General also pointed to Grenada鈥檚 plan to establish a National Skills Development Institute and two new skills centres in 2019 as being 鈥渉ighly commendable".
She added that Grenada is an "ideal place" to consider how government and public and private sectors intersect with education and employment to open up opportunity in the 21st century.
The Council for Education in the Commonwealth is currently celebrating its 60th anniversary. This year鈥檚 conference is designed to explore the main challenges facing education provision across the 53 member states.