THE College of the Bahamas council has appointed Dr Earla Carey-Baines acting president of COB.
Dr Carey-Baines will hold the position until a new president is appointed at the end of an ongoing search that will lead to the selection of a Bahamian professional.
The new acting president has more than 30 years experience in education and higher education administration.
Dr Carey-Baines held the position of president of the college for an interim period, from July 1, 2010 to December 31, 2010.
She joined the college as a faculty member in the English Department in 1988 and became co-ordinator of the department in Fall 1997.
From September 2000, to July 2004, Dr Carey-Baines was chair of the School of English Studies with responsibility for the school’s long range planning, curriculum, programme evaluation and faculty performance assessment.
From January 2005 to June 2010, she served as dean in the Faculty of Liberal and Fine Arts with oversight of the Schools of Communication and Creative Arts, and English Studies.
She was also acting dean with responsibility for the School of Social Sciences.
While serving in this capacity, she helped to develop the BA in Spanish programme, the college’s first baccalaureate degree in a foreign language, and collaborated with the Office of Research, Graduate Programmes and International Relations to expand student study abroad opportunities and faculty exchanges in non-English speaking countries.
Dr Carey-Baines has served the College in a number of other capacities covering a range of interests including research, graduate programmes, quality assurance, faculty promotions, professional development and fundraising; and has presented scholarly papers in a number of areas including academic integrity, academic programmes and course development.
Before joining COB, she held several senior administrative positions including general manager of the Bahamas Union of Teachers and administrator of the Winton Child Care Centre.
She began her career in education as a teacher in the public education system in 1977. Her professional career outside of academia includes serving as assistant secretary general of the Trade Union Congress and assistant secretary general of the Bahamas Union of Teachers.
Comments
Reality_Check 10 years, 11 months ago
And her stellar academic credentials of import to this weighty position for all COB students to look up and aspire to.......NONE! How very sad for the future of COB in the eyes of global academia.
ThisIsOurs 10 years, 11 months ago
Was wondering why they didn't mention what her degree was in, thought it was an oversight.
But I don't know her, perhaps she is qualified for the position, don't know... She has a union background, hopefully this isn't a political appointment.
Sign in to comment
OpenID