ABSTRACT
Higher education and its ability to produce a high quality, specialized labour force is vital to Caribbean destinations and their ability to innovate and remain highly competitive in the global tourism market. The purpose of this paper is to engage in exploratory research to determine the extent to which Caribbean tertiary institutions are educating for destination success. The tourism curricula of six institutions across the English-speaking Caribbean were evaluated using content analysis. The study disclosed that there is good alignment between the tourism curricula across the region and the definers of destination success. However, urgent consideration must be given to reshaping the curricula to provide a better balance between knowledge acquisition, knowledge creation, knowledge application and knowledge transformation.
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No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).
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Notes on contributors
Acolla Lewis-Cameron
Acolla Lewis-Cameron is Dean of the Faculty of Social Sciences at University of the West Indies, St. Augustine, Trinidad. Her educational achievements include a MSc. Hospitality and Tourism Education from the University of Surrey, UK and a Ph.D. in Tourism from Brunel University, UK. She is the lead editor of the text entitled “Marketing Island Destinations: Concepts and Cases” and co-author of the text “Caribbean Tourism: Concepts and Cases”.