Dear Editor,
When the Guyana Online Academy of Learning (GOAL) launched its 2026 cycle with a record 14,064 scholarships, the government framed it as a triumph of ambition over adversity. Yet thousands of students from the 2024-2025 cohorts remain trapped in limbo—denied portal access, chasing refunds, or awaiting extended deadlines for degrees of dubious standing. This is not progress; it is a high-stakes distraction, where fresh announcements bury unresolved scandals without addressing the rotten core: an intermediary model that invites fraud and incompetence.
The Limbo Legacy
The collapse of the University of Staffordshire partnership stands as GOAL’s most glaring failure. In August 2024, 1,400 students were proudly awarded spots through the International Skill Development Corporation (ISDC), only for red flags to emerge by January 2025—students locked out of university systems, followed by Staffordshire’s public disavowal of any formal tie. GOAL severed the link in March 2025, but the damage lingers: ISDC, the broker at the center, is now repaying US$1.5 million to Guyana after peddling unauthorized courses.
Indira Gandhi National Open University(IGNOU) fares no better. Thousands of students face an April 30, 2026, deadline to submit overdue assignments, a tacit admission that the program’s machinery is clogged with backlog rather than humming with efficiency. Amity University in Dubai, meanwhile, hovers in scrutiny’s shadow, its cohorts’ fates unclarified amid 2025 inquiries. These are not footnotes; they represent a systemic betrayal of trust, where public funds fueled private hustles.
New Partners, Same Vulnerabilities
GOAL’s response? Pivot to scale. The 2026 lineup boasts Lewis University (USA) for computer science and MBAs, International University of Miami, Saint James School of Medicine (St. Vincent), Atlantic Technological University (Ireland), Miles Education for certifications, and local outfits like The New Guyana School and New Horizon. Impressive on paper, perhaps—but the partner roster reveals no shift from the intermediary trap that enabled the ISDC debacle.
Direct government-to-university contracts are absent; brokers and frameworks persist. This is the unlearned lesson: Staffordshire didn’t fail because of one rogue actor, but because GOAL outsourced verification to the very middlemen profiting from opacity. Without ironclad, transparent pacts, the next “record-breaking” cycle risks another million-dollar refund queue.
Accountability Over Announcements
Guyana deserves better than a program that measures success in raw numbers while ignoring human cost. The 14,000 new scholars are a political win, but they cannot absolve the ministry’s negligence—who greenlit ISDC? Why ignore early warnings? The May 2026 portal reopening offers no comfort when the prior cycle’s wounds fester.
True reform demands ditching intermediaries for direct linkages, mandatory pre-launch audits, and public dashboards tracking every cohort’s progress. Until then, GOAL remains a monument to mismanagement: promising digital uplift while delivering analog chaos.
“How many more cycles must collapse before the government chooses governance over gimmicks? The public watches, and the burner stays lit.”