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How
HIV/AIDS is affecting ECED programmes
Patricia Maunganidze,
Matron at Collin John Campbell center.
Extracted from the Child Advocate Newsletter, Issue No. 3
December 2003
Like all other sectors of Zimbabwe’s
society which have been affected by HIV and AIDS, Early Childhood
Education and Development (ECED) has not been spared the effects.
As parents die, resulting in reduced
financial resources for surviving children and the cost of living
continue to sky-rocket, orphans are the first ones to feel the wrath
as they are pulled out of pre-school. Some do not even get to see
the gates of a pre-school as they are kept at home until school-going
time, or even sent away to the villages to live with ailing grandmothers.
The little available resources are turned to other needs like food,
rather than pre-school.
Pre-school enrolments are dropping. For
example Collin John Campbell had 75 children registered at start
of last term, but by the end of that term, five had pulled out.
Two went back home because the guardian could no longer afford the
fees. One was sent out of Harare to go live with an aunt because
the parents had died of AIDS. Children who are isolated during the
pre-school days, tend to development slower as they miss out on
social interaction with others, which is key to their development.
Children who are infected by HIV suffer
similar consequences as adults. Ill health affects their development,
and other children tend not to want to play with them simply because
they suffer from scabies or diarrhea, or any other visible disease.
Because of the stigma associated with
AIDS, people are reluctant to tell the pre-school teachers the status
of their children. However, divulging a child’s HIV status is helpful
to the child and the teacher who spends a greater part of day with
the child at the pre- school. If the teacher knows, she is better
placed to handle situations if a child gets sick or is involved
in an accident at the play center.
ECED is playing a valuable role of providing
love and affection that most orphaned children miss out on after
the death of their parents. Most of the people who are trusted with
the custody of orphans do not care very much about the child’s health
or education, let alone showing them affecting that children so
thrive on. They are pre-occupied with trying to survive or enjoying
the benefits left behind by late parents of the children they would
be looking after.
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