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The
right to quality education for all Zimbabwean children: Everyone's
challenge
Child
Protection Society (CPS)
March 25, 2009
The economic
meltdown in Zimbabwe has affected various service delivery sectors
including the education sector. Children have suffered most, as
teachers were spending more time out of the classroom so that they
could supplement their salaries. Teachers are critical to ensure
that children receive a quality education. In emergency situations
or during reconstruction, teachers not only enable children to continue
learning but they also serve as a source of reassurance and normalcy
for children and the wider community.
As focused on
in previous education bulletins, the effects may not be immediate,
but the situation signifies a precious time and learning gap created
when children were denied their right to education. This presents
a programming opportunity for CSOs in the child development sector
to introduce programmes that will revamp the education sector and
provide a qualitative resuscitation in education stimulus interventions
that reach the child.
The Zimbabwean
education system, once regarded amongst the best in the region,
had been seriously affected by the macro-economic meltdown to the
extent that it was fast losing its reputation of being one of the
finest on the African continent and beyond.
This bulletin
encourages for strategies that can be put in place to promote quality
education for children to fill an urgent service delivery gap and
help meet children's education rights. Agencies (e.g. communities,
CSOs, local and international NGOs, relief and reconstruction agencies)
in assuming the role of employer of teachers and putting in place
compensation arrangements which may vary widely. Contribution in
this way realizes some Minimum Standards for Education in Emergencies
through which the education sector can be revamped and improved
as set by the Inter-Agency Network for Education in Emergencies
(INEE)
The following
are forms of remuneration which could be implemented
- Monetary
compensations involving stipends complimented by other benefits
such as training, food and accomodation allowance,
- Non-monetary
allowances which reduce the day to day living expences of teachers
and address their basic needs
Other strategies
include:
- Opportunities
for professional development and support, including training,
effective supervision and management.
- Improved
working conditions, which may involve physical working conditions,
such as a manageable pupil teacher ratio.
Several further
challenges have been faced as school closed and teachers downed
their chalks leading to losses for children in learning time spent
outside the classrooms. The problems bedeviling our education system
cannot be tackled in isolation and they cannot be viewed outside
the larger macro economic environment prevailing in the country.
In order to be sustainable, strategies need to take into account
market forces rather than simply reaching agreements between donors,
education authorities and other employers of teachers. This is particularly
pertinent in situations where teachers are mobile and thus are more
likely to move in response to market forces, attracted by higher
wages even if it means they have to cross borders or potentially
not return to their country of origin.
Revamping confidence in the education system requires efforts, not
only from the government but also from all facets of society. Strategies
for ensuring that teachers are appropriately compensated are vital
in attracting teachers to the profession,retaining them and keeping
them motivated to provide quality education. It is important to
note that an established system for teacher compensation increases
teacher motivation, helps to stabilise the education system thus
effecting control, professionalism and accountability, decreases
teacher absenteeism and high levels of turnover, protects the investment
made in teacher training and increases the quality and availability
of education for children.
With the passage
of the Government of National Unity it is time for all policy-makers,
CSOs and individuals must come together to play their part in ensuring
that the right to education for children is ensured. Several interventions
should be put in place immediately to encourage the strenghtening
of our education system and to meet the government's targets towards
attaining the MDG2 on "Achievement of Universal Primary Education".
CSOs should therefore realign their programming focus and introduce
projects aimed at ensuring the right to education for orphans and
other vulnerable children in all provinces of Zimbabwe. Of note
are the immediate government efforts to upgrade the remuneration
of teachers in foreign currency and various efforts by School Development
Associations (SDAs) to further supplement teachers' salaries
through independent fundraising efforts.
Visit the Child
Protection Society fact
sheet
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