| |
Back to Index
Zimbabwe's educational legacy from the 1980s: was it all so rosy
Mary
E. Ndlovu, Sokwanele
May 21, 2013
View
this article on the Sokwanele website here
Download
this document
- Acrobat
PDF version (233KB)
If you do not have the free Acrobat reader
on your computer, download it from the Adobe website by clicking
here
February 2013
has come and gone, bringing with it yet another set of abysmal O
level examination results and another round of national gnashing
of teeth, finger-pointing and acrimonious name-calling. Some attempted
to score cheap political points at the expense of rational debate,
while the Minister was at pains to point out the difficulties faced
by children trying to learn over the past chaotic few years. Indeed,
the schools have suffered drastically through the decade of economic
collapse and political violence, starved of funding, abandoned by
teachers, who left children to fend for themselves without much
opportunity for learning. The Minister was not wrong in pinpointing
the problems of recent years. However, if we step back to take a
longer view of the evolution of our education system, we will find
that the present dysfunction originates much further back, and is
in fact the logical outcome of policies introduced in the immediate
post-independence years – those very policies which have been
hailed as bringing Zimbabwe the “best education system in
Africa”. It is time for us to revisit the developments of
those years.
Much glowing
rhetoric has been mouthed and printed lauding the miraculous achievements
of Zimbabwean education in the post-independence period. But how
much has been myth and how much hard fact? Public and private figures
talk about restoring our education to “excellence”.
Certainly there were excellent aspects and segments, but is it correct
to characterise the system as excellent? In comparison to many other
African nations, Zimbabwe could certainly boast of both quantity
and quality, but is the low standard achieved by others the measuring
stick we should be using, or should we be looking at what was done
in comparison to what might have been done? Or at least should we
not be telling the truth about what was done and the legacy it left?
Post-Independence
expansion policy – democratisation means quantity
A major component
of both liberation movements’ promises to the Zimbabwean people
when independence was achieved in 1980 was to bring expansion and
equality in the education system. Education was considered to be
a necessary ingredient of economic development, but it would also
fulfil the demands and aspirations of the general populace to have
their children educated so that they could emerge from poverty into
a more comfortable life with modern amenities. Thus everyone expected
that the new government would address the racial disparities in
educational provision and meet the people’s demands. Few,
however, were really expecting the massive expansion which took
place in the early 80’s, with the aim of fulfilling the election
promise to provide both primary and secondary education to all children.
During the final
war years, many schools had been closed, so enrolment numbers had
declined from their peak in 1977[i]. But when the schools opened
in January 1980 after the signing of the ceasefire, the numbers
skyrocketed. The expansion which took place in the ensuing years
has been the hallmark of Zimbabwean education, and it was a truly
remarkable achievement. The figures tell the story.
During 1980,
1,310,315 children registered for school[ii]. Of these, the vast
majority were in primary school – 1,235,994 – with only
74,321 being registered for secondary schools. The total was an
increase of 424,514 or 47.9% over the previous year, and of 38.5%
over the higher enrolments of 1977 before the war took such a toll.
The huge 1980 increase took place primarily because the war had
ended and schools which had been closed reopened. Parents rushed
to enrol their children in school, now that they could move freely
without fear, and the Grade 1 intake more than doubled from 1979
or any earlier year. Returning refugee children also swelled the
school population.
But after independence
in April of 1980, a much bigger expansion was introduced, to begin
taking effect in 1981. The abolition of any primary school tuition
fee from Term 3 in 1980 encouraged many to enrol their children
the following January. In that next year, the Grade 1 intake increased
again by 25%[iii] and the numbers in every grade from 2 to 7 were
substantially higher than in 1980, indicating that most children
had by this time returned to school, and many who had been unable
to enter school during the war registered even though they were
now overage. The total primary enrollment for 1981 was nearly half
a million more than in 1980. By 1982 the number was over 1.9 million
and by 1983, as the huge grade 1 intakes from 80-82 began to make
their way through the system, the figure reached over 2 million,
never to drop below this again. The essence of this growth was to
move from a 70% participation rate of children in primary schools
in 1976 to 97% in 1984[iv].
However remarkable
that may have been, the far greater expansion took place in secondary
schooling. Prior to independence, one of the major grievances of
African Rhodesians had been that secondary schooling was harshly
restricted by a selection process at grade 7. Thus, in 1976 when
70% of children were able to attend primary school, only 23% of
Grade 7 pupils could proceed to secondary. The new government made
an early decision and in mid-year announced that from January 1981
every child who finished Grade 7 could automatically proceed to
Form 1, regardless of examination results. Places would be made
available for all. From 22,201 in 1980 the Form 1 intake nearly
quadrupled in 1981 to 83,491. With this policy being continued from
year to year, by 1986 the secondary school population surged to
over half a million. The combined school enrollments reached just
over 3 million for the first time in 1991 – representing 28%
of the total Zimbabwean population at the time.[v]
Of course the
consequences of such an explosion in numbers were manifold and would
have been debilitating for any school system. As the Permanent Secretary
wrote in his report “1981 might be described as the year of
shortages; shortages, that is of everything but children”[vi].
There were not enough buildings, not enough teachers, not enough
teaching materials, not enough ministry staff to conduct supervision,
and certainly not enough experienced administrators. Everything
became make-do.
Download
full document
Visit the Sokwanele
fact
sheet
Please credit www.kubatana.net if you make use of material from this website.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License unless stated otherwise.
TOP
|