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High
fees, staff exodus ravage Zim schools
Mail
& Guardian (SA)
February
04, 2007
http://www.mg.co.za/articlePage.aspx?articleid=297899&area=/breaking_news/breaking_news__africa/
The empty chairs
in the classroom at Hatcliffe, a township north of the Zimbabwean
capital Harare, are a familiar sight in many schools in the economically-blighted
country.
A few weeks
after schools opened for the year's first term, six pupils in a
class of 34 had not shown up and schoolteacher Aaron Maturure was
beginning to worry.
"Maybe their
parents have failed to raise school fees for them or their parents
can't buy them school uniforms ... as you know prices have shot
up," Maturure said.
"The children
enjoy school so much they would never miss classes for flimsy reasons."
Government schools
are not free in Zimbabwe but charge lower rates than private ones.
There are a handful of bursaries for some poor students.
Takavafira Zhou,
president of the radical Progressive
Teachers' Union, said at least 45 000 pupils had dropped out
of school when the new term began in January, while up to 5 000
teachers had left the government service.
"This is lowering
standards as it heaps the burden on the remaining teachers," he
said.
"Access to education
is now based on means rather than merit. This is retrogressive.
It reverses the gains made over the years."
A steep rise
in school fees and the exorbitant price of uniforms and stationery
have driven the cost of education beyond the reach of many.
Poor families
reeling under record inflation which peaked to a new high of 1 281%
in December often face the tough choice between starvation and educating
their children.
"Two of my three
children are supposed to be in school but I failed to raise school
fees after they went up," said Norice Kachaka, a resident of northern
Harare.
Authorities
raised school fees by up to 1 000% in a move aimed at improving
facilities in state schools, which mostly operate without adequate
textbooks and laboratory equipment. Some of the buildings need urgent
repairs.
"Tell me what
future there is for these children who can't even go to primary
school because of the high fees?" said Farisai Mutanga, whose three
children were sent home for not wearing proper uniforms.
A primary school
pupil pays an average of Z$30 000 ($120) a term in fees, up from
around Z$7 000 last year.
School uniforms,
which includes shoes, sneakers, a pullover, a blazer and a hat,
can now cost up to Z$400 000.
To skimp on
uniforms, which are compulsory, some parents stitch it themselves
but the price of material is also making that option unaffordable.
A metre of cloth
ranges from Z$12 000 to Z$20 000.
A lack of resources,
high fees and an exodus of teachers are reversing the gains of Zimbabwe's
"education for all" policy launched in the 1980s, which made the
Southern African country one of the most literate on the continent.
Zimbabwe Teachers
Association (ZMTA) chief executive officer Peter Mabande said scores
of trained teachers were heading to South Africa to do menial jobs
that paid more.
Mabande said
they often left without informing school authorities or their union,
making it difficult to estimate numbers but underlined that it was
"a huge investment going to waste".
"We have heard
cases of our members doing menial jobs on farms in South Africa,
hoping to get a teaching job later," Mabande said.
"We can't take
three years training professionals only to lose them. The situation
is bad, they want to survive on their salaries which are a pittance
really.
This, he said,
was driving teachers to moonlight as street hawkers, farm labourers
or traders to supplement their income.
"Some of the
things teachers end up doing for survival are demeaning to the profession.
You have teachers who cross borders nearly every week to buy things
for resale and in the end they are no different from the ordinary
trader."
President Robert
Mugabe, himself a former teacher, last month pledged to improve
the lot of teachers and make education affordable to all.
He rapped schools
charging exorbitant fees, saying: "We are not saying run schools
at a loss. No. We are saying there should be a little margin of
profit but not outrageous ones." - Sapa-AFP
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