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Rural
education falls victim to economic decline
IRIN News
April 17, 2007
http://www.irinnews.org/report.aspx?ReportID=71650
MHONDORO - Education
delivery in Zimbabwe's rural communities has all but disintegrated
and experts warn that any gains made after independence are rapidly
being reversed in the continuing economic meltdown.
"Evidence
on the ground shows that the standards of education among rural
communities are falling sharply, and one does not rule out the possibility
of a collapse if there is no active campaign to revitalise schools
in these areas," Gordon Chavhunduka, former vice-chancellor
of the University
of Zimbabwe, told IRIN.
"In line with the
government's policy of bringing education to the majority after
independence [in 1980], rural communities made tremendous strides,
particularly before the economy started experiencing a downturn,"
he added.
The post-independence
government, which started off on a socialist path, worked vigorously
to ensure that education was available to children living in rural
areas. Investment in the construction of schools and provision of
teachers meant the number of learning institutions shot up, even
in marginalised areas.
Now, according to Chavhunduka,
the government was grappling with heavy domestic and international
debts and no longer paid attention to rural areas; other social
institutions such as hospitals were also crumbling.
"The main problem
is the failure to provide adequate resources to sustain the existing
schools, and to build more in areas that don't enjoy access to education,"
he commented.
No facilities,
no teachers
Pass rates in remote
communities are generally well below average. Donald Jonasi [not
his real name], a senior teacher at Kumuka secondary school, in
the Zowa area of Chegutu in Mashonaland West Province, told IRIN
the school persistently produced poor results because there were
no adequate facilities, it was underfunded and forced to use classrooms
belonging to a primary school.
"Even though we
teach science subjects, we don't have a laboratory and we resort
to teaching only theory - one of the reasons why it is difficult
to have good passes. Besides, how can the pupils be expected to
pass when they are supposed to share classrooms with primary school
pupils and sometimes learn under trees?" Jonasi asked.
It is not unusual for
at least fifteen pupils to share one textbook, and most pupils can
barely afford exercise books and other necessary stationery.
Trained teachers - there
are only five but 30 are needed - shun the school because it is
remote and does not have electricity, running water or a telephone.
A single teacher is responsible for a classes of up to 45 pupils.
"Not many teachers,
after spending four years at college, would want to come and teach
at a school that is as poorly equipped as this. As a result, the
ministry is left with no choice but to deploy untrained teachers
who, obviously, cannot be expected to produce the desired results,"
said Jonasi.
Teacher morale was low
because they were poorly paid, Jonasi said. "The government
is getting monkey business because it pays nuts, and some would
rather go drinking beer than teach."
The economic crunch,
characterised by inflation of more than 1,700 percent, high unemployment,
foreign currency shortages, shrinking industry and depleted agricultural
production, has forced millions of Zimbabwean professionals to relocate
to other countries. Thousands of teachers have fled to South Africa,
Botswana and Swaziland in search of better paying jobs; many others
had left the profession for better paying jobs.
Eat
or educate
As basic commodities
become more unaffordable by the day, rural parents, who mostly depend
on farming, are also feeling the pinch: they can hardly afford the
school fees for their children.
Takaona Chirenje, 49,
of Mhondoro, a village 100km west of the capital, Harare, has five
school-going children and is among the many parents struggling to
balance day-to-day family needs with sending his offspring to school.
"I managed to pay
fees for only two of the children last term, and I don't how I am
going to clear the arrears and raise enough money for next term,
starting in early May," he said.
"I have to clothe
and feed all of them but the prices of commodities are well beyond
my reach, since my only means of livelihood is the soil, yet we
have suffered one drought after another."
''I however, consider
myself lucky - my children are still in school. There are hundreds
of other poor children - who have dropped out''
Chirenje said he had no choice but to send the children to work
on a nearby farm, owned by a senior government official, during
the weekends. He worked part-time there himself, "but we don't
get much from there since the owner of the farm pays very little".
Farm workers are among
the lowest paid, with full-time labourers taking home a monthly
gross of Z$10,000, [US$0.40 at parallel market rates] - not enough
to buy a single exercise book - and fees are set to increase from
Z$25,000 to Z$90,000 [US$1 to $2.57 at parallel market rates].
His children are bracing
for a cold winter and may face the humiliation of being sent home
because their father cannot afford uniforms or school fees. "I,
however, consider myself lucky because - the difficulty of paying
school fees and buying uniforms aside - my children are still in
school. There are hundreds of other poor children I am aware of,
particularly in the surrounding farms, who have dropped out of school,"
Chirenje said.
Secondary schools are
few and far between in the Mhondoro area, leading to high dropout
rates after primary education. Children often end up in illegal
gold panning, fishing or working on commercial farms for low wages
with their parents.
The government
used to provide financial assistance to such children through the
Basic Education Assistance Module (BEAM), but the scheme is another
casualty of Zimbabwe's economic nosedive.
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