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Schools
close as hordes of teachers resign
IRIN News
October 08, 2007
http://www.irinnews.org/Report.aspx?ReportId=74698
BULAWAYO, - A South African
recruitment drive for teachers, combined with an exodus of education
professionals escaping Zimbabwe's seven-year recession, is creating
staff shortages so severe that some schools are closing.
At least four schools
have closed and several more are facing the same situation. The
students are being transferred at a time when they are preparing
to write their year-end examinations, placing even greater pressure
on the recipient schools.
Teacher's salaries have
not kept pace with Zimbabwe's official inflation rate of more than
6,000 percent, while neighbouring South Africa has embarked on a
recruitment drive for teachers in the Southern Africa Development
Community (SADC) to bolster their own teacher numbers.
Firoz Patel, director-general
for planning and monitoring in South Africa's education department,
has reportedly said they were seeking to recruit at least 4,000
mathematics and science teachers from the region by April 2008.
The department had already recruited 1,500 teachers, who were being
deployed to posts in remote areas, often shunned by local teachers.
The Progressive
Teachers Union of Zimbabwe (PTUZ), the biggest grouping of educators
in the country, said this week that 15,200 teachers had migrated
to neighbouring states, such as South Africa, Botswana, Namibia
and Swaziland, since the beginning of 2007.
Raymond Majongwe, secretary-general
of PTUZ, confirmed that the mass exodus of teachers was forcing
schools to close, while many institutions were operating with a
skeleton teaching staff.
"There are two schools
in Matabeleland North [Province] which have shut down as a result
of teacher shortages, while in Matabeleland South [Province] there
are reports that one headmaster was forced to close down the school
after all the teachers left," Majongwe told IRIN. He said 8,000
teachers had left Zimbabwe after the first term, while another 7,200
left after the second term.
Teacher
exodus
"There has been
a mass exodus of teachers ... the situation this term is worse because,
in the last two weeks alone, hundreds of teachers resigned en masse
and the figures of teachers who have now left the country could
be double those of the beginning of the year. We are still compiling
the statistics," Majongwe said.
Last week, Inyathi High
School in Matabeleland South Province transferred its students to
nearby Gloag High School after all the science teachers resigned,
while Lumene Primary School, in the same district, failed to open
for the third term when none of the teachers arrived for duty. Other
schools that have failed to open in Matabeleland South are Chibila
Primary in Binga, Sizinda and Gundwane Primary School.
Zipora Mudenda, Acting
Permanent Secretary in the Ministry of Education and Culture, confirmed
that teachers had resigned but said she was unaware of any schools
closing as a result of staff shortages.
"As far as we are
concerned all schools have been operational, and if there are such
cases of schools not being opened or closing down, this has not
been brought to our attention - and in such cases the education
directors are supposed to staff those schools with relief teachers,"
Mudenda said.
She conceded there was
a brain drain affecting the education profession, and said the ministry
was implementing a skills-retention fund in a bid to retain teachers,
but the initiative was dismissed by the PTUZ.
"The government
has not done anything to retain teachers. The retention fee of Z$200,000
(US$0.40 at the parallel market rate of Z$500,000 to US$1) a month
is a joke, and teachers will continue to leave until government
gets serious," Majongwe told IRIN.
Final
year exams
The staffing shortages
at schools have become a serious concern for the parents of school-going
children, who are about to start writing their final year exams.
"Since the beginning
of the term the students have not been learning anything due to
a shortage of teachers, and the situation is made worse by the fact
that the government has embarked on an exercise to recruit untrained
teachers to fill the gaps," Martha Tshuma told IRIN. Her child
attends Sobukhazi Secondary School in the high-density suburb of
Mzilikazi in Zimbabwe's second city, Bulawayo.
Students in many schools
in and around Bulawayo, interviewed by IRIN, said most teachers
at their schools were untrained relief teachers. "Right now
all teachers at school are temporary teachers, and they do not seem
to be in charge, as they are confused by a lot of things in our
syllabi," said a final-year student who declined to be named.
Majongwe said the government
was using relief teachers, but this was not a solution and was compromising
education standards in a country once widely regarded as setting
some of the best educational standards in Africa after Zimbabwe
won its independence from Britain in 1980.
Last week 25 teachers
resigned from Kuwadzana High School in the capital, Harare, while
at Mzilikazi High School, in Bulawayo, 20 teachers resigned, Majongwe
said.
Hyperinflation has played
havoc with teachers' salaries of about Z$5 million (US$10) per month.
A promise by the ZANU-PF government that salaries would increase
to Z$15 million (US$30) has been dismissed as nothing more than
a perpetuation of poverty wages.
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