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Zimbabwe's
tertiary education face total collapse
Zimbabwe
National Students Union (ZINASU)
December 07, 2007
Education a critical
player in the development of any societal set up fell prey to political
hypocrites of Zimbabwe under the leadership of Robert Gabriel Mugabe.
Early post Zimbabwe's independence era, Education and Health took
a sharp growth that saw establishment of Hospitals, Clinics, and
Primary, Secondary and Tertiary institutions in all provinces. The
question then comes around growth management, if the government
did put systems in place that are consistent with the rate of growth,
thus maintenance and sustainability of already established and allow
for more demand/supply informed growth.
The ill-advised
Robert Mugabe made a catastrophic decision on behalf on the citizenry
in 1992 where he adopted Economic and Structural Adjustment Programme
(E.S.A.P) leading to the privatization of key national services
and education was not spared. Making bias and audit to the developments
on tertiary education in Zimbabwe, more than 45 tertiary institutions
ranging from Universities, Polytechnic, Teachers, and Agricultural
colleges have been established to date. Contrary to the foregoing
the government failed to put complementary measures that boost the
percentage allocation to the education sector on the national budget.
It was rather seen proposing more establishments in areas of political
interest.
Reparations to the causatives,
a gradual and unnoticed shift of responsibilities with regard to
financing operational and running costs of tertiary institutions
came to the government's rescue. Students have been receiving full
government support since the establishment of the oldest institution
in 1947 the University of Zimbabwe until 1992 where the government
introduced a 50% grant and 50% loan. In 2001, a 100% loan system
was adopted and finally on the 10 th of February 2006 the government
withdrew support. In full upfront payment of tuition, accommodation
and food fees led to an unprecedented rate of student drop out hovering
at 31% ( research carried out by Zimbabwe National Students Union,
2006). Similarly, under-financed tertiary institutions fail to improve
or rather maintain acceptable standards of teaching and research,
ensuing from the mass exodus of qualified teaching staff to greener
lands in neighbouring and overseas countries. Great Zimbabwe University
continues to run Faculty of Commerce without a single qualified
lecturer.
The quality of the products
becomes the question at hand. Half baked graduates are being happily
capped by Robert Mugabe Chancellor of all state institutions. The
same graduates suffer the boomerang effect of the flawed education
delivery system as they fail to meet acceptable international standards.
Sons and daughters of top government official are receiving first
class quality education in other developed countries and therefore
will not have direct interest in resuscitating the ever deteriorating
standards of education in Zimbabwe. The move by Australian Government
to deport children of top government officials becomes highly commendable.
They should have a taste of their own medicine.
Benjamin Nyandoro
Former Students Union President
National University
of Science and Technology (NUST)
Visit the ZINASU
fact
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