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Getting
harder to keep children in school
Tonderai
Kwidini, Inter Press Service (IPS)
January 26, 2008
http://www.ipsnews.net/news.asp?idnews=40948
Alois Mufundisi, a media
professional, earns 200 million Zimbabwean dollars, about 50 U.S.
dollars on the thriving parallel market.
On paper this amount
appears huge, but in real terms it is just enough to buy essential
foodstuffs for half a month. He is barely able to keep his three
children in school. Seven years ago he could manage without any
problem. Now he has to do private jobs to supplement his income.
"Sometimes I can't
sleep thinking about where I can get my next dollar. It really pains
me to think that I may not be able to pay for basic things such
as my children's education," said Mufundisi.
With hyperinflation at
8000 percent according to the Central Statistical Office (CSO),
keeping children in school has become difficult in Zimbabwe.
Educational standards have been on a free fall since the beginning
of an unprecedented economic collapse that started in 2000, with
often-violent seizures of thousands of white-owned commercial farms
in the former regional breadbasket.
"During our time
education was free," said Mufundisi. "My parents could
send me and my siblings to boarding schools on my father's civil
servant salary, but now I am in danger of not being able to do the
same for my children."
Schools opened in Zimbabwe
on Jan. 15 and teachers in Harare have reported growing absenteeism.
To make matters worse the country is facing acute shortages of food,
hard currency and fuel in the economic meltdown that began in 2000.
Once Africa's
best, Zimbabwe's educational system is now in crisis. Tens of thousands
of teachers in state schools are constantly on a 'go-slow' action
demanding a wage hike. There is an exodus of teachers to better
paying jobs outside the country. The Progressive
Teachers Union of Zimbabwe (PTUZ) -- one of two teachers' representative
bodies -- estimates that more than 15,000 teachers left the teaching
profession in 2006.
Those who stay behind
spend most of the time moonlighting. Even head- teachers at private
schools -- where quality of education is better - are demanding
bribes of up to 200 South African rands or 50 U.S. dollars in hard
currency to enrol children.
"I had to pay money
in foreign currency to secure a place for my daughter at a private
school in Harare," Mufundisi told IPS.
A teacher at a rural
Zimbabwe school, who spoke to IPS on condition of anonymity said,
"I am quitting and going to South Africa. I have sold so many
text books from my department library to supplement my meagre salary,
I have to make a move before I am caught."
President Robert Mugabe's
investment in education after Zimbabwe's independence in 1980 has
generally been seen as the highlight of his increasingly autocratic
27-year rule, although he inherited most of the infrastructure from
the former white colonial government.
PTUZ estimates that between
four and five children share a textbook. There are often four children
to one desk in the poorly equipped classrooms.
Students are fainting
in class from hunger. Girls are missing school during the menstrual
cycle because they cannot afford to buy sanitary pads. School dropout
rates have shot up. Children are quitting school to supplement family
incomes as vendors, commuter omnibus conductors, even sex workers.
A price-freeze
ordered by the government in June last year left store shelves bare
of most basic commodities, but the freeze was eased in phases to
restore the viability of producers and businesses. However, supplies
of goods have remained erratic.
Some Zimbabwean residential
schools -- hit by severe food shortages - were reported to
be insisting that students bring their own supplies, according to
Zimbabwean private media. The PTUZ said several boarding schools
had cut short the last term of 2007 after running out of food.
The union secretary general
Raymond Majongwe told IPS, "Our reports indicate that many
schools will not open. These are clearly signs of the virtual collapse
of the education system."
Higher education
is also in crisis. The Zimbabwe
National Students Union (ZINASU) -- a representative body --
released a report this week stating that the country has the world's
highest college dropout rate outside a war zone.
The report further states
that more than 31.5 percent of students were forced out of school
due to the exorbitant fees being charged in these institutions.
"The government
only funds about 3 percent of the students in tertiary institutions.
80 percent are funded by their relatives," stated the report.
"Zimbabwe is facing
a sharp decline in public expenditure on higher education, deteriorating
teaching conditions, decaying educational facilities and infrastructure,
perpetual student unrest, erosion of university autonomy, a shortage
of experienced and well trained teaching staff, lack of academic
freedoms, and an increasing rate of unemployment among the college
graduates," the report damningly concludes.
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