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Mowing
and cleaning replace geography and algebra
IRIN
News
January 29, 2008
http://www.irinnews.org/Report.aspx?ReportId=76475
Harare - Two
weeks into the new term, Tatenda Marimire, 13, has spent more time
as an unpaid errand boy for his school than getting to grips with
algebra, because there are no teachers. Like most civil servants,
educators have increasingly stayed away from work to seek other
sources of income to survive hyperinflation.
"We are spending
most of the time cutting grass, cleaning dormitories and running
errands for members of staff that have reported for duty, and this
makes us feel like young workers without salaries," he complained.
"We don't know where the teachers are and if we will manage
to learn at all."
The Zimbabwean
government has been struggling to pay its employees inflation-related
salaries and the education sector has been one of the worst affected
by the eight-year economic crisis. On 24 January the Progressive
Teachers Union of Zimbabwe (PTUZ), the country's biggest group
of educators, issued a statement calling for a strike over general
unhappiness with recent salary hikes.
The union had asked for
a minimum monthly salary of Z$1,770 million (about US$321 at the
parallel foreign exchange market rate of Z$5.5 million to US$1)
for at least the first quarter of 2008, but only Z$141 million (about
US$25) per month was put on the table.
The government
has not publicly released official inflation figures for the last
two months but the International
Monetary Fund (IMF) estimates that the rate has reached 100,000
percent and is still rising.
Too
weak to teach
"We
are stressed, our bodies are weak and our minds numb," said
the PTUZ statement. "Prolonged exposure to poverty has destroyed
the professional person in us. We are facing a slow death."
Low teacher morale, the brain drain, inadequate financing, poverty
and hunger were some of the challenges the education sector was
facing, according to the 2004 government progress report on the
UN Millennium Development Goals.
Many teachers have sought
to supplement their meagre salaries by cross-border trading, illegal
gold panning, informal foreign currency trading and even sex work.
The PTUZ statement said
reporting for work would only deceive children and their parents
into believing that meaningful learning was taking place at schools,
whereas it was not: "We do not want to convert classroom blocks
into shopping malls and shopping centres. We do not want to covert
our students into customers."
A senior teacher
at Marimire's school in Chitungwiza, a town about 30km south of
the capital, Harare, admitted that they had been affected by the
shortage of teachers.
"Even
the strike that PTUZ is calling for would be meaningless because
the teachers are just not there [because they have left the profession
or even the country], and through interaction with my colleagues
in and outside Chitungwiza and Harare I have heard that the situation
is bad in almost every school, with private schools being less affected,"
said the teacher, who did not want to be named.
The school was unable
to pay the salaries demanded by private tutors and had approached
university students awaiting the start of a new semester in March
to help out temporarily. "This is just a way of managing the
crisis, but we are lost as to what permanent solution we can have.
Teachers have been abandoning classrooms over the years, sometimes
without even bothering to tender their resignations, but this year
seems to be the worst."
In another statement
urging parents to support their strike, the PTUZ noted that more
than three million Zimbabweans have fled the country to seek economic
refuge in other countries. The brain drain has also acutely affected
the health, construction, engineering and manufacturing sectors.
Angry
parents
Many
parents are angry because their children are receiving little or
no education. According to the latest statistics by the United Nations
Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organisation (UNESCO), Zimbabwe
still has an overall literacy rate of over 90 percent, the highest
in southern Africa, which analysts attribute to an aggressive policy
in the 1980s that aimed to bring about universal education.
But the high inflation
rate has drastically undermined the allocation for procuring teaching
and learning materials, according to the government's Ministry of
Education, Sports and Culture.
Primary school enrolment
rates were above 90 percent in 2004, but attendance and completion
rates have been dropping because of rising costs, which have also
affected the quality of education: in 2004, the Grade 7 examination
pass rate was 67 percent and the textbook-pupil ratio was low, ranging
between 1:6 and 1:10 in all subjects, according to the ministry.
"Yes, this country
might have one of the highest literacy rates on the continent, but
the falling standards in the education sector are definitely bound
to drastically lower the quality of local qualifications,"
commented John Sakarombe, whose daughter is in a boarding school
outside the city of Gweru in Midlands Province.
When he visited her recently,
his daughter complained of erratic food supplies and power cuts,
and said they had to cook their own meals because most of the kitchen
staff had left. The pupils have been forced to use the bucket system
because the school did not have the funds to hire plumbers to clear
the blocked sewer system, and this exposed them to communicable
diseases, he added.
"I feel cheated
and am fed up," said Sakarombe. "I paid more than one
billion dollars [in school fees] - not easy money to raise, especially
as we are coming from the Christmas holiday ... but this is what
I am getting."
Some schools even urge
students to buy groceries for their teachers, because the prices
of commodities have now risen beyond the reach of the majority.
People's
Shops
In
an attempt to help the poor cope with high prices, the government
announced this week that it would be introducing "People's
Shops" to cater to low-income groups.
According to the official
Herald newspaper, industry and international trade minister Obert
Mpofu said the shops would ensure that disadvantaged groups and
people earning very low incomes could buy basic commodities at affordable
prices.
The concept has been
borrowed from Angola, which has allocated US$1.5 billion to build
such shops throughout the country.
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