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Schools
turn children away
IRIN
News
September 25, 2008
http://www.irinnews.org/report.aspx?ReportID=80596
Rather than
encouraging enrollment, schools in Zimbabwe are asking children
not to report for lessons.
"We have received,
with concern, continuing reports that some children [in Zimbabwe]
are not going to school because there are no teachers," said
Roland Monash, deputy representative of the United Nations Children's
Fund (UNICEF). UNICEF keeps 150,000 Zimbabwean children at school
by paying their fees.
"There is need to
do an assessment of the situation as soon as possible with our partners
in the NGO sector and the government, so that we have an understanding
of the situation," he added.
Many teachers
have left the profession for better paying jobs in neighboring countries,
and the remaining few have been on strike since 2 September, demanding
a pay hike, said Raymond Majongwe, secretary-general of the Progressive
Teachers Union of Zimbabwe (PTUZ).
"Teachers cannot
afford to go to work because of poor salaries ... We now have a
strange situation where professionals who are in the teaching field
are doing menial work in Zimbabwe and within the region," he
said. "The few teachers who continue to teach are unqualified
relief workers, who are being paid with groceries."
A teacher earns US$10
a month, which has little value in an economy struggling with an
inflation rate of more than 11 million percent.
The headmaster of a school
in Mabelreign, a suburb of the capital, Harare, has asked children
to return to school after two weeks; at another school, IRIN found
children had been told to spend the day in the playground.
"Out of a staff
complement of 30 teachers, there are only five who are reporting
for duty, but not doing any work," a teacher at one the schools
in Harare told IRIN. "The rest have either left the country
or cannot be bothered to report for duty because of the paltry salaries
that we are getting."
Orirando Manwere, a parent,
told IRIN that at one of the schools, children writing exams had
been asked to contribute cash to enable teachers to afford transport
to come to school to invigilate. "The teachers expect to get
money from parents, but parents also don't have money."
Zimbabwe is experiencing
a shortage of paper currency, and people are only allowed to withdraw
Z$1,000 a day - enough to buy a loaf of bread or a one-way bus ticket
to town.
PTUZ's Majongwe said
exams should be called off. "We are the teachers and we know
what has been going on: there was no teaching and no learning. We
would rather delay in coming up with a good complete product [children
properly equipped to sit the exams] than produce a half-baked product."
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