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This article participates on the following special index pages:
Talks, dialogue, negotiations and GNU - Post June 2008 "elections" - Index of articles
GNU
deal: Challenges and expectations in the education sector in Zimbabwe Student
Christian Movement of Zimbabwe (SCMZ)
September 30, 2008
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After a decade
of a man made governance crisis in Zimbabwe, the nation has finally
reached a transitional arrangement in the form of the power sharing
agreement
between the two formations of the Movement for Democratic (MDC)
and the Zimbabwe African National Union Patriotic Front (ZANU PF).
The agreement brings hope to the suffering masses of Zimbabwe, hope
that has been destroyed by a decade of economic meltdown, disrespect
for the rule of law and the gross violation of human rights through
state organized and state sponsored violence particularly sham June
27 2008 election.
As the nation gets into
the transitional arrangement, this is the time for all stakeholders
to look at one of the worst affected area in our community, the
education sector. Unless something is urgently done to address the
shameful conditions prevailing in the education sector then this
new government shall be deemed a failure by students and the teaching
staff.
The state of
the nation's universities is deplorable to say the least.
The opening of the University
of Zimbabwe, the National University of Science and Technology,
the Great Zimbabwe University, the Midlands State University for
the first semester of the 2008 to 2009 academic year has been postponed
for close to a month with University authorities clearly admitting
that the conditions obtaining on the ground is not conducive for
safe learning. They sight, and honestly so that just an average
of 10% of the teaching staff is ready to deliver lectures to students
with the other 90% having either left completely or not prepared
to teach until their poor remuneration has been addressed.
Students are expected
to pay ZW$48 000 for accommodation and tuition fees. Bindura University
which has been opened the living conditions of students are pathetic.
The two accommodation sites, the new site and the old site both
can not meet the high demand for accommodation due to the ever increasing
enrolment at the institution. The deficit in accommodation is forcing
students to stay in the fairy cheap but overcrowded Chipadze high-density
suburbs where an average of seven students is reportedly sharing
a single room.
The nation's universities
do not have water and electricity, the sanitary system is a clear
health hazard. Recently the University of Zimbabwe made headlines
when two deputy ministers commissioned the opening of boreholes
at the institution of higher learning. The libraries in these Universities
are stocked with very old textbooks which are no longer relevant
to modern education. Efforts to bring modern internet technology
on campuses have not yielded any meaningful results, with the bulk
of University Students still computer illiterate because they do
not have access to any computer piece.
The situation in Polytechnic
and Teachers Colleges is no better. These colleges were successfully
opened at the beginning of September. However, there is no learning
going on as lecturers are not coming citing poor remuneration. Moreover
the students are required to pay around ZW$14 000 for tuition, accommodation
and food, a figure that is a mockery to the parents and guardians
who are receiving paltry salaries from their jobs.
As if not enough, the
food that is served in the college dinning halls is not suitable
for human consumption. Water and electricity shortages are the order
of the day. The story of the education system will not be complete
without reference to the status of the primary and secondary education
in Zimbabwe. Just a decade ago, Zimbabwe was celebrated the world
over as one of the countries with the leading quality and quantities
of those who receive such education.
However, following
the governance crisis, the situation in the nation's schools
has deteriorated to unacceptable levels. Rural schools are no longer
accessible due to poor roads which badly need repair. More seriously,
the tuition fees charged at primary school are too high in both
rural and urban schools. Teachers are not reporting for duty or
doing so but not executing their expected duties.
In the secondary education sector, particularly in boarding schools
the school authorities in an attempt to cushion inflation are now
asking students to bring their own groceries for use in the school
kitchen. The tuition fees themselves are too high for the parents
who are mainly civil servants and peasants.
This whole picture in the education sector has far reaching gender
implications in the school and college communities of the nation.
Female students are now being forced to resort to prostitution in
light of the serious economic hardships. They are forced to get
into relationships in which they have no power to negotiate safe
sex therefore exposing them to risks like HIV and AIDS.
This is happening
in the background of a country whose health delivery system has
totally collapsed. All stakeholders in the education sector particularly
students are looking forward to the new government impatiently but
with a lot of hope. The historic agreement between ZANU PF and the
two MDC formations though it falls short of the glory of democracy
brings hope to the suffering masses of Zimbabwe. In fact that was
the best route for Zimbabwe to take at this moment given the need
for national healing. The government should therefore stand up to
the challenges and expectations of Zimbabweans in general and students
in particular by urgently allocating the ministries of education
and higher education to competent and professional individuals,
those who have an educational background.
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