|
Back to Index
Teachers'
Unions write-off 2008 as academic year
Vusumuzi
Sifile, The Standard (Zimbabwe)
October 04, 2008
http://www.thezimbabwestandard.com/local/19047-teachers-unions-write-off-2008-as-academic-year.html
The country's
two main teachers' unions - the Progressive
Teachers' Union of Zimbabwe (PTUZ) and the Zimbabwe Teachers'
Association (Zimta) - have called for the "complete scrapping
off of 2008 from the academic year because it was a wasted year".
Among other things, they
want all pupils to repeat their grades next year, as they did not
learn anything meaningful this year.
For the first time since
their formation, the two organisations on Friday held joint commemorations
of World Teachers' Day, and collectively condemned the government's
continued neglect of the plight of teachers. The event is celebrated
worldwide on October 5, but the two organisations decided to hold
it two days earlier.
The PTUZ and Zimta have
all along rivalled each other, and would negotiate separately for
teachers' working conditions. But on Friday the two unions announced
they were now joining forces for teacher emancipation. Modalities
of the unity were however still being discussed. They also jointly
condemned violence against teachers in the run-up to the disputed
one-man presidential election run-off.
"Our coming together
must herald a new beginning. Time has come for teachers to bury
our differences," said PTUZ Secretary General Raymond Majongwe,
deviating from a statement he was reading.
Supporting the call that
all students should repeat in the next academic year, Majongwe said:
"It is our well considered view that the 2008 school academic
year for primary and secondary education should be set aside and
that the 2008 examinations should be cancelled. After setting aside
the academic year, all students should repeat their current grades."
This, he said, would
effectively mean there is no intake for Grade 1, Form 1 and Lower
Sixth.
ZIMTA President, Tendai
Chikowore said there was need for teachers to "stand up and
speak out in order to support those policies which promote the attainment
of quality public education".
"As educators, we
lament the general declining standards in the provision of quality
public education," said Chikowore. "In return for our
valued labour, we deserve to be paid salaries commensurate in value
to our work. If that does not happen, we will be left with no option
but to use our most effective measures to induce some quicker response
from the employer to pay us adequate remuneration."
The deteriorating standards
at institutions of higher learning, she said, was also compounding
the crisis at schools.
"We note, with concern,
the falling standards in the preparations of teachers in a situation
where there is a critical shortage of qualified lecturers in most
teacher training colleges and universities, and where the teaching
practice supervisory structure has broken down due to lack of experienced
teachers in our schools."
Chikowore called on the
"relevant authorities to bring perpetrators of political violence
to book". She said this would boost teachers' confidence.
Giving a solidarity
message at the commemorations, Zimbabwe
Congress of Trade Unions (ZCTU) Secretary General Wellington
Chibebe said the "government has deliberately destroyed the
teaching profession".
"Yesteryear teachers
were part of the middle class, but today they occupy the lowest
position on the radar. You have allowed yourselves to be abused,"
Chibebe told the teachers.
The Coalition
Against Child Labour in Zimbabwe (CACLAZ) commended the two
unions for working hard despite "the continuous deterioration
of the teachers' conditions of service over the last few years".
In a statement, CACLAZ
said: "These circumstances have regrettably reversed the gains
made so far in the education sector which at one time was the envy
of many people the world over. At the end of the day the parents,
children and the teachers themselves have been robbed of a golden
opportunity to reach out to their collective dreams and it is now
quite doubtful whether we are ever going to achieve MDG 2 by 2015."
Most teachers have not
been reporting for duty since the beginning of the third term last
month. Among other things, they are demanding a salary of US$1 200.
Many teachers have resorted to holding private lessons for a fee
for the same pupils they are supposed to teach at schools. The government,
despite not doing much to address the plight of teachers, has ironically
lambasted teachers for the practice.
Please credit www.kubatana.net if you make use of material from this website.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License unless stated otherwise.
TOP
|