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Making
schools work
IRIN
News
May 04, 2009
http://www.irinnews.org/report.aspx?ReportID=84226
The authorities announced
a package of measures on 4 May to revive Zimbabwe's beleaguered
education system and get teachers and children back into classrooms,
as schools are expected to reopen this week.
"Cabinet will shortly
decide on tuition fees, which will be substantially reduced,"
David Coltart, the minister of education, sport, arts and culture,
told a press conference.
He said school fees would
be reduced and parents would only have to pay admission fees to
keep their children in schools while consultations on the fees to
be charged took place. The admission fees range from US$5 to US$20.
Teacher unions have said
educators would not return to work unless their salaries were improved,
so as an inducement to get them back to school he announced that
their children would not have to pay school fees.
Coltart said he had met
with several donor organisations who had promised to help the government
revive the education sector through capitalization. Zimbabwe's economic
meltdown, with around 90 percent unemployment and crippling shortages
of basic commodities, has made survival a priority.
According to the UN Children's
Fund (UNICEF), school attendance rates dropped from 80 percent to
20 percent in 2008. Unaffordable school fees and absentee teachers
meant more than 90 percent of Zimbabwe's rural schools, which most
children attend, could not reopen at the beginning of the 2009 school
year.
At present, school fees
will cost the parents of primary school children in affluent low-density
suburbs US$150 per child, while those in high-density townships
will pay US$20. Civil servants earn about US$100 a month, making
education unaffordable for most children.
The parents of high school
students in low-density areas will have to fork out up to US$280
per term, while those in high-density areas will have to lay out
US$180.
Students in rural secondary
schools are expected to pay US$50 per term, but even with provisions
to stagger payments, parents throughout the country failed to pay
fees.
According to available
statistics, more than 20,000 teachers left the profession between
2007 and 2008 in search of greener pastures, mainly in neighbouring
southern African countries.
While individual teachers
said they would "wait and see", union leaders on 4 May
urged their members to return to work. "We are calling on all
teachers to report for duty. We are doing this with heavy hearts,
but we have faith in the minister," said Sifiso Ndlovu, chief
executive of the Zimbabwe Teachers Association.
Raymond Majongwe,
secretary-general of the Progressive
Teachers Union of Zimbabwe, told IRIN that donor representatives
had assured them they would receive money to improve salaries. "After
meeting the donors, we have reason to believe that our case is now
in legitimate hands ... we have confidence in them."
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