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Address
to National Education Advisory Board (NEAB) on report on the Rapid
Assessment of Primary and Secondary Education
David
Coltart, Minister of Education Sport and Culture
September 14, 2009
Read the report
I still have
to digest the contents of this document. What I would like to do
though is to go through a couple of the chapters and to give you
some initial responses to what you've said from my perspective,
stressing though, that what is important is that we take this report
back to the Ministry. Within the Ministry we will collectively go
through this report and build a consensus within the Ministry. It's
no use recommendations being made, and accepted by me without the
support of the Ministry. My role now must be to build a broad consensus
within the Ministry so that we can move ahead together in implementing
some of these recommendations. Of course the other issue thereafter,
is to build a consensus within Cabinet, to make all three political
parties, who are signatories to the transitional government, agree
and buy into the recommendations.
Having made those preliminary
points, let me just say regrettably, that I don't have a lot
of time. I've got another meeting at four and I need to leave
for that meeting at about ten to four, so I think I've got
about fifteen minutes.
Dealing with Chapter
2 and the recommendations of page twenty-two, obviously Zimbabwe
is lagging behind virtually every SADC country in the provision
of free primary education. This must be a goal for us to achieve.
The danger of implementing totally free education is that you remove
any incentive for parents to get involved, and there's no
doubt that if parents have a say they get engaged more in education.
It seems to me that we've got to try to strike a balance in
this regard.
The other comment that
I would make in this regard is that of course in the short term,
given the catastrophic state for the economy, it is highly unlikely
that we are going to be able to provide free primary education in
the short term. But clearly it is a goal that we must try to achieve,
subject to that one reservation.
I was interested in the
one recommendation that is not contained in the formal report that
came from the gentleman from the front chair, regarding the Nziramasanga
Commission report. My understanding is that several hundred copies
of this report were produced and are gathering dust somewhere. I'm
not sure where, but it seems to me that this should be published,
made available to the public and that educationalists and the general
public should be given the opportunity to debate that report. My
understanding is that a lot of money was spent producing the report,
and even if it is rubbish, which I doubt, it's important that
we have a debate around it. Mr. Chairman, in this regard, my hope
is that this will be widely published. I hope that you have some
means of putting it on the web, at the very least, and I hope that
we can have a public debate regarding this. I certainly intend taking
copies of this report and sending a personal letter to the president
and every other member of the Cabinet asking them to read it and
to let me have their views. I think it would be very useful if the
trade unions could do that as well. Parents, the school heads, lets
have a much broader debate. I think it will improve the quality
of the recommendations and the chances of them being implemented
efficiently if we establish a wide national consensus.
Turning to Chapter 3
and the issue regarding teachers. This of course is one of my most
important and pressing priorities. I note that the recommendation
regarding a time frame to pay a salary above the poverty datum line.
I've had numerous discussions with our colleagues in the trade
unions in this regard. The problem that we face in setting out that
timeline is that the Ministry of Finance itself has no accurate
or reliable data on which to make forecasts. The Ministry of Finance
has enjoyed a steady increase in public revenues through to July.
In July revenues hit 98 million, only for them to fall back in August
to just over 77 million. The Minister of Finance told us when we
met with him, that based on his initial projections he was hoping
that between July and August they would move from 98 to about 120
million, but instead of moving ahead they dropped. So it illustrates
the difficulty that we face as a government during this very volatile
transition period in terms of planning and giving undertaking to
teachers regarding where their salaries are going.
There are wonderful ideas
regarding housing, mortgage schemes and we really need to look at
them very carefully. Just so that you know, we have already implemented
provisions regarding the Amnesty; there are 1935 applications this
year. Only 400 of those have been dealt with. We know the deadline
and we are implementing measures to try and process those as quickly
as possible. But we have major constraints. We have problems in
terms of a lack of staff in head office. My poor Permanent Secretary
of course in terms of law, is the only person who can ultimately
sign off on these. He has the immense responsibility of ensuring
that child molesters don't slip through the net. But clearly
we have an obligation to try and improve that and deal with these
quickly.
Turning to Chapter 4,
I have one comment. Without any criticism Mr. Chairman it seem to
me that inadequate attention has been paid to the issue of curriculum
review and development. Perhaps I'm speaking out of ignorance
because I haven't read it in detail but it does seem to me
that one of the most pressing things that we have to do is to conduct
a widespread curriculum review and further development. My understanding
is that we last conducted an extensive curriculum review in 1983.
If we think of the type of personal computer one could buy in 1983,
compared to now we'll see just how much the world has changed.
Sometimes we look at IT in isolation. We don't look at the
impact of information technology on the teaching of every single
subject. And yet our curriculum has not moved forward. In terms
of recommendations, for the purposes of donor funding, I think a
recommendation that appears not be there, is this urgent need for
donor support for us to conduct extensive curriculum review and
development. In my mind, that has a major role to play in the provision
of a quality education for the future in Zimbabwe.
Turning to Chapter 5,
I'm already thinking of the entire system that we have employed
regarding fees and finance and that very much links in my view with
this discussion regarding the role of SDCs and the role of parents
generally. From what I have read and from what I have heard, it
seems to me that the vast majority of parents throughout the country
are alienated from this process of determining fees and it is still
clouded in a lot of obscurity and possibly there's even deliberate
actions taken to not involve parents in this decision-making process.
I think a key challenge for us is to try to democratize the system
of education at school level, whether primary education becomes
free or not. I think the real challenge for us is to see how we
can involve parents more in the running of their school no matter
who pays for it. And a key stepping-stone to that is through a revision
of this process of raising levies. And I think, not just in terms
of narrow democratization, but also in terms of transparency and
accountability. What I would like to see for example is the obligation
placed on school heads and SDCs to publish their budgets in a public
place in schools. We discussed this last week in the context of
BEAM payments, and I suggested the idea that school heads be obliged
to tell parents, by a public posting of an account regarding the
amount of money the school has received in the BEAM payment and
how that is going to be spent. This is something that I'm
very keen on looking at. But I must stress that I want to look at
all education statutory instruments. To conduct a very widespread
review of statutory instruments and to come up with a comprehensive
statutory instrument so we can treat that as some sort of educational
bible. In terms of that I hope that we can democratize the whole
process and address some of these issues.
Turning to Chapter 6,
I note this issue that there are amore OVCs in secondary schools
than in primary schools. One of the things that I think we need
to refine in the coming months and years is this interaction between
the existing BEAM program but also the development and what I hope
will be the refining of the means test policy that was introduced
in March this year. I see these as being complementary. I take note
of the concern raised to try to localise the decision-making regarding
who gets benefit in terms of the BEAM program. And that was one
of the reasons I implemented the means test application. To try
to get the local community more involved in determining who should
get assistance and not.
On Chapter 7, I was interested
to hear, regarding the need for centres of excellence and also to
accommodate children with disabilities. I'm not going to bore
you today regarding academies with centres of excellence but it's
another area off the record that perhaps hasn't been focussed
on. To explain to all of you, one of my deep concerns is that we
have this huge gulf in our country now between government education
on the one hand providing a basic education and private schools
and mission schools providing a comprehensive quality education.
Children can only go to those mission and private schools if they've
got parents or guardians wealthy enough to pay for them. The real
danger we have is that poor talented children who can only go to
government schools to get a basic education are going to drown in
the mediocrity of a basic education and the nation will lose those
talents. We have to find some policy, develop some policy between
those two extremes. Where we have government schools that can identify
and nurture those disadvantaged, but never the less talented children.
Turning to Chapter 18,
the promotion of libraries, and something that really struck me,
the promotion of a reading culture. That Zimbabweans have been accused
of not having a reading culture, and that they read for exams, not
for pleasure. This comes back, Mr. Chairman, to the focus that Zimbabwe
education has had for the past three decades even more on academic
education. I believe and what I hope you will all consider, is whether
the time has not come for us, not to throw academic education out
but certainly to have a much greater orientation towards vocational
training and practical skills. That of course, is a different issue
to the promotion of a reading culture but what sparked my thinking
in this regard was that I think we are in a bit of a rut in education
at present in Zimbabwe. We've got a certain mold; I think
we all need to engage in some lateral thinking. That is going to
involve a shift towards vocational training but also to consider
this issue of a reading culture. I would take it a step further.
I believe that we need to promote a culture of enquiry, of questioning
and of debate. I fear that what often goes into an education where
you are taught by rote, is an unquestioning compliance with authority
and what is given rather than an attitude that seeks to explore
and challenge the society around us. I think that it may be one
of the reasons why as a nation we've gotten into so much trouble.
That leads to a further issue, and that is a need to achieve a balance
between maintaining discipline in our schools, which has been one
of the most important features of a Zimbabwean education, and is
clearly something that we do not want to get rid of. And yet at
the same time trying to balance that discipline with promoting kids
that have more of an enquiring mind. And it is a balance, because
if you go too far to the other extreme of promoting inquiring minds,
you can breed a whole generation of unruly kids that have no respect
for authority, and that leads to an unruly nation.
Turning to Appendix A,
the need for clearer guidance of SDCs: I've touched on that
and of course the issue of the role of parents. They need to be
acknowledged. And I've put a big question mark here. What
is the role of parents and in the future?
Turning to Appendix B and ZIMSEC, I note what you say regarding
a loss of confidence in ZIMSEC and the question about how do we
restore confidence in ZIMSEC. I need to stress very clearly to you
all that the Ministry policy, and this is the policy of all three
political parties to the GPA, is that we want to retain ZIMSEC.
That is a national policy, and that is one that will be respected.
There are no easy answers because parents are voting with their
feet. Just speaking to the head of Prince Edward at lunch time,
he was telling me that a substantial proportion of his best students
have already chosen not to write ZIMSEC. That is not going to be
an easy trend to reverse. But clearly we are going to need further
advice from the advisory board and from you all about how we can
try to stabilize ZIMSEC.
Appendix C, and the issue
regarding remote rural schools. This brings me in conclusion to
something that underpins many of the issues raised in this report
and concerns and issues that I spoke very forcefully on this morning
when we launched the education transition fund. The donor community
has been exceptionally generous to the education sector. This morning
we announced a fund of $30 million for the provision of textbooks,
and at the same time announced $20 million for the rehabilitation
of BEAM, and there are indications that there's going to be
a further $20 million coming from the donor community. Which is
a total of $70 million that will be put into the education sector.
My point made this morning
was that whilst we are extremely grateful for that money, the challenge
for government is to make education a priority yet again. I believe
we are in danger of paying mere lip service to education. Much of
what has been touched upon today is only going to be addressed if
government decides to allocate the percentages that were obtained
when Fay was Minister; that is of 22% of National Budget. It is
only then that we are going to pay our teachers an adequate competitive
salary. It is only then that we are going to be able to ensure the
provision of textbooks. That we are going to ensure the rehabilitation
of the physical infrastructure. And perhaps that is the dominant
recommendation that needs to come from this. I have no doubt that
if you conducted survey amongst parents, amongst Zimbabwean citizens
about what is their number one priority in our nation; it is undoubtedly
the provision of a quality education for their children. That has
not been reflected in a succession of budgets in our nation. I believe
that one of our roles must be to reinforce this view. Its no good
if it just comes from me. I'm one person in Cabinet. I believe
that we are going to have to mobilize entire communities to lobby
their members of parliament countrywide so that there becomes a
very broad national consensus, so that come November, we get close
to those percentages that need to be obtained. There are many countries,
I'm sure, that have an even higher percentage of their national
budget allocated in real terms to education. And that's what
we have to strive for together.
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