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What of the differently abled students?
Students Solidarity Trust
April 13, 2010
The discourse on education
transition in Zimbabwe has negated the plight of the differently
abled students amid initiatives and contributions from the parent
Ministry of Education, Sport, Arts and Culture (MoESAC) and donor
organizations. The Ministry of Higher and Tertiary Education (MoHTE)
has been conspicuous by its inactivity not only with regards to
the differently abled students but also students in general. The
inception of the inclusive government saw the forsaking of the unstable,
weak and worthless Zimbabwe dollar as the official currency for
a multi-currency system. In the short term, this helped stabilise
the economy and halted the slide into economic ignominy. Broadly
speaking, the economy has taken shape and inflation figures indicate
that Zimbabwe is slowly moving out of the economic tangle it had
plunged itself into. These developments as welcome as they maybe
compel us to pose the question: What of the differently abled students?
Generally speaking,
marginalised groups including the community of differently abled
students have limited access to the foreign currency and thus they
can not afford the tuition fees. For starters, differently abled
students need more than tuition fees depending on the particular
type of their disadvantage. The extra aids they need such as hearing
aids, Perkins Braillers, wheelchairs, white canes to aid them in
their mobility and other specialised equipment are very expensive
and are imported. On average, differently abled students would require
two to three times more resources to assist them to access education.
Resultantly, students have been forced to drop out of school due
to failure to pay their tuition fees. The University
of Zimbabwe, Midlands State University and other tertiary institutions
have seen a decline in students with disadvantages applying for
places and in those completing their studies due to lack of resources.
In the past year, a few
initiatives have been launched by government and nowhere in these
initiatives are specific measures and mechanisms to address the
plight of the differently abled students. The Minister of Education,
Sport, Arts and Culture, Senator David Coltart has launched the
Education Transition Fund [ETF] meant to stabilise the education
system and recapacitate schools through ensuring that the schools
have furniture and books. Up to now, no mention has been made in
the [ETF] in terms of funding for differently abled students or
programs that will ensure that as the recapacitation goes on, these
students will also be provided for. This arrangement means that
a section of Zimbabwean society is being left out of the revival
efforts by the government.
The Minister of Finance
Honorable Tendai Biti on 2 December 2009 presented a budget that
he said was reconstruction with growth and equity. He allocated
about 108 million dollars to education programs with no mention
of differently abled students in particular. The closest was the
23 million dollars allocated to social protection programs but this
was mainly focusing on the Basic Assistance Education Module [BEAM].
Acknowledging the financial limitations that have gripped the government,
it is important that differently abled students do not fall through
the net as the financial squeeze promises to stay with the nation
for some time. Programs should be put in place to ameliorate the
plight of these students as most of them come from disadvantaged
and poor backgrounds. A return to the loans and grants system will
go a long way in assisting the students as they need access to resources
to complete their studies. Government should, through the responsible
ministries be able to do a needs assessment to find out how they
can assist differently abled students. Education should be a right
enjoyed by any and all and without these interventions by government,
education will remain a privilege for the few who have the money
to buy it as a commodity available on the market.
Visit the Students
Solidarity Trust fact
sheet
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