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Pupils
might get own textbooks
IRIN
News
May
20, 2010
http://www.irinnews.org/report.aspx?ReportID=89203
Siphiso Nyoni, 15, races
home when the final bell rings at Luveve High School in Bulawayo,
Zimbabwe's second city because she shares an accounts textbook with
five other classmates and needs to get her homework done as soon
as possible.
"You are sometimes
forced to rush through the assignment and in the process make silly
mistakes because someone is waiting to take her turn using the same
textbook," she told IRIN.
Zimbabwe's ailing education
system, once a model for sub-Saharan Africa, buckled under the economic
and political crises of the past decade, when widespread food shortages,
hyperinflation, cholera outbreaks and an almost year-long strike
by teachers in 2008 led to a dramatic decline in the standard of
learning and the near total collapse of the system.
The UN Children's Fund
(UNICEF) noted that public financing of the sector had also fallen
significantly, leaving most schools with no funds to purchase even
the most basic teaching materials like books and stationery. "We
have to make do with what is available because the school cannot
provide enough textbooks," Nyoni said.
In January 2010 the Ministry
of Education, Sport and Culture put the ratio of text books to pupils
at about one to 10, but teachers in the capital, Harare, have reported
instances of 40 pupils sharing one text book at some schools.
"It is difficult
to teach and motivate pupils when a whole class has to share five
textbooks," said Aquillina Dhliwayo, the accounts teacher at
Luveve High. The school devised a scheme in which pupils living
in the same neighbourhood were put into clusters so they could share
textbooks more easily.
However, juggling textbooks
and homework might soon come to an end. UNICEF has provided over
US$50 million, with which David Coltart, the Education Sport and
Culture Minister, said his ministry aimed to improve the pupil-textbook
ratio to 1:1 by the end of the year.
"The teams will
have to meet teachers, parents, and members of the school development
association to hear their concerns on issues affecting education
delivery," Coltart told IRIN. "We hope to complete the
task by the end of June."
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