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No
chance to prepare for the future
IRIN
News
June
28, 2010
http://www.irinnews.org/report.aspx?Reportid=89592
Chenai Moyo, 18, is confident
she would have passed the examinations at her school in Harare,
Zimbabwe's capital, but for two years in a row there was no money;
now she has to fend for the family and depends on an older man for
support.
"I couldn't
register for examinations last year (2009) because my father had
just passed away, and the little money that was there went towards
his burial. My mother is not employed and now that she is ill the
situation is worse for me and my brothers," Moyo told IRIN.
Her mother tested positive for HIV in 2009.
Moyo was a brilliant
student but said she would probably never sit her O-Level examinations,
a school-leaving certificate. "My mother talked me into marrying
this man, who is an elder in our church. He has promised to look
after my ill mother and my two brothers, but I have given up hope
of ever going to school again," she said.
She is not alone: recent
education ministry statistics showed that some 100,000 learners
(33 percent of those eligible to write O-level exams) and around
10,700 learners (29 percent of those eligible for A-level exams)
had failed to register.
"This year ... there
are a number of students out there who have failed [to register]
because of poverty," education minister David Coltart said
in a statement.
Zimbabwe's ailing education
system, once a model for sub-Saharan Africa, has buckled and all
but collapsed 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.
It is not uncommon for
10 pupils to share a textbook, and although the government drastically
slashed school fees in February 2009, deepening poverty put even
the reduced cost of attending government schools in some areas beyond
the reach of thousands of children.
The government extended
the initial exam registration deadline of 28 May by two weeks, but
most people were sceptical that parents and students who had previously
been unable to pay the fees - US$10 per O-level subject and US$20
per A-level subject - would be able to raise the money in time.
"The extension
means nothing at all - the period is too short, and one wonders
why the government is in such a hurry to close the door on students,"
the president of the Progressive
Teachers Union of Zimbabwe (PTUZ), Raymond Majongwe, told IRIN.
"Besides, late entrants
will be fined US$5 per subject and we don't know where the government
expects the poor parents that have failed to raise the examination
fees to get the extra amount."
Majongwe said he thought
the ministry's figure for the number of students who had failed
to register for examinations was an "understatement" of
the gravity of the situation.
"According
to our own independent surveys, close to 200,000 O and A-level students
have been denied the chance to prepare for their future. There are
thousands who have resigned themselves to fate, as they have failed
to write in the past and are not part of the current statistics
since they are not attending school," he pointed out.
A headmaster at a secondary
school in Seke rural district, about 40km south of the capital,
said only 30 students at his school would write their O-level examinations
this year.
"I was supposed
to have 125 students sitting for their O-level examinations but
only a handful managed to register," he noted. "While
the examinations fees might not seem too high, it should be remembered
that the majority of households in rural areas still have large
families to look after, and there is a significant number of child-headed
families."
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