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Pregnancy
need not put an end to education
IRIN News
August 25, 2010
http://www.irinnews.org/report.aspx?ReportID=90286
Falling pregnant used
to mean the end of school - and of much more - for girls in
Zimbabwe, so a new regulation replacing immediate expulsion with
maternity leave has been welcomed.
In 2008 Sarudzai Gopoza,
now 19, dropped out of school after falling pregnant. "He refused
to marry me. My father said he could not look after me, so I had
to look for a job. Luckily he let me leave the child under the custody
of my mother," she told IRIN.
A government regulation
stipulating that pregnant girls automatically be expelled from school
meant that Gopoza - who was about to write O-Level examinations,
a school-leaving certificate that would have greatly enhanced her
job-finding prospects - had to work as a domestic worker.
"My life is ruined
- as a housemaid I am earning hardly enough to buy food and clothes
for my child, and I don't see myself being able to further my education
and get a better job in the future. I will consider myself lucky
to get a husband who will also accept my child and look after both
of us," she said.
It is perhaps too late
for Gopoza, but a new regulation by the Ministry of Education, Sport,
Art and Culture states that girls who share her predicament will
now get three months' leave, after which they will resume their
studies. A male student responsible for the pregnancy will go on
paternity leave for the same period.
"I am happy
that the government has seen it fit to allow school children to
go on maternity and paternity leave in the event of a female student
falling pregnant," said Petronella Nyamapfene, director of
the Justice for
Children Trust.
"The new regulation
ensures fairness in the sense that, unlike in the past, when the
girl child was punished while the boy remained in school, both students
will now be treated equally."
The director
of Girl Child
Network (GCN), Nyasha Mazango, whose organization has helped
sexually abused girls return to school, said the new policy would
be empowering.
"We view the issue
of a female student falling pregnant as either an indication of
immaturity or vulnerability, and support the new policy because
it gives the girl child a second chance. We are already looking
at how we can cooperate with school authorities and communities
to ensure a smooth return of the students who have fallen pregnant,"
Mazango told IRIN.
"Some school authorities
are known to be adverse to the idea of taking back these unfortunate
girls, but we hope that they will cooperate. Parents and guardians
would have invested a lot of money in terms of school fees, uniforms
and other educational costs, and allowing the children to continue
will help avoid huge losses to them."
Girls returning to school
after their maternity leave might encounter stigma. "From experience,
students who are known by their peers to have been raped or sexually
abused suffer a lot of stigmatization and usually perform badly
at school," said Samuel Mbirimi, 48, a senior teacher at a
secondary school in Chitungwiza, a town about 30km south of Harare.
"The situation could
be worse where the girl is known to have become a teenage mother.
In any case, she is distracted by her new role as a mother,"
he told IRIN.
Gordon Chavhunduka,
a sociologist and former vice chancellor of the University
of Zimbabwe, noted that "with this policy, the inequality
between males and girls accessing education will be reduced".
However, he cautioned
that the education ministry would have to "send a clear message
that this policy is not giving school children the licence to make
children at will, otherwise the education sector will be thrown
into confusion".
The school curriculum
should be expanded "to ensure that what the children learn
includes great detail about pregnancy prevention, the dangers of
premature pregnancies, and such other subjects like HIV and AIDS,"
Chavhunduka told IRIN.
GCN's Mazango suggested
that the government provide free or subsidized day-care centres
for students with children, but admitted that "This will be
a tall order, considering the fact that the social welfare department
is currently battling with paying the school fees of disadvantaged
children."
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.
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