| |
Back to Index
Livelihoods
situational analysis of UZ female students
Compiled
by Professor Rudo Gaidzanwa and Dr Charity Manyeruke, University
of Zimbabwe, for the Students Solidarity Trust
February 14, 2011
View this document
on the SST website
Download
this document
- Acrobat
PDF version (1.3MB)
If you do not have the free Acrobat reader
on your computer, download it from the Adobe website by clicking
here.
Executive
Summary
Over the past
decade, the Zimbabwean economy and social infrastructure deteriorated
to unprecedented levels. The socio-economic meltdown was punctuated
by inflation which reached 231 million percent in July 2008 when
the Central Statistical Office stopped computing the inflation rate.
Other sources such as Hanke (2008) reported inflation rates to have
reached 7,96 trillion percent by November 2008. The gross domestic
product of Zimbabwe declined by approximately 43% and social services
collapsed. It is in this context that this study seeks to examine
how the socially disadvantaged and exposed female university students
coped with the challenges that affected the tertiary education sector.
The objectives of the study are to describe students' experiences
during the crises of 2006 to 2010; to examine the strategies students
used to cope with the challenges; to investigate students'
current experiences with academic life and to examine the coping
mechanisms that students are use to deal with their current challenges.
The situation of the female university students is specifically
examined in order to understand how they, as a particularly disadvantaged
group, coped with the economic crisis and its effects on their university
education.
The current
research employed both qualitative and quantitative methodologies.
Data were collected using a survey questionnaire and focus group
discussions. A total of 91 students at the University
of Zimbabwe participated in the study. 59 female students completed
the survey questionnaire while 24 female and 8 male students participated
in focus group discussions. The researchers made use of purposive
and convenient sampling techniques in recruiting research participants.
Data from questionnaires were analyzed and coded into SPSS version
17.0, and presented as descriptive data. Analysis of focus group
discussions involved compilation of summaries of emerging issues
from each sex specific group using the constant comparative technique,
a technique that groups similar data to develop major themes.
The analysis of demographic
characteristics of the participants revealed that they were fairly
distributed according to year of study, with first year students
comprising 27.1% of the participants, second year 28.8%, third year
and fourth year 32.2% and 11.9% respectively. The majority of participants
were single-never married (86.4%) as compared to the single-divorced
5.1% and 8.5% married. Respondents' age ranged from 20 to
25, while only 3.4% were below 20 years of age.
Data from the study also
showed that the female students at the university were sometimes
perceived positively as motivated, daring, enduring, learned and
prosperous though predominantly they were negatively stereotyped
as prostitutes, materialistic and highly suggestible. Regarding
the experiences of the students during the period between 2006 and
2009, the data showed that the students agreed that the inflationary
crisis period was the toughest time. Students reported that they
lived in dire poverty on campus and almost always had to forgo meals.
During the crisis from 2006 to 2009, the participants reported that
they faced challenges in accessing food, transport and sanitation.
The participants also reported that there were shortages of qualified
lecturers at the University of Zimbabwe. On campus the students
lacked access to enough clean water and had to boil and drink water
from an ornamental pond.
Data showed that transport
was so expensive and scarce that they resorted to using open trucks
and evaded fare payment. The strategies the students used to deal
with the 2006 to 2009 challenges included finding older, usually
married men with incomes ("sugar daddies") to finance
them through the difficult times. In addition, female students noted
that their parents imposed curfews on them, requiring them to be
home by sunset. On the academic front, students complained about
exorbitant tuition fees, inadequate accommodation, erratic Internet
connections, lack of water, scarcity of books in the library, high
stationery costs, high food and transport costs. Many students were
staying with relatives, renting with other students or alone, staying
with spouses and boyfriends. A significant number of students survived
on only two meals per day. The students also faced gender-based
violence which included heckling for wearing "inappropriate
clothes", physical harassment, rape, sexual harassment, touching,
expulsion from the university library and verbal abuse.
The findings suggested
that the most vulnerable female students included those who were
not assertive especially the ardent church goers and nuns, those
dressing in untraditional styles, final year students desiring to
pass at any cost, those not really bright and the first year students.
Some female students were helped with tuition by boyfriends, parents
and "sugar daddies" while others performed piece jobs
or had other employment and yet others were on the government cadetship
program. Female students benefited from resources such as computers,
libraries, the Internet, lecture rooms, the quota system, good infrastructure
and lecturers. The challenges faced by students included marriage,
pregnancy, male-dominated courses such as those in engineering,
household chores and gender roles. Education-related problems included
poor administration, poor information dissemination, lack of career
guidance, fear of failure, lack of security and absence of student
attachment.
Recommendations that
emerged from the study include the reintroduction of loans and grants
from government, improvement of registration procedures, provision
of cheap transport, improvement of hygiene on campus, sanitary wear,
improvement in handling of results and the student-administration
relationship, opening halls of residence and training the security
and library personnel.
Download
full document
Visit the Students
Solidarity Trust fact
sheet
Please credit www.kubatana.net if you make use of material from this website.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License unless stated otherwise.
TOP
|