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The
state of education in Zimbabwe - A dream shattered
Women
of Zimbabwe Arise (WOZA)
February 18, 2009
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Background
Last week, the
political parties proceeded to implement their power-sharing deal.
This is the first step in the formation of a transitional government
that is to oversee reforms, come up with a new constitution and
then conduct an election. Zimbabweans have had to stand by and observe
this process without being given the opportunity to participate,
and perhaps they will feel that they have no choice but to continue
to watch and wait for these developments to lessen their hardships.
Many promises were made in the Global
Political Agreement that have been ignored, so we should not
be surprised if the trend continues.
But what should Zimbabweans
do? Our role is to put maximum pressure on all the parties to this
agreement to address our issues and our priorities. We must not
wait for 100 days to pass and complain that nothing is happening.
Every day matters and every day we should be speaking out and demanding
change. Especially as most schools in the country have still not
opened.
Education
- a dream shattered
We as a people have always
valued the education of our children more than anything else. For
that we sell our precious beasts, work two jobs, travel across borders,
go into exile, buy less food and once joined the liberation struggle.
We hang the hard-earned certificates on the unpainted walls of our
small homes, and ululate at the graduations. An educated son or
daughter is our pride and joy, the fulfillment of years of struggle.
After Independence ZANU
PF seemed to understand this burning desire of Zimbabweans, resources
were allocated to the ministries of education and an expansion of
schooling followed in the 1980's. Although there was still more
that could have been done, by the mid-1990's we could boast of teachers'
colleges training qualified teachers by the thousands, universities
producing graduates to teach A-level, graduates obtaining further
degrees to become college and university lecturers. We were the
envy of Africa, with 90% adult literacy by 2002 and 98% youth literacy.
Our school leavers could obtain places for tertiary education anywhere
in the world, but they did not need to leave Zimbabwe, because our
universities were developing and providing training in almost any
field.
Teaching was a respected
profession at one time, a teacher the most educated person in a
rural community, a resource of knowledge to be shared. Teachers
were never highly paid, but they could buy the necessities and some
luxuries. Many even retired on a decent pension.
Who could have believed
that we could sink so low as to reach the situation we are in today?
Only private tertiary institutions function, government universities,
colleges and schools are closed. The rot began many years ago; by
2001 the number of school-aged children not in school was already
higher than in 1991, literacy rates had started to fall by 2002
and qualified teachers had begun leaving Zimbabwe by 2003. But the
worst devastation has come in the past four years. Schools are closed
because there are no teachers; teachers are not there because they
have been chased away from their classrooms by the meager wage offered
by government. Large numbers of them have opted to swim across the
crocodile infested Limpopo River to seek a living wage in South
Africa.
WOZA believe that a once
vibrant education system, along with our children's lives, has been
destroyed by political interference. The Mugabe regime stole from
the education budget to fund political campaigns and pay an overstaffed
intelligence department. They could not provide funding for schools,
classrooms, textbooks and teachers salaries, and so today, in 2009
we have no education except for those few rich people who send their
children to private schools. Even the defense forces whose activities
were resourced at the sacrifice of the education system cannot afford
to send their children to school.
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