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WOZA
demand changes in education system in 2010
Women
of Zimbabwe Arise (WOZA)
January 04, 2010
Women and Men
of Zimbabwe Arise (WOZA) has launched a report on the state of education
in Zimbabwe entitled Looking
back to look forward - education in Zimbabwe: a WOZA perspective.
The recommendations contained in the report form the basis of WOZA's
current campaign on education.
The education
of their children has been a major driving force for Zimbabweans
and WOZA members in particular, and the motivation behind much activism.
In the first decade after Independence, the education system in
Zimbabwe reached its peak and was heralded as the best in Africa.
In the last decade however, it has been pushed to its decline by
power and politics. The report reflects on how this decay took place
in order to expose this injustice and to demand its immediate remedy.
The recommendations
included in the report include:
- A revamping
of the curriculum to ensure its relevance to the children who
learn.
- Introducing
more vocational subjects - both commercial and technical
-and providing opportunities for children to be attached
in work places during their senior years.
- Allowing
children to be placed according to their abilities and their interests
instead of providing the same curriculum for all
- Teaching
methods need to stress skills development rather than rote learning
of knowledge in preparation for exams.
- Administration
of schools needs to be less autocratic and more tended to participatory
decision-making; physical abuse, which is common, must stop.
- A subject
which teaches human rights, good governance, and democratic practice
will need to be introduced to the curriculum
- Teachers
and administrators will need to be re-trained to accommodate new
approaches to teaching and learning.
- Examination
systems will have to be revamped.
In January 2010,
ahead of the new school year, WOZA has the following demands:
- Teachers
must produce quality teaching and show that they are committed
to the learning of all their pupils equally.
- Education
authorities must utilise the vehicles that are being purchased
to supervise teachers and demand more discipline in schools.
- Teachers
must stop demanding top-ups from parents and the Ministry must
prohibit this practice.
- The Ministry
must work to produce a new and relevant curriculum as recommended
above.
- Parents will
do their best to pay reasonable fees set by Ministry and levies
set by properly constituted and democratic parents meetings at
the beginning of each year - we will not accept any fee
or levy changes in 2010.
Visit the Women
of Zimbabwe Arise (WOZA) fact
sheet
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