Coltart to introduce civic education

ZimEye.org
By Gerald Chateta
May 10, 2010

Harare – Education Sports and Culture Minister, David Coltart said he was in a process of introducing civic education in the country’s education curricular which would see children being taught to respect tolerance and human and property rights. The idea comes after the country had witnessed a decade of human rights abuses by the former ZANU-PF government.

Coltart said civic education was going to cultivate, nurture and promote the spirit of tolerance among Zimbabweans adding that it should start from the school going pupils.

“In a revision of the country’s education curriculum which we are about to commence we will introduce a new curriculum on social justice, tolerance and respect for human and property rights. Under this new curriculum pupils will be taught how to deal with complex situations including the use of non violence and tolerance in dealing with situations of conflict. We have identified civic organizations which will help us in that respect, “said Minister Coltart.

Commenting on the move by the government to introduce civic education in schools independent political commentator Ms Prisca Chiwara said the idea was very noble.

“Given that our children are survivors of political violence stress and trauma the inclusion of civic education is going to reshape their minds. I view this part of national healing and reconciliation which is going to be cemented in the minds of our children who had not by choice been exposed to violence, “she said (ZimEye, Zimbabwe).

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Row over textbook tender

Sunday News

By Nobuhle Nyoni

9th May 2010

A ROW is looming pitting printing houses and the United Nations Children’s Educational Fund (UNICEF) over a textbook tender that they claim was “mysteriously” awarded to Longman Zimbabwe. Zimbabwe Printing House and College Press Publishers argue the awarding of the tender was unfair.

The tender flighted under the Education Transition Fund (ETF), was targeted at producing millions of textbooks for primary schools to improve the education system in the country.

The aggrieved companies called for the suspension of the tender and said investigations into the whole process should be instituted as they feel the granting of the tender was irregular.
In a letter (which the Sunday News has in its possession) written to the Minister of Education, Sport, Arts and Culture, Senator David Coltart, the companies said the tender was awarded in a non-transparent manner.

“The whole tender has been shrouded in secrecy and lacks the transparency you insisted on in one of the meetings you chaired at Educational Services Division (ESD) offices,” reads the letter.
The two publishing houses also noted that that was going to create a monopoly as only one publisher was going to survive.

“The way this tender has been handled will not assist in developing local industries as two long established printing houses, Zimbabwe Publishing House and College Press Publishers will now be faced with immediate closure as there will be no other means for them to sustain their operations,’’ continued the letter.

ZPH and College Press publishers said that situation was likely to take the industry back to what it was 40 years ago where the country only had one publisher as they would not be able to operate for three years.

The letter further stated that it was Government policy and normal practice to ensure that monopolistic tendencies and entrenchments were done away with.

“The removal of competition and the entrenchment of a monopoly will ensure that there will be no incentive or economic argument to force the remaining publisher to improve or upgrade products going to schools,’’ says part of the letter.

In an interview the executive chairman of ZPH Publishers, who refused to give his first name, said he could not comment on the issue, as it was private business.

“I cannot comment right now as this is a business issue, why did you contact me when you have got the letter, what more information do you want to hear,’’ he said.

The two publishers further said the suspension of the tender was imperative as failure to do that would permanently damage the education system.

“Only one product will be available to students irrespective of how good or bad it is thereby restricting our children to only one thought and one influence,’’ read the letter.

They noted that whenever donor funds were received in the country they were expected to benefit local industries.

The Minister of Education, Sport, Arts and Culture Senator David Coltart said the tender was awarded transparently.

“The tender was allocated in accordance with international standards. Also UNICEF wanted to ensure that they got the best so that is why Longman Zimbabwe was chosen,’’ said Minister Coltart
Minister Coltart said a second tender was going to be flighted soon.

“A second tender is going to be flighted soon and I have no doubt that the other publishers will benefit,’’ said Minister Coltart.

He said the ministry insisted that 20 percent of the work was to be done by local companies so that they were empowered.

Efforts to get a comment from Unicef were fruitless as the spokeswoman’s phone went unanswered.

The ETF is a programme whose target is to produce millions of textbook copies for primary schools over the next five months in Zimbabwe.

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Curriculum lagging behind global trends

The Standard

By Vusumuzi Sifile

9 May 2010

ZIMBABWE’S schools are using a curriculum that was last reviewed in the 1980s, a development that has contributed to the perennial “free fall” in education standards and put the country out of sync with fast-changing education trends globally.

Government, which is battling to bring normality to an education sector weighed down by intermittent strikes by teachers and an acute shortage of textbooks says it is now treating the review of the curriculum as a priority.

However, the move could put the government on a warpath with teachers’ unions who believe the authorities want to “rush to change the engine of the vehicle without solving the fundamental problem”.

Education Minister David Coltart told a two-day conference to review the first year under the inclusive government organised by the Mass Public Opinion Institute that the outdated curriculum was frustrating attempts to transform the sector.

Coltart said his ministry had since identified experts who would lead the curriculum reform process.

“The last comprehensive curriculum review was done in the late 1980s,” he said.

“Our hope is that by mid-2011 we would have come up with concrete areas for curriculum reform.”

The reforms would start right at the Curriculum Development Unit, which Coltart said was in a shambles.

In September last year, the National Educational Advisory Board (NEAB)  recommended that the Ministry of Education’s “structures need to be reviewed to cope with recent changes and challenges, particularly in terms of providing a more updated curriculum which caters for a globalised economy”.

Teachers’ unions are divided on the proposals.

The Zimbabwe Teachers Association (Zimta) said it supported the review, while the militant Progressive Teachers’ Union of Zimbabwe (PTUZ) argued it was not a priority. Zimta chief executive officer Sifiso Ndlovu said the state of the current curriculum amounted to “condemning children to poverty”.

“Things have changed, life has changed, and education should be used to prepare learners to face life,” said Ndlovu. “We support the revision of the curriculum. Under the current system, we are condemning children to poverty.  “Time has come now for us to even adopt a different examination system.”

Among other things, Ndlovu said they wanted the review to address the practical needs of learners.

Raymond Majongwe, the PTUZ secretary-general warned that the proposed reviews would not solve the main problems facing the education sector.

“While it is correct that we need to review the curriculum, it should not be hurriedly done otherwise we would have another half-baked pudding,” he said. Majongwe said most of the problems around politicisation of schools, poor remuneration for teachers, leaking of examination papers, among others, had nothing to do with the curriculum.

“If we want a quick fix, we might be creating a problem for ourselves. The problem is not the curriculum, but lack of investment in the education sector.  “We cannot rush to say let us change the curriculum yet there are so many fundamentals that need to be addressed,” he said.

Coltart said the printing of 13 million textbooks was now at an advanced stage, a development that would see all pupils having access to text books.  “The situation at schools is profoundly shocking, but we are working with our partners and local communities to rehabilitate schools,” said Coltart.

Coltart blamed the education crisis on years of neglect by successive Zanu PF governments.

The NEAB report proposed that “the curriculum and examinations (should also) be adjusted to the needs of children with different types of disabilities, such as the blind and the deaf”.

It also proposed that there should be “more vocational and technical education, so that they have a chance to be gainfully employed after leaving school”.

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Parents Must Pay for Kids’ Education

The Herald

Editorial

6 May 2010

Harare — Zimbabwe’s  State schools cannot cope without fees and levies; parents need to realise that there is no “free education” and the better the school the more it is going to need in the way of parents’ money and support to maintain and raise standards.

The urban-rural divide is still sufficiently serious that whatever little can be spared from the education budget, and whatever well-wishers are able to donate, tends to go to rural schools.

Urban parents, all in the cash economy, are expected to pay fees and levies.

However, by law, no school in either the state or private sector can set new fees and levies without the agreement of a majority of the parents attending a meeting called for that purpose.

This means that different levies are charged depending on where a school is, and depending on the keenness of parents.

Where a set of schools have interlocking zones there is a tendency for the keenest parents, and the ones prepared to make the biggest sacrifices, to concentrate on one of the schools and this one then draws ahead of the rest in the area, albeit charging more to achieve its higher standards.

It does not matter if this pricier school is one of three in a high density suburb or if it is well positioned in the low density suburbs.

The fact remains that more money is spent on that school and most of the problems afflicting State education in Zimbabwe at the moment are soluble by spending more money.

Unfortunately other parents, liking the higher standards but not liking the fees get their children into those schools and then try and ride on the sweat of others by not paying the laid-down and agreed levies.

The parents who make the sacrifices and support the school object and are now, through their School Development Associations, trying to bar the children of those who will not pay what has been agreed at parents’ meetings.

One special case is the three schools that are the direct descendants of the city’s first Government school, opened in 1898, well over a century ago. Prince Edward Boys High, Girls High and Selbourne-Routledge Primary are not the cheapest Government schools, but Prince Edward is acknowledged as the flagship State school and the other two are pressing hard to reach the same standards with a great deal of success.

We believe that they must be allowed to show just how good a State school can be at what is, in all reasonableness, a fairly modest fee.

The three schools charge in combined fees and levies little more than 10 percent of what a Trust school will charge.

When he took over the educational hot seat as the Minister last year, Senator David Coltart made one interesting observation: he wanted to see as a long-term goal the State schools rising to the level of private schools.

This is a commendable goal and to achieve it he needs flagship schools, centres of excellence, and to carry the parents with him.

The three central Harare schools are an excellent place to start.

All three have lost much of their old residential zones as the commercial area of the city laps round their walls.

So most pupils have to come from further afield.

The two high schools share a zone, or can easily share a zone, with a neighbouring school. And by neighbouring we mean that the other school is across a wall or across the road.

Selbourne-Routledge was moved to eastern Belvedere when Routledge, the former primary school at Prince Edward, and Selbourne, the former primary school at Girls High, were combined.

But even that school is surrounded by three other State primary schools that can share its zone.

So the minority of parents who do not wish to pay the levies agreed by the majority at these schools have alternatives and have the right for their children to be admitted to other schools should they so wish.

Of course, many parents will say that they want the better facilities at the more expensive schools.

But then they must recognise that the facilities are better as the schools have more money, and they have more money because they charge higher levies.

We think that the three schools were quite correct in refusing admission to the children of parents who will not pay what the majority agreed.

The only concession we would suggest is that if a parent makes a substantial payment towards arrears and then agrees to monthly payments to catch up then some leeway can be granted.

But we note that some, who have not paid anything for five terms, have already been granted a lot of time.

We hope Minister Coltart will allow the three schools to develop and grow as flagship schools for his State system.

The peculiar geographical position of the three allows this without anyone suffering.

At the same time we hope that he will allow other selected schools, generally those that do or can share a zone with a group of other schools, to also forge ahead as centres of excellence.

In time more and more schools will want to join this club of high standards, the club is not exclusive and to join a school simply needs a majority of parents prepared to back their children’s education.

This will eventually allow the Minister to concentrate more of his meagre resources on schools in areas where it is clear that parents have very little indeed, so that their children can at least have an adequate education.

What the Minister must not do is allow a minority of parents at schools trying to raise standards to derail the praiseworthy efforts of the majority prepared to make the sacrifices to ensure the best possible schooling for their children.

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Zimbabwe’s Education And Health Systems Still In Crisis

Radio VOP
6 May 2010

Harare, – Zimbabwe’s Education and Health Ministers said the two sectors were still in a shocking condition due to lack of political will among the warring political parties in the country.

During a presentation on the social services sector; infrastructure resuscitation and rehabilitation of education and health services in the first year of the inclusive government, Education minister David Coltart and his Health and Child Welfare counterpart Henry Madzorera said although donor response had been very positive, lack of political will among the government parties was thwarting progress.

Coltart said Zimbabwe’s education system was still in a “free fall”, and most schools in the country were still in a “profoundly shocking” state despite various interventions since the formation of an inclusive government in 2009.

This had been worsened by the government’s failure to develop a new curriculum, forcing schools to rely on one developed over two decades ago, which was out of sync with the demands of modern education. In addition most schools did not have the textbooks to complement the curriculum.

“The situation at schools is profoundly shocking, but we are working with our partners and local communities to rehabilitate schools,” said Coltart. “There has not been comprehensive curriculum review for over two decades. Our hope is that by 2011 we would have come up with concrete areas for curriculum reform. We are currently working with experts in curriculum reform to identify areas that can be improved. Our idea is to make the curriculum more vocational. Most children come out of school with academic but useless qualifications.”

“The fact of the matter is that the education sector has been grossly neglected by successive governments, and we are now reaping the effects of that,” added Coltart.

In health, Madzorera said the situation had been worsened by erratic disbursements from treasury, which were much lower than internationally recommended standards.

“Donors are also not willing to put money into the ministry directly. The health system is still grossly under funded with about $12 per capita instead of the recommended $34 per capita,” said Madzorera.

Former government minister Fay Chung said the government should develop ways of productively using such natural resources as minerals to fund health and education.

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Speech by Senator David Coltart given to Konrad Adenhauer Foundation conference on “The first anniversary of Zimbabwe’s Inclusive Government”

Speech by Senator David Coltart regarding Education: Problems, Progress, Setbacks and the Way Ahead

Harare

5 May 2010


I am grateful to the Konrad Adenhauer Foundation for organising this conference. I will be speaking this afternoon regarding the Education sector and will be analysing the problems I have faced, progress made, the setbacks, and then briefly conclude by looking at the way forward.

I think that we need to remind ourselves that the agreement leading to the Inclusive Government was seriously flawed right from the very beginning and it remains flawed. The Inclusive Government itself is comprised of protagonists; people who have fundamentally different views on how the Government should operate. And so I think that, in many ways, both Zimbabweans and the international community have had unrealistic expectations in this last year. We have thought that this Government would be able to achieve miracles, and of course it hasn’t. There are many problems that still confront our nation and there is much to complain about. But despite that, I don’t think that we as Zimbabweans appreciate just how much has in fact improved since February 2009 – and I think that we see that no more so than in the Education sector; even though, I stress, there are enormous and, in some respects, seemingly insurmountable problems.

I want to take you back to when the Inclusive Government started in February 2009 and paint the picture of the Education sector as I saw it when I took office on the 17th of February. On the day I took office, most of our 8000 schools were closed and we had over 90,000 teachers on strike. The teachers had very low morale and there were virtually non-existent communications between the teachers and their unions on the one hand and the government on the other hand.  The unions estimate, and I’ve got no reason to dispute their figures, that some 20,000 teachers left the service during 2007 and 2008. Many teachers were under severe attack, especially in 2008 in rural schools. In all, or nearly all, government schools, and most schools country wide, the textbook-pupil ratios in 2009 were simply appalling. We don’t have accurate data on it, but generally we accept that the average was probably 15 children to one textbook. The National Education Advisory Board established that in some remote schools those ratios were even worse, and in fact many of the schools that I have been to the only textbook that you would find in the class room would be the one used by the teacher. When I took office the November 2008 exams hadn’t even been marked yet by mid-February. None of the papers – Grade 7, ‘O’ level, ‘A’ level – had even been marked yet. The physical infrastructure of most schools and educational institutions had almost totally collapsed. My introduction to the Head Office was quite remarkable; I found no water in that building and the toilets in a total mess. It smelled like a sewerage pond. You literally gagged walking up the stairs, and you had to walk up the stairs because only one of the three lifts was working, and even that wasn’t permanent. The state of the Head Office reflected the state of schools countrywide. Schools countrywide had then, and in many respects still have, completely unsanitary conditions; roofs off, hardly any desks and toilets in an appalling state.

The last comprehensive curriculum review was done in the mid-1980s. As you look across the education sector you will see it littered with collapsed educational institutions. For example, the Curriculum Development Unit which has a fine building in Mount Pleasant is a shell – a total shell. The radio broadcasting facility, which was used to such good effect right up until the early-2000s, is no longer functioning and the same applies to the TV broadcasting function.

So, in essence, when we took office in February last year we had the form of education, but hardly any substance whatsoever. Lots of physical buildings but very little taking place in those buildings. In that context, what progress have we made in the last year? I would like to leave you with eight areas of progress.

Firstly, regarding teachers: we have, in the last year, established a functional working relationship with the unions. One of the first things that we did was to build better levels of trust between Government and the unions. Those communications have steadily improved in the course of the last year. I’ve sought help from UNICEF for international funding to come in and help the administrative functions of unions. This was very much needed during the time when the hundred dollar allowances were being paid and teachers did not have any salary, meaning that dues could not be deducted from their salaries to pay the unions. During that period I, with UNICEF, mobilised resources to ensure that the unions survived. We’ve also brought the unions – all three of them – onto the National Education Advisory Board so that they can play an important role in the formation of policy advice for me. We have ensured that at every possible juncture they be included. I’ll speak just now about the World Bank workshops that we’ve organised for our staff in this regard. I’ve insisted that the unions be represented at those planning meetings as we develop a strategic plan.

We also declared an amnesty for teachers that had left. I have differing figures to those of the Parliamentary Committee for Education, who have a figure of over 3000; I had a figure of 2431 teachers, but that I can see is an older figure from late November, so your figure is perhaps more up to date. But they have been brought back into the system. There is still a point of contention with the unions who believe that there are up to 16,000 teachers who have applied to come back but have not been re-accepted into the service, but at the very least we’ve had 2431 come back into the service. Now, you have to see that in the context of 20,000 teachers leaving during 2007 and 2008. What we’ve done is we’ve stopped the haemorrhaging – we’ve reversed it. We haven’t addressed the problem totally, but we’ve at least seen in the last year a positive inflow of teachers. We’ve also seen marginally improved salaries with the advent of hard currency. Thus, whilst there are still major problems concerning our most important asset in the education sector, namely our teaching profession, there have been qualitative improvements in the last year.

Secondly, the situation regarding school materials – learning materials – is in the process of being improved dramatically. As you know, we set up the Education Transition Fund in September 2009. The way this Fund operates is as follows: I chair the Fund, its membership is restricted to donor countries and organisations, and it is managed by UNICEF. Since September we’ve mobilised US$ 52 million for the Fund, and let me stress that that is money that is already in the kitty. Certain teaching materials have already been procured, and we have several container-loads of rulers and mathematics sets and the like already delivered in the country and in the process of being delivered to schools countrywide. You will have read in the papers recently that UNICEF has just concluded a contract for the supply of 13 million primary school textbooks. Those textbooks are being printed as I speak. Now 13 million may just sound like an arbitrary figure to you, but let me stress that this is arguably the biggest single delivery of textbooks that this country has ever seen. We have focused on four key areas in the primary school sector, namely Maths, English, Environmental Science and Indigenous Languages. These textbooks will be delivered with effect from the end of July through to September, and when the 13 million textbooks are delivered to primary schools we are going to improve the ratios in those subjects from 15:1 to 1:1. Literally every single child at primary school will have their own textbook in those particular subjects.

Because of the savings achieved in the first stage of the textbook procurement plan, we have now calculated that we have sufficient money to do exactly the same in the secondary school sector. Within the Ministry we are now in the process of finalising the list of secondary school textbooks and tenders will be advertised shortly by UNICEF, the intention being to commence the printing of secondary school textbooks in September. Our hope is that in seven key subject areas we will be delivering secondary school textbooks to all high schools by the first term of 2011. We believe that we may well be able to achieve 1:1 ratios in those selected areas as well. Let me stress once again that this is a massive exercise and one of the main reasons why our education sector has declined so markedly in the last few years is because children have not had access this fundamental resource of textbooks. I believe that that the textbook situation is going to dramatically improve, and indeed is already improving.

Thirdly, regarding school infrastructure and Head Office infrastructure: let me deal with the Head Office – if you come to the Head Office you will find that we have water, that we have functional toilets in all the fourteen floors and the lifts are now working – all three of them. Now, I’m not saying that that is replicated in our schools – the situation in our schools is still profoundly shocking – but we are now working with the World Bank and I’m trying to expand the Education Transition Fund to work on the proposal of per capita grants. The idea is that we want to ensure that money doesn’t get blocked at Head Office or in Harare but that we devise a programme to ensure that we get money down to individual schools, and that we work with local communities – with local plumbers, builders and painters – to rehabilitate these schools whose infrastructure is in such a shocking state.

Fourthly, regarding Academies and Centres of Excellence:  one of my deep concerns since coming to office has been that even if we restore a basic education to our children – by getting teachers back to school, by getting these core textbooks delivered, by getting toilets repaired and classrooms painted – we are not going to address the needs of supremely talented but disadvantaged children who are not going to have those talents nurtured, who are not going to have those talents identified for their own good and for the Nation’s good. For that reason, we are promoting the notion of Academies. Initially we’ll be looking at 20 Academies – two per province countrywide. At the same time we intend setting up a scholarship fund – 40% of the schools’ intake will be reserved for talented disadvantaged children who will be fed into these Centres of Excellence so that our supremely talented but disadvantaged children will not be left behind, will not drown in the mediocrity of a basic education, but will be nurtured – in their own interests and the interests of the country.

We’ve made some progress with the Academies. We’ve had the concept of Academies approved by the Government. A new trust has been set up called Teach Zimbabwe, and I’m working closely with the World Bank and other institutions to secure the necessary funding for the rehabilitation, initially of these 20 schools, and then of course in time the number of the schools will be expanded.

The fifth area of progress relates to curriculum review. As I stressed, one of the problem areas we face is that there hasn’t been comprehensive curriculum review for over two decades. I have recently secured agreement in principle for funding of this exercise through the Education Transition Fund and our curriculum development unit is working with a Zimbabwean expert in curriculum reform to devise a plan of action for a programme of comprehensive curriculum review and reform in the coming years. The Finish Government has also recently provided us with funding for technical assistance in this programme with a specific area of concern in mind. As you are aware our education system in the last 30 years has been almost exclusively academically orientated, and my belief, and it’s a belief shared by many in the Education sector, is that we need to get more of a balance between an academically orientated and a vocationally orientated education system. One of my deep concerns is that so many children come out with academic but relatively useless qualifications at the end of their secondary education. We have to focus more in our process of curriculum review on ensuring that we have a better balance and more focus on vocational education. As I say, the Fins, who are the leaders worldwide in vocational education, have provided us with funding for this.

Tied into curriculum review there are a few specific areas that we are focusing on and have already started work on. One is Civic Education; to develop a curriculum on human rights, on constitutionalism, on the concepts of tolerance, respect for human rights and the use of peaceful means to resolve conflict. We’ve already started working with certain civic organisations to devise an appropriate curriculum for Zimbabwe. In like manner, we are developing a new curriculum on conservation farming and we are working with institutions in Zimbabwe that promote those concepts. In addition we will be looking at new curricula regarding the environment, sport, HIV/Aids and ICT. This all comes under the broad heading of curriculum review. Our intention is to have an initial plan of action developed within the next coming months, and our hope is that by mid-2011 we will have come up with concrete proposals for curriculum reform.

The sixth area of progress relates to a review of legislation. One of my concerns is that many of the Acts which fall under my jurisdiction are in need of review and reform. If you take the Education Statutory Instruments you will see that they span three decades and that they’re very difficult to read because they are all over the place. We need to consolidate these and review them. I just recently secured funding through the ETF for a technical expert to come on board, and that process will be starting shortly – not just in the Education sector, but in the other sectors of society that I’m responsible for, namely Sports, Arts and Culture.

The seventh area of progress relates to ZIMSEC. You will recall that I said that when I took office we hadn’t even finished marking the November 2008 examinations. We have now achieved a lot of progress in that regard – we got the Grade 7 results out by January this year and ‘O’ level and ‘A’ level results were published before the end of February. This is still unsatisfactory, still too late, but a substantial improvement on the year before.  I will shortly be announcing a new Zimsec Board which I am confident is going to restore Zimsec as an institution of the highest repute.

The eighth area of progress relates to review within the Ministry of our own practices. As you know, I set up the National Education Advisory Board under the chairmanship of Dr Isaiah Sibanda. Dr Fay Chung who is here today has been a member of that Board for its first year. The Board conducted an interim assessment in the first few months of us taking office, and that report, authored by Dr Chung and two colleagues, was published in July by the National Education Advisory Board and has been widely circulated. In the last few months the Advisory Board has also conducted further and much more comprehensive research in ten key areas of the Education sector. Those reports are very close to completion and will be made available to the public when the Advisory Board present them to me.

We’ve also worked very closely in this context of internal review with the World Bank. We’ve had two meetings; one in January for our internal top level management and then another with many in the wider education  sector in early March. Those two meetings in turn have agreed upon a programme to develop a strategic plan, and we are now moving into a further phase with the World Bank. We are about to embark on a process of consultation countrywide to develop a strategic plan for the Ministry – a short term strategic plan and that will then lead into a five year strategic plan. And then you’ll be pleased to know that both NEABs’ work and this World Bank assisted work is looking at the  Nziramasanga report (published in August 1999) very closely to see what elements of that report need to be implemented which have not been implemented in the last decade.

So I would say that those are eight areas of real progress. Let me talk briefly about the setbacks. I would list four areas of setbacks. The first, of course, relates to insufficient funding for the Education sector. Government has only allocated 14% of the national budget in 2010 for Education, not 22% as we had hoped. Whilst we have managed to mobilise good funding through the Education Transition Fund, I have not been able to fund certain key sectors, for example the teachers. Although I have made numerous attempts to get funding from the international community for teachers, the international community will not fund recurrent expenditures of that nature.

Secondly, and this is tied to the first setback, we have had ongoing labour action for reasons I fully understand. I’m fully sympathetic towards teachers and the unions, but of course this has dramatically affected service delivery in the Education sector. Related to this we still have the major problem of incentives. I don’t have time to discuss this with you now, but it’s not a resolved problem by any means.

Thirdly, we’ve had internal difficulties. We’ve had massive human resource constraints within Head Office. Take the planning department, for example. It is meant to have a complement of 25 people, but in fact has a director and four secretaries. This has also been a new order – the interaction between myself as an MDC Minister and civil servants who have worked under a tradition of ZANU-PF has often been difficult. We’ve had to learn to work with each other, and that has not always been easy, either way.

A fourth area of setbacks is the realisation that the Education sector in truth is still in free-fall. It is still plummeting. We see that in the recently published ZIMSEC results. Although there was a marginal improvement in the ‘O’ level and ‘A’ level results, one has to see that in the context of the dramatic reduction in the number of students who wrote the exams. I believe that it follows logically that if all the students who would have liked to have written the exams had done so, we might not necessarily have got that improvement. But the most worrying statistic is given in the Grade 7 results, the pass rate of  which has plunged. Another very worrying emerging statistic from these results is the huge divide between results achieved in the two urban provinces of Harare and Bulawayo and those achieved in the other rural provinces. In Harare and Bulawayo the pass rate was 72%; the average in the rural provinces was in the 30s. So there’s a massive rural-urban divide now in terms of education delivery.

Chairman, in conclusion: the way forward. I leave three areas for you. Firstly, Government funding:  this is primarily our own national responsibility. Clearly we have to, as a Government, as a Nation, grow our economy. But then we have to cut the cake differently. We have to increase the budget that we allocate to Education from 14% to the UNESCO recommended 22% if we are ever going to start to address the problems I have identified. The fact of the matter is that the education sector has been grossly neglected by successive governments for two decades. It was last adequately funded in the late-1980s. In real terms the amount of money allocated to Education has plummeted and we are now reaping the whirlwind. We are seeing the consequences of that failure to make education an actual priority.

Secondly, we desperately need international support. We cannot do it ourselves. The Education Transition Fund is an interesting model. I believe that it ensures that our own Zimbabwean educational objectives are fulfilled, but it also ensures that donor money is being spent properly. The international community needs to understand the danger of a lost generation. We need only look south to South Africa to see what happens to a nation when a whole generation doesn’t have an education. But we will need massive international support to rehabilitate the sector if we are to stem this crisis and prevent a lost generation emerging in Zimbabwe.

I end with five key priority areas: Firstly, we have to restore basic education, for all our children. Secondly, we need to ensure that our talented disadvantaged children are not left behind; not allowed to drown in the mediocrity of a basic education. Thirdly, we have to extend parental involvement in education. Fourthly, we must complete curriculum review to bring our curriculum up to the best practices worldwide, and finally, we need comprehensive legislative review to ensure that the Education sector functions efficiently and fairly.

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Schools Bar Pupils Over Fees

The Herald

5 May 2010

Harare — Schools in Harare opened for the second term yesterday with scores of students at Government institutions being turned away for failing to pay tuition fees and levies.

The financial burden on parents appears to have taken its toll as large numbers of schoolchildren did not attend classes.

The children were told to meet arrears dating as far back as January last year, with some schools saying they were owed hundreds of thousands of United States dollars.

Harare’s Girls High School said parents and guardians owed over US$300 000.

Yesterday, the school enlisted the services of the police to bar those in arrears from entering the premises.

Teachers heeded union calls to report for duty and it was business as usual for fully paid-up pupils.

A survey conducted by The Herald showed that indebted students at Girls High, Selbourne Routledge and Prince Edward schools were not allowed to enter the premises.

At Queensdale Primary School, fully paid-up students were issued with a “Green Visa Card” to enter the premises.

School Development Authority members in the morning manned the entrance and asked students to produce the “visa” as a prerequisite for attending lessons.

At Girls High School, SDA members and Zimbabwe Republic Police personnel were at the gates.

Day scholars at the school are paying US$130 in fees while boarders are forking out US$425 inclusive of food, tuition and levies.

Education, Sport, Arts and Culture Minister David Coltart yesterday said the law stipulated that pupils should not be turned away for non-payment of levies.

He, however, said those who had not paid Government-approved tuition fees can be barred from attending lessons.

“No student should be turned away from attending lessons for failure to pay levies. “However, students who fail to pay tuition fees approved by Government can be turned away,” Minister Coltart said.

Parents who spoke to The Herald urged the Government to intervene.

“Students should be allowed to learn while we are looking for the money. They cannot afford to miss lessons at this particular time, especially with examinations around the corner.

“We don’t know if it is now Government policy to turn students away because of failure to pay fees,” said a parent with a child at Girls High.

Girls High SDA chairperson Mrs Sophie Mungwashu said parents and guardians who did not meet their obligations were running the school down, adding they were owed over US$300 000 in levies.

“Reaching this decision was very difficult but we had to act this way because the school is becoming dilapidated, which is not good for a Government flagship.

“Some of these arrears are from 2009 first term and some students had the audacity of getting up to Form Six without paying a single cent. This cannot be allowed to continue.”

Asked why they sought police intervention, Mrs Mungwashu said: “ZRP were only called to maintain order and not to threaten students.

“The idea of engaging debt collectors does not work because when students finally pay up, some debt collectors do not remit the money.

“The fees that we are charging were approved by the Ministry of Education, Sport, Arts and Culture.

“There is no justification whatsoever for parents to continue sending their children to school for over a year without paying fees.”

At Prince Edward and Selbourne Routledge, pupils who had not paid fees were barred from entering the premises.

In many Harare high-density suburbs, lessons proceeded normally.

At Glen Norah High and Infill Primary schools, teachers said they had reported for duty after getting incentives.

“As long there are incentives, we are going to teach wholeheartedly since our employer is failing to pay us adequately,” said a Glen Norah High School teacher.

At Kuwadzana 4 Primary School, teachers said they were reporting for duty “for the benefit of the pupils”.

Pupils at Haig Park Primary and Ellis Robins High School said it was also back to business.

In Chinhoyi, pupils at Chaedza Primary School were ejected from the premises for failing to pay their fees.

One pupil said: “The headmaster said we should go home and only come back when our parents have paid the fees in full.”

Parents expressed dismay at the decision by the school authorities at the Chinhoyi municipality-run school.

“We feel that the decision is ill-timed because parents just don’t decide not to pay fees but are forced by circumstances.

“Most parents are struggling to make ends meet and the move by school authorities is heartless,” said a parent.

School authorities said they were not authorised to talk to the media.

The provincial education director was said to be out of office, while Chinhoyi town clerk Mr Ezekial Muringani said he would look into the issue.

“Give me time to establish the facts first before I can give you an accurate answer. That is the responsibility of the director of housing,” he said.

The housing director, who handles the portfolio under “social amenities”, was also out of office.

It was, however, business as usual at other schools.

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Zimbabwe Cabinet Deliberations on Visit by North Korean Soccer Team Pushed Off

VOA

By Gibbs Dube

May 5, 2010

Cabinet discussion of whether Zimbabwe should invite the North Korean soccer team to train in the country through the June-July World Cup period has been put off to next Tuesday as President Robert Mugabe and Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangirai are in Tanzania for the World Economic Forum, a ministerial source said.

Education, Sports and Culture Minister David Coltart told VOA Studio 7 reporter Gibbs Dube that the Cabinet will review the decision by the Zimbabwe World Cup 2010 Committee to invite the North Koreans.

“I presume that if the issue has to be discussed by Cabinet, it will be discussed on Tuesday and as far as I am concerned that team has not yet confirmed that it will be training in this country,” Coltart said.

Political commentator Samukele Hadebe said the North Korean team visit should be canceled to promote healing and reconciliation among Zimbabweans traumatized not only by political violence during the 2008 elections but by older episodes like the 1980s Gukurahundi purge of rival liberation activists in the Matabeleland region.

Hadebe said it would be unfortunate for the government to allow a visiting team to scuttle efforts being made to promote peace in a country devastated by three decades of misrule.

Tourism Minister Walter Mzembi told VOA recently that the government has not yet decided where the team will train in Zimbabwe ahead of the 2010 World Cup. The western city of Bulawayo was originally mooted as the venue for the North Korean training camp, but Bulawayo is the capital of the Matabeleland region.

Protesters have threatened to disrupt the team’s training activities there saying North Korea trained a crack army unit which has been accused of massacring more than 20,000 people in Midland province and Matabeleland, once a stronghold of the PF-ZAPU movement of the late Vice President Joshua Nkomo, which merged with the ZANU movement of now-President Robert Mugabe to form the present-day ZANU-PF party.

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Minister Coltart’s daughter survives lion attack

Zimbabwe Guardian

4 May 2010

The daughter of Education, Sport, Arts and Culture Minister David Coltart’s daughter was on Saturday mauled by a lion and had to undergo surgery at St Anne’s Hospital in Harare.

She was attacked at the Antelope Game Park in Gweru before being hospitalised at St Anne’s Hospital.

“She was operated on her arm on Monday and is recovering well,” said Minister Coltart.

The minister’s eight year old daughter, who cannot be named as she is a minor, sustained two bites on the arm.

The Coltart family will not be taking any legal action against the person who allowed her to pat the lion at the park or the owners.
The minister’s daughter was being shown a breeding lion that was in its pen.

“She was in the company of an adult relative of the owner who was showing her a breeding lion. She was bitten while patting the animal. We heard screams and ran to her rescue,” said Minister Coltart.

The minister’s eight year old daughter was rushed to Gweru 2nd Street Avenue Clinic before she was transferred to St Anne’s in Harare.

“I’m grateful towards the staff at Gweru Clinic, Mars, the medical team in Harare and St Anne’s Hospital for quickly responding to the accident and acting so professionally. My daughter is happy and recovering well after her operation,” said the minister.

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Zimbabwe Cabinet to Review Sensitive Issue of Hosting North Korean Soccer Teams

VOA
By Gibbs Dube
Washington 3 May 2010

The Zimbabwean Cabinet on Tuesday was to take up the highly sensitive question of to whether the country should invite North Korea’s soccer team to train in the country through the World Cup in neighboring South Africa, amid demands by Matabeleland regional activists that the team not be welcomed.

Objections have to do with the fact that the Zimbabwean Fifth Brigade, accused of committing massacres during the 1980s Gukurahundi conflict between rival liberation forces in Matabeleland, was North Korean-trained.

Education Minister David Coltart, senator for the Bulawayo constituency of Khumalo, said it is not yet clear if the North Koreans will train in Zimbabwe during the 2010 World Cup next month in South Africa.

Coltart said that while it is unfair to blame the young soccer players for the Fifth Brigade massacres in the Midlands and Matabeleland regions in the 1980s, the government should take into account the demands by regional Matabeleland activists that the North Korean team not train in Zimbabwe.

Coltart told VOA Studio 7 reporter Gibbs Dube that there is no need to open up old wounds by hosting a team whose presence in the country may provoke political disturbances. “It is important that we deal with this issue in a sensitive manner so that we don’t allow a visit like this to inflame passions or re-open wounds,” Coltart said.

Brilliant Mhlanga, a member of the Matabeleland activist group Ibhetshu Likazulu, said the North Korean soccer players would not be welcome in Matabeleland or anywhere else in Zimbabwe. He said would be a “symbolic insult” to have the North Koreans train in Zimbabwe as the Fifth Brigade atrocities remain unresolved.

“Our wounds are still fresh and it is even more insulting to the spirit of those whose innocent blood was shed after undergoing the most horrific, evil and satanic acts ever committed in the history of modern day Zimbabwe,” he said.

Historians estimate that more than 20,000 people, mainly of the Ndebele ethnic group, were killed by soldiers of the Fifth Brigade in a purge of supporters of then-opposition leader Joshua Nkomo, head of the Zimbabwe African People’s Union, which later merged with the Zimbabwe African National Union of Robert Mugabe.
Nkomo became Zimbabwean vice president under the Unity Accord which ended the fighting.

President Robert Mugabe has described the massacres as “an act of madness,” he has failed to publicly apologize for atrocities or provide compensation for the families of civilians killed by government troops.

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