School fee hike fuels dropout rate

BY SAUL DAMBAZA

HARARE - The recent tenfold hike in state school fees in Zimbabwe has led to more children than ever dropping out of school, as parents fail to pay the fees.

Parents of children at state primary schools in urban areas now have to pay at least Z$2.5 mill


ion a term. Secondary schooling cost Z$10 million a term.

When the price hikes were announced, child rights organisations predicted that more pupils would drop out of school and many would resort to begging, prostitution or child labour just to survive.

Linnia is an 11-year-old girl who was recently kicked out of school because her parents could no longer pay her fees. Dressed in a flimsy pink outfit that barely covered her in the short but harsh southern African winter, she told IWPR, “I would like to go back to school soon and join my classmates. I hope my parents will get the fees or someone can help pay.”

Police and soldiers destroyed her family’s only source of income, a tiny carpentry shop in Mbare, during the infamous Operation Murambatsvina.

According to UNICEF programme assistant Joshua Mahachi, the United Nations agency has so far paid the fees of about 200 children who would otherwise have had to drop out of school. He said applications for fee support were pouring in and UNICEF’s local office had insufficient funds to help everyone.

The economic crisis, coupled with the departure of teachers to work abroad and an HIV/AIDS epidemic that has killed thousands of school staff, is steadily eroding what was once reckoned the best education system in Africa. These days the majority of schools have no textbooks, stationery or chalk, let alone computers.

As recently as 2000, when the country’s precipitous slide into penury began, school enrolment stood at 93 per cent, but the figure is now well below 50 per cent.

“Our job as teachers is like bricklayers who are expected to construct a house without being given the bricks,” said Magdalene Ngwenyama, a teacher in a working class suburb of Bulawayo, whose school has just two textbooks per class for each subject.

When contacted for comment, Education Minister Aeneas Chigwedere admitted that the dropout rate was increasing, but he accused some schools of increasing their fees without government approval.

“We were working on ways to ensure that no child is sent home due to non-payment of fees,” said the minister. “We also have names of schools which have since the beginning of the year been increasing school fees to levels that are unrealistic without the approval of the government. I can assure you that such schools will be penalised heavily.”
About a quarter of children who complete primary school education cannot afford to go on to secondary school, and many end up begging on urban streets, according to UNICEF data. Children orphaned by HIV/AIDS, particularly in rural communities, are worst placed when it comes to access to schooling.

UNICEF is spearheading the Harare Taskforce on Street Children, a joint venture between non-government organisations and government departments, which conducted a survey in 2004 revealing that a high percentage of the children on the streets of the capital were virtually illiterate, although they had a strong desire for education.

“Most of the children left home to look for ways to earn an income or because of poverty at home,” said the report. “Most children indicated that they would like to return to school.”

According to another UN report from the same year, more than 50,000 children of informal traders and city squatter families in Zimbabwe had dropped out of school. The number has increased enormously since then.

Retired educationist William Mupita, who was a teacher for 40 years, said he had never seen such large numbers of children dropping out of school. “This is probably the first time since the days of the liberation war [of the Seventies] that such high numbers of children have dropped out of school in such a short period of time,” he said. “The figures should alarm anyone serious about this country’s human development.”

Worsening conditions also make schoolchildren more vulnerable to sexual abuse, according to a child rights group.
“Because of the hike in school fees, many children are visiting schools trying to negotiate fee payments. It makes them more vulnerable at the hands of teachers who exploit them,” said Witness Chikoko, acting director of the African Network for the Prevention and Protection Against Child Abuse and Neglect.

Staff at a boarding school near Marondera, southeast of Harare, were recently charged with sexually abusing 52 girls, and similar cases have been seen in many other parts of the country.

Even President Mugabe’s alma mater, the elite St Xavier College at Kutama, 80 kilometres southwest of Harare, has announced that one-third of its 1,000 pupils have left because parents can no longer afford the fees. Textbooks are not being replaced and classrooms are falling apart.

The teachers at the college are, however, grateful for the free eggs and chickens that arrive intermittently from a nearby farm estate confiscated from its former owner and now in the hands of Mugabe family members.- IWPR

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