‘Education now preserve of the rich’

30

AS the first term opens today, parents and guardians in the Midlands and Matabeleland provinces have raised concern over the skyrocketing cost of education and the strike by teachers.

Those who spoke to Southern Eye yesterday said they were grappling with not only exorbitant fees, school uniforms and books, but the possibility of sending children to classrooms where there are no teachers, as the latter have vowed to down tools, demanding better salaries and working conditions.

Teachers’ associations have said their members would down tools if their salaries did not come in United States dollars.

A parent from Ascot Infill in Gweru, James Chiseko, said despite the difficulties he faced in preparing for his daughter, who is going for Form 1 at a local school, he feared that the effort could be a waste of resources.

“I had to fork out almost $1 000 for fees, uniforms and books for my daughter, but now my worst fears are whether children are going to get down to learning business with the looming strike by teachers,” he said.

Another parent, David Mushangwe, said it was difficult to make decisions for schoolchildren, as there was uncertainty with the pending labour unrest.

He said although he sympathised with the teachers, as a parent, he also feared making efforts that might not bear fruit.

“It’s their (teachers) right to demand better working conditions, but I am also looking at what I have invested for my children in preparing for them as schools open,” Mushangwe said.

“As parents, we might make all efforts to pay the fees, buy expensive books and uniforms, but at the end of the day, our children face the possibility of not learning or even being sent away from school.”

 

Janet Mpofu from Mkoba suburb said she would only pay fees after following developments on threats by teachers to embark on industrial action.

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here