Paying School Fees

ZOC also pay school fees for children who otherwise could not afford them.

It’s estimated that 1.5 million children need help to access education in Zimbabwe. School fees, provision of materials, school uniforms and other basic equipment, and huge loss of qualified, experienced teachers are all major issues.

On average, primary schools cost approximately US$5.50 per term, with secondary education in cities/towns costing approximately US$10.70 per term (three months).

UNICEF reports that fees are normally around USD $15 – $40 per term for a child of primary school age, though in rural areas they can be as little as USD $2. Some school can be as high as USD $500 per term in the inner city.

Can you help us by committing to pay the school fees for one or more children each term?

READ UNICEF’S REPORT ON THE EDUCATION CRISIS IN ZIMBABWE…

Zimbabwe education crisis worsens

Nearly all of rural schools closed

HARARE, 10 February 2009 – As the world focuses on the inauguration of Zimbabwe’s Prime Minister and the commencement of a government of national unity, UNICEF today released data revealing that 94 per cent of schools in rural Zimbabwe remain closed and called for a prioritisation of the education sector by the new government.

“The education situation is a national disaster. It is imperative that the unity government focuses on this. Children in rural areas already live on the margins, many are orphaned, a huge number depend on food aid, they struggle on numerous fronts.” said Roeland Monasch, UNICEF Representative in Zimbabwe. “Now these children are being denied the only basic right that can better their prospects. It is unacceptable.”

The figures emerging from routine assessment visits across Zimbabwe revealed that 66 of 70 schools were abandoned. In the only fully operational school found during visits, a third of pupils were reporting for classes.  Many of the abandoned schools have been vandalized.

The education crisis which started last year saw a marked depletion of teachers in schools, plummeting school attendance rate from over 80 per cent to 20 per cent and postponement of national schools’ exams. This year schools were opened two weeks late, exam results have not been released and learning only resumed in some urban areas for the few who could afford to subsidize teachers’ salaries and pay exorbitant tuition fees in US dollars.

“It is the responsibility of government to ensure that every child receives an education. The burden of salaries, learning material and school maintenance should not fall on parents,” said Mr. Monasch.

“This is just not sustainable, most parents cannot carry this burden and many children will fall between the cracks, and rural schools bear testimony to this”.

Now on the brink of collapse, Zimbabwe’s education system was once the best in Africa.
However, past successes have been reversed by a raft of problems hinging on the lack of financing, which has led to a marked declined in the pay envelope of teachers and school improvement grants.

While UNICEF already provides support to the Ministry of Education Sport and Culture – an investment of US$17 million over the last two years – for classroom construction, school fees assistance to over 100 000 children, textbooks, learning materials, boreholes, toilets in rural schools, the children’s agency recognises teachers remain vital for learning and support to bring back the teachers in the classroom is requisite.

“Strong, swift and decisive national leadership is critical at this juncture but so is international support to the sector” said Mr Monasch. This is an opportunity for all stakeholders to show their commitment to Zimbabwe and its children.”

Welcome to our site…

Zimbabwe Orphan Care (ZOC) is a registered UK based charity working in Harare, Zimbabwe. The charity was established by Alan & Dorothy Graham (originally from Belfast) in 2000 to help orphaned children and abandoned babies in the Harare area. Zimbabwe is among one of the poorest countries in the world with very high unemployment and HIV/Aids having wiped out a whole generation.