A
sentiment of acknowledgement or approval, an indication of enthusiasm.
The
damn truth, definitely.
Basically,
"I comprehend what you are saying and verify that your statement is true,
my good brother."
Again, not much more to say
than what's printed here, from The
Citizen. Major shida that
needs to be addressed ASAP.
####
Tanzania: Pupils Stare At Bleak
Future in Skewed Teacher Allocation Plan
Public primary schools in rural
areas, still battling with an acute shortage of teachers, may have to wait a
little longer for relief, official data that reveals the glaring uneven
distribution of teaching staff across the country suggests.
The government, which has
announced that it would recruit over 40,000 teachers, faces a Herculean task to
address the disparities that have had a hard-hitting impact on schools in rural
areas.
A recent analysis by The Citizen of dataset dubbed 'Pupil to
Teacher Ratio in Government Primary schools in 2016' as of March last year,
reveals that some regions with low enrollment have more teachers than those
with the highest number of pupils.
It's a contradiction that has,
for years, created unequal learning opportunities between pupils in state-run
schools in Kilimanjaro, Arusha, and Dar es Salaam, who have adequate teachers,
and their counterparts in Kigoma, Mara, Mwanza, and Rukwa where there are
critical shortages of teaching staff.
Data from the government's open
data portal, which The Citizen
verified through physical visits to selected schools in these regions, reveals
that inequality in teacher distribution plays a major role in academic
performance, with disadvantaged areas doing badly in the Standard 7 national
exams.
Even in cities where the
majority teachers prefer to live, there is still glaring inconsistency in how
teachers are distributed with Arusha having more numbers than Dar es Salaam,
Mbeya, Tanga, and Mwanza.
For example, Dar es Salaam had
485,389 pupils and 12,813 teachers, almost the same number with Mwanza, which
had 627,695 pupils. Mwanza, which had 142,306 more pupils than Dar es
Salaam, had 12,833 teachers only.
With a total enrollment of
333,601 pupils in primary schools by March last year, Simiyu Region had 71,484
more pupils than Arusha (262,117 pupils), but it had only 7,093 teachers, while
the latter had 7,605 teachers, according to the data. This means Arusha
had 500 more teachers than Simiyu despite having a relatively low enrollment.
The pupil-teacher ratio (PTR) in
Simiyu stood at 52 against Arusha's 37, making it one of the 10 regions with
the lowest number of teachers. And while more than half of public primary
schools in Ruvuma have pupil-teacher ratio above the normal standard of one
teacher for 40 pupils, in Kilimanjaro, more than three quarters of the schools
enjoy the best PTR.
Data shows that Kilimanjaro with
253,263 pupils had 8,279 teachers, about 1,962 more than Ruvuma with a larger
number of pupils. Ruvuma, a southwestern region with a PTR of 47, had a
total enrollment of 271,701, but had 6,341 teachers only.
Though it has been claimed that
the availability of teachers alone does not guarantee quality of education, Dar
es Salaam, Kilimanjaro, and Arusha, which top all the regions in numbers of
teachers, have been performing well in the past Primary School Leaving Exams
(PSLE).
The three regions have been
clinching top 10 positions almost every year, including 2016, while regions
like Kigoma, Dodoma, and Tabora lag behind.
Generally, Tanzania has
persistently faced a serious shortage of teachers in both primary and secondary
public schools, particularly for science and mathematics subjects.
By the end of December last
year, according to data obtained by The
Citizen from the President's Office, Regional Administration and Local
Government, the nation was short of 47,151 teachers for public primary schools.
That may be a conservative figure - the situation could be worse, independent
sources of data suggest.
A 2014 report by the United
Nations Educational, Scientific, and Cultural Organization (UNESCO)'s Institute
for Statistics (UIS) says Tanzania needs to recruit at least 406,600 new
teachers by 2030. This translates to an average of 25,412 teachers'
recruitment annually from back then.
The reason for higher numbers of
teachers in urban schools is a no-brainer. Rural schools lack the basic
facilities that can attract even an average, less-experienced teacher.
Most run with no classrooms, no
desks and chairs, no clean and safe water, and no decent houses for teachers.
Getting to some of the schools in remote areas is a nightmare. There are
no proper roads, no electricity. Teachers are forced to walk for hours to
the nearest town.
If they are to use a bodaboda to
get to the nearest bus stops, they have to dig deeper into their pockets -
despite the fact their monthly salaries are hardly enough for basics.
In some regions, where The Citizen visited recently, a teacher
has to build his own grass-thatched mud house on arrival because there are no
houses - not even to rent. In short, the working environment is pathetic
and unbearable. For those who have endured over the years, it's been a
life of sacrifice all the way.
At Chohero Primary School in the
Mvomero District of Morogoro, for instance, the two teachers who handle 510
pupils walk almost 20 kilometres to the nearest bus stop. Last year, only
six out of the 49 Standard 7 pupils who sat the PSLE passed with an average of
C.
In an interview with The Citizen, Kigoma Regional Education
Officer, Omari Mkombole, said the uneven distribution of teachers was a direct
result of the difficult life in most rural areas. Teachers who quit join
private schools in town.
"If the government provides
more incentives for teachers, they may be motivated to teach in rural areas.
In Kigoma, we will prepare our own package to retain teachers; directives have
already been sent to all District Commissioners," he said.
Mr. Juma Kaponda, the Director
of Education Management in the President's Office (Regional Administration and
Local Government), says the disparity in distribution is due to a number of
reasons, but mainly health and social factors affecting teachers. Married
couples prefer working in the same area, and there are teachers with health
complications - these would want to be close to hospitals.
But Mr. Kaponda admitted that
the disparities had proven costly, and the government was working on rectifying
them. "Teachers in areas with critical shortages are being
overworked, reducing their efficiency and producing poor results," he
says.
"Directives have already
been issued to municipal councils to ensure that they re-allocate teachers to
fill gaps in those areas facing scarcity. Also, this year the government
will employ 40,000 teachers for primary and 10,169 science and mathematics
teachers for secondary schools to fill the gap," adds Mr. Kaponda.
For education experts, the
disparity betrays the absence of a clear policy on incentives for teachers
living in harsh environments. Dr. Luka Mkonongwa, a lecturer at the Dar
es Salaam University College of Education (DUCE), reveals just how bad the
situation can be. "Due to poor working conditions in many rural
areas, some teachers are forced to lie that they are suffering from certain
diseases in order to be transferred," he says.
He also says the opportunity to
relocate due to marriage is also leaving some female teachers with no option
but accepting marriage proposals only from men living in towns.
"It's very difficult to
block transfers where marriage or sickness is cited as the reason for a
request. Therefore, there is no long or short term measure that can solve
this problem without investing in better social services across the country,
and providing special incentives to teachers living in rural areas."
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