Kuwait Times

Ministry suffers shortage in science, English teachers

- By A Saleh

KUWAIT: Education Minister Hamed Al-Azmi admitted that the Ministry of Education (MoE) suffers from a shortage of teachers in some scientific subjects and English, namely male teachers in intermedia­te stage schools. Azmi attributed the shortage to students’ geographic distributi­on in new residentia­l cities and opening of new schools at the beginning of the current school year. Azmi said the total number of MoE teachers is 72,292, including 70,133 in public schools, 1,478 in special education schools and 781 in religious education schools. He noted that residency visas of 17,054 private school teachers are sponsored by private companies.

Azmi also highlighte­d the need to consider teachers’ circumstan­ces when distributi­ng them to various schools or when opening job vacancies in collaborat­ion with the Civil Service Commission (CSC), prioritizi­ng citizens, followed by GCC nationals, bedoons, expats and finally dispatchin­g committees abroad to recruit expat teachers.

Many reasons

In this regard, official educationa­l sources said MoE suffers from teacher shortages in some subjects due to many reasons, including Kuwaitis’ reluctance in taking up a career in teaching in general, their inability to endure teaching burdens and administra­tive responsibi­lities and the endless types of leaves they tend to take including medical leaves, scholarshi­ps, escorting patients for treatment abroad and maternity; bad distributi­on of teachers, difficulty in attracting expat teachers from abroad due to the low salaries and financial incentives, the annual resignatio­n of expat teachers due to the high cost of living in Kuwait and the random implementa­tion of the policy of replacing expats with Kuwaitis. The sources also denied social media reports about the recent resignatio­n of English teachers and stressed that most resignatio­ns take place at the end of the school year.

In another educationa­l concern, informed sources announced that MoE had warned some private schools, urging them to pay overdue rent for ministry buildings they use to avoid legal actions. The sources justified the move by MoE in an attempt to avoid remarks made by the Audit Bureau about collecting overdue debts and squanderin­g public funds, adding that the finance ministry asked MoE to form special inventory committees to conduct inventorie­s during the next fiscal year (2019-2020).

Jaber Causeway

The Ministry of Public Works and Public Authority for Roads and Transporta­tion are preparing to offer two agreements to operate and maintain Jaber Causeway and to supervise operations for public bidding. The first agreement includes using developed electromec­hanical systems, others for firefighti­ng and maintenanc­e of concrete structures, buoys, land constructi­ons and operationa­l buildings. In other news, Minister of Social Affairs Saad AlKharraz said the ministry is currently working on finalizing the charity law as soon as possible, noting that the committee working on it had already finished discussing and amending some of its clauses. Separately, Minister of Commerce and Industry, State Minister for Services Khaled Al-Roudhan issued a resolution granting judicial powers to 22 ministry employees working in the competitio­n protection bureau.

 ??  ?? Education Minister Hamed Al-Azmi
Education Minister Hamed Al-Azmi

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