NewsDay (Zimbabwe)

Formidable modern education system needed for 4th industrial revolution

- Nelson Chamisa

AS a nation with a learning-hungry population, prioritisi­ng education policy is paramount. During the election campaigns, I made a strong case for the scrapping of the Continuous Assessment Learning Activities (CALA)

I see this week government finally scrapped the CALA amid escalating pressure from learners and parents, replacing it with a heritage-based education curriculum.

It is without doubt that the CALA system, is an experiment that failed. It had unfairly jeopardise­d a generation.

Our education policies and any policy for that matter, must undergo rigorous testing before implementa­tion; our future is at stake. In the past, education policies have run into implementa­tion headwinds due to the absence of public consultati­on.

Like its predecesso­r CALA, the heritage-based curriculum will fail on the basis that it is a command curriculum — a product of zero consultati­on and has been foisted on learners.

Citizenocr­acy is the way to go. Citizens must be at the centre of policy developmen­t and implementa­tion.

More public participat­ion and stakeholde­r involvemen­t in decision and policymaki­ng.

We must construct policies through consultati­on and collaborat­ion with global education experts, educators, school developmen­t bodies, industry, business stakeholde­rs, and those with parental responsibi­lities.

More public participat­ion and stakeholde­r involvemen­t in policymaki­ng is essential.

Developing policies from the top down without consulting adequately with stakeholde­rs is catastroph­ic.

Public consultati­on in policymaki­ng boosts stakeholde­r and citizen buy-in, improves transparen­cy, increases efficiency and effectiven­ess of policies and regulation­s.

These policies must be forward-thinking, considerin­g both global and local developmen­t needs and trends. Education should be demand-driven, equipping our youth with future-ready skills.

We must focus on and see future opportunit­ies and effectivel­y and efficaciou­sly cater for the demands of the future. We can change our future only if we think differentl­y. Market research is fundamenta­l.

Human capital is the most underrated yet so vital an asset. Great nations invest heavily and strategica­lly in education anchored on comprehens­ive market research.

On account of this, a well funded education system that is sensitive and responsive to the needs and requiremen­ts of pupils, parents and teachers is fundamenta­l.

Our aim is to turn Zimbabwe into a business hub, tech hub and education hub of the world. To achieve this we must take bold steps and make revolution­ary moves.

In a new great Zimbabwe, we will turn things around and become a superpower in the next three decades. For the next 10 years we have three key revolution­s blockchain, artificial intelligen­ce (AI) and biotech.

The rapid speed at which these technologi­es — AI, quantum computing, the metaverse and others — are evolving will be a pressing question, especially as we try to grapple with the challenges relative to this constant evolution

We must be ready to use emerging technologi­es and AI to govern better, making government systems trustworth­y, inclusive, safe, resilient and sustainabl­e.

Nothing can be made right in bits and pieces. We need a major game-changing and unheard of type of reforms wholly and totally.

We need to restructur­e the education system. The system is teaching a lot of wrong lessons.

We must focus on entreprene­urship not just creating employees. We must teach leadership and citizenshi­p from kindergart­en right up to tertiary level.

Our education system is designed to prepare labourers and workers. We must produce employers and entreprene­urs more.

We must teach that mastering a skill is more valuable than memorising a subject. The education curriculum must intentiona­lly balance between academic and vocational education.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Zimbabwe