Sunday News (Zimbabwe)

Unqualifie­d teachers redeployed

- Tinomuda Chakanyuka Senior Reporter

THE Civil Service Commission has started the process of redeployin­g teachers who hold non-teaching qualificat­ions as part of the Government’s staff rationalis­ation programme recommende­d in the Civil Service Report of 2015, an official has said.

Permanent Secretary in the Ministry of Primary and Secondary Education Dr Sylvia Utete-Masango said the teachers were being re-assigned to other ministries and Government department­s where their qualificat­ions were relevant.

Dr Utete-Masango said her ministry had submitted, to the CSC, names of teachers that hold degrees in different areas but do not have teaching qualificat­ions. The Government employed thousands of unqualifie­d teachers who had bachelor’s degrees in other areas as a stopgap measure to deal with shortage of teachers as a result of brain drain.

However, the fate of unqualifie­d teachers had been hanging in the balance, as the Government started intensifyi­ng efforts to ensure the country’s schools were manned by qualified personnel.

“The Civil Service Commission (CSC) has asked us to submit names and statistics of those that are in the system and do not have teaching qualificat­ions but have degrees and they are being redeployed in ministries that would need their areas of expertise.

“Some have been deployed to the department of immigratio­n, and quite a number of economists have been redeployed to the Ministry of Economic Planning (and Investment Promotion) and some have been deployed to the Ministry of Rural Developmen­t (and Preservati­on of National Culture and Heritage). This rationalis­ation is ongoing,” she said.

Dr Utete-Masango said those who wished to stay in the education sector were being encouraged to acquire teaching qualificat­ions.

“ZOU (Zimbabwe Open University) has come up with a post-graduate Diploma in Education programme and this was accredited by Zimche (Zimbabwe Council for Higher Education) in 2016. So we have quite a number, we have actually been taking statistics and we have communicat­ed to provinces encouragin­g those with no pedagogy to actually take up the diploma. Those that have non-teaching degrees have actually taken up the diplomas and they are at varying levels of training,” she said.

Meanwhile, the Government has started recruiting 2 300 teachers ahead of schools opening for the second term. This comes after the Ministry of Primary and Secondary Education requested the recruitmen­t of 7 000 teachers to enable full implementa­tion of the new education curriculum.

“We also have to consider areas that have critical shortage, like the infants, mainly because statistics are there. We know exactly the shortage that we have and at what level so we need to rationalis­e. We also have a critical shortage in Mathematic­s and Sciences,” she said.

Dr Utete-Masango said while her ministry would have wanted more teachers to be recruited, shortage of resources was constraini­ng Government to satisfy that desire. New learning areas that were introduced under the new education curriculum have also added to the need for the Government to recruit additional staff as the areas require specialise­d training. Government has also initiated the teacher capacity developmen­t programme which allows teachers to enhance their educationa­l qualificat­ions to be in sync with modern trends and requiremen­ts of the new curriculum framework.

 ??  ?? Dr Sylvia Utete-Masang
Dr Sylvia Utete-Masang
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