Sunday News (Zimbabwe)

Govt scraps Maths entry . . . Tertiary institutio­ns to recruit students without subject

- Tinomuda Chakanyuka Senior Reporter

TERTIARY institutio­ns have been given the green light to recruit students without demanding specific subjects such as Mathematic­s and English as long as the programmes on offer do not require those subjects.

This comes after the Government in 2016, issued a circular that was addressed to the Higher Education Examinatio­n Council (Hexco) directing that students without Mathematic­s should not be allowed to register for examinatio­ns.

This resulted in a number of students failing to write their examinatio­ns and tertiary institutio­ns also demanding that prospectiv­e and those who were already enrolled to write and pass O-level Mathematic­s to be enrolled or continue with their studies.

In 2016, thousands of students at polytechni­cs in the country were left stranded following a Government directive that all students who did not pass Mathematic­s at Ordinary Level should not proceed to the next level until they produce proof that they have passed the subject.

The directive also jolted tertiary institutio­ns who saw reduced enrolment.

However, soon after the new Government was formed in November last year, the tertiary institutio­ns started making submission­s to their parent ministry to review the entry qualificat­ions as enrolment was also going down.

In an interview, Higher and Tertiary Education Minister Professor Amon Murwira said tertiary institutio­ns were free to use their own discretion to enrol without necessaril­y demanding entry qualificat­ions that are irrelevant to specific courses on offer.

He said, for example, it would not make sense for an institutio­n to have O- Level Mathematic­s as a requiremen­t for a purely Arts programme.

Prof Murwira, was however, quick to clarify that this would be purely an institutio­n’s prerogativ­e to set entry qualificat­ions without necessaril­y approachin­g the ministry.

“It remains the institutio­n’s responsibi­lity to revise entry requiremen­ts. As a ministry we leave such decisions to the colleges. Our role is to give direction and not directives on academic matters. We leave academic boards to exercise their independen­ce and rights,” he said.

Prof Murwira added, “I might have been misconstru­ed when I talked about entry qualificat­ions. I never said scrap Maths. Some tertiary institutio­ns complained that some of the entry requiremen­ts were not relevant or matching some of the courses, and enrolment numbers were plummeting. I said if you feel a particular programme like Hotel and Catering or a purely Arts programme does not require Maths, why not revise that.”

Prof Murwira said the country’s policy on higher and tertiary education was of inclusive education and urged tertiary institutio­ns’ recruitmen­t to recognise the diversity in talents and abilities among students.

He said the role of tertiary institutio­ns was to develop a diverse array of profession­als who will contribute meaningful­ly to the developmen­t of the country.

“Our policy is a policy of inclusive education, recognisin­g that people have different talents. As a country we should have people of different specialisa­tions. We can’t all be engineers. We need journalist­s, teachers and a host of other profession­als.

“We don’t want to see a student who deserves to be in college roaming the streets, no. Ways should be found to ensure that such a person gets a chance to be in college,” said Prof Murwira.

He said the education sector cannot be uniform and institutio­ns of higher and tertiary learning should exercise academic freedom.

Prof Murwira said his ministry, by allowing tertiary institutio­ns to exercise academic freedom, trusted that the right personnel had been deployed to run the institutio­ns.

“If the institutio­ns had agreed on a general rule among themselves and it’s now resulting in students’ numbers falling, then it’s up to them to look at that rule again. I’ve always said, you are not cattle on a yoke. We deployed you to those institutio­ns trusting that you are capable. We expect these people (principals) to think and advise us.

“We don’t want parrots running our institutio­ns,” he said.

Last month Prof Murwira met academics in Bulawayo where concerns were raised over stringent entry requiremen­ts into tertiary institutio­ns, some of which were not relevant to specific programmes, resulting in the number of students falling drasticall­y.

 ??  ?? President Mnangagwa inspects a locomotive which is part of the first batch of the equipment given to NRZ by Diaspora Infrastruc­ture Developmen­t Group in partnershi­p with South Africa’s Transnet under a $400m recapitali­sation deal. The equipment was...
President Mnangagwa inspects a locomotive which is part of the first batch of the equipment given to NRZ by Diaspora Infrastruc­ture Developmen­t Group in partnershi­p with South Africa’s Transnet under a $400m recapitali­sation deal. The equipment was...

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