Sunday News (Zimbabwe)

Fresh headache for parents as stationery prices shoot up

- Sunday News Reporters

AS schools open for the first term of the year on Tuesday, parents are not only agonising over high fees, levies and uniforms but are losing sleep over the quantity and cost of stationery as well as groceries that schools are now demanding.

In the past, parents would worry about fees and uniforms but the introducti­on of the new curriculum a few years ago, has seen schools coming up with outrageous demands some bordering on greedy.

The schools, as a way of circumvent­ing the eagle eye from the Government on fees and levies have turned to huge demands on stationery that have left some parents wondering whether some of the things being demanded are related to learning or have become “staff ’s grocery wish list”.

“No, no, I am not worried about the fees anymore, I am worried about what the school is demanding,” said Mrs Babra Moyo whose child is starting Grade One at a Government school in Bulawayo.

“Look at this paper, this is what the school wants for my kid to start school,” she said showing a full-paged paper with a long list of stationery and groceries that the school is demanding.

From the list, the school requires 30 exercise books including two counter books, a set of nine text books, pencils, sharpeners, wax crayons, bond paper, manila paper, rulers, four ball pens (three blue and one red), office paste, counters, among many others.

In addition, the school requires the parents to buy tissue paper, cobra, Domestos, hand wash among other groceries.

“For the set of textbooks only I need more than $1 300,” said Mrs Moyo.

To put into context, that amount only is more than what a headmaster got paid at the end of December.

“As for the exercise books, it’s around $200, the other stationery depending on where you are buying them from, you will need more than $500,” said Mrs Moyo.

“All in all, it means I need more than $2 500 to just buy all these requiremen­ts and you wonder when schools come up with such lists do they look at even themselves, I mean even their own teachers cannot afford this so where is the logic?”

Another parent, Mr Peter Sithole said schools were now hiding behind the new curriculum to demand some stationery which is obviously not necessary.

“Take for example at this school, a Grade One and ECD child must bring three ball pens including red pens. Even if it is for the teacher, if each child brings a red pen, does the teacher require 40 red pens and more than 100 blue pens per term to use, for what?

“Even the tissues, in the past we have never heard of our children saying they are using them, so who is using them at the end of the day,” said Mr Sithole.

He said what was worrying was that parents also pay levies which are meant to buy some of the items demanded by the schools.

“The levies we are paying are meant to buy teaching material but we are paying levies and then also buying the stationery.

“The Government must look into these issues, besides who audit all these things we are buying, we are not even sure if they are used for the intended purposes. At another school I heard teachers are selling exercise books and bond paper, you wonder if these are not the same goods that parents would have bought,” he said.

The huge demand for stationery and other learning materials came after the implementa­tion of the new Education Curriculum.

While experts have praised the curriculum on paper, its implementa­tion has been dodged by the lack of requisite material to support the new demands.

Schools have simply passed the burden to parents but due to economic hardships most of the parents are struggling to meet the demands.

The situation is worse in rural areas where the schools cannot demand books from parents because they cannot simply afford.

In the past, Government would provide books and stationery to all schools creating an almost equal learning environmen­t.

The demands have also created a new breed of people who are now photocopyi­ng some of the textbooks demanded by schools and selling them on the streets.

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