Sunday News (Zimbabwe)

Zim has moved mountains in higher education but . . .

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AT independen­ce in 1980, Zimbabwe inherited a single higher education institutio­n, the University of Zimbabwe which was establishe­d as the University College of Rhodesia and Nyasaland and was an affiliate of the University of London in 1955.

The institutio­n was later renamed the University of Rhodesia, the University of Zimbabwe-Rhodesia, and finally the University of Zimbabwe. According to Evelyn Chiyevo Garwe and Juliet Thondhlana in their paper — Higher Education Systems and Institutio­ns in Zimbabwe, the university had a strategic relationsh­ip with the parent universiti­es — the University of Birmingham for Medicine and the University of London for all other programmes that ensured that quality was well regulated. The curricula and qualificat­ions were modeled along British standards, thereby attracting high-calibre staff, technical assistance, and funding from Europe. As a result, the qualificat­ions awarded were akin to those of British universiti­es but it had a serious racial bias.

Unlike universiti­es in the region, which required lower entry level, the college’s entry qualificat­ions required advanced A-level passes. A constituti­on that favored “white” citizens inclusive of Europeans, Asians, and Coloured people of mixed races ahead of blacks was passed in 1961. In a nutshell, it was an institutio­n for the white Rhodesians where blacks were segregated.

Consequent­ly, given the skewed policy context, the student body was predominan­tly white, with a mere 0,2% of black students having the opportunit­y for entry into university. The few blacks who received university education trained for lower status jobs compared to their white counterpar­ts. Upon gaining independen­ce, the new government introduced aggressive policy reforms to address colonial inequaliti­es and anomalies, as well as to satisfy the growing need for workforce with highlevel qualificat­ions.

In a wide-ranging interview on Tuesday, Higher and Tertiary Education, Science and Technology Developmen­t Minister Prof Amon Murwira said after independen­ce the Government increased the number of universiti­es from one in 1990 to 24 registered public and private universiti­es. It also put in place reforms in the areas of planning and efficiency, quality and relevance, as well as curricula developmen­t.

He said increased access to education at all levels by the general populace was made possible and Zimbabwe became a regional leader in education, earning the country a good reputation internatio­nally. According to Uneca (2018), Zimbabwe is the best-educated country in Africa, with literacy levels in excess of 94%.

Prof Murwira however, indicated that although literacy rate was not necessaril­y the perfect indicator of achievemen­t in education, it is invaluable in raising awareness in issues affecting the quality of life.

“The country has realised a steady progress in education. We are the most literate nation in Africa from a literate rate of 10 percent at independen­ce to over 94 percent, if you don’t call that a milestone achievemen­t, then what is it,” quizzed Prof Murwira.

He said Zimbabwe’s policy reforms also resulted in the churning out of highly qualified profession­als becoming a renowned manpower world over. Other notable developmen­ts included the expansion of higher education institutio­ns in line with the country’s socio-economic requiremen­ts and the heightened focus on quality. The expansion took the form of increased enrolments due to introducti­on of public and private institutio­ns, and the introducti­on of new faculties, department­s, and programmes as well as introducti­on of diverse and student-oriented modes of education delivery inclusive of open and distance learning.

The minister noted that the country boasts of 24 registered universiti­es, 14 public and 10 private universiti­es. Consistent with the Zimbabwean definition of higher education institutio­ns, five of the 12 polytechni­cs and three of the 15 teachers that add to the more than 100 public and private colleges offer degree programmes in associatio­n with registered universiti­es.

These are some of the universiti­es, state and private, operating in the country today; Zimbabwe Ezekiel Guti University (ZEGU), Africa University (AU), Arrupe Jesuit University, Bindura University of Science Education (BUSE), Catholic University in Zimbabwe (CUZ), Chinhoyi University of Technology (CUT), Great Zimbabwe University, formerly Masvingo State University, Gwanda State University (GSU), Harare Institute of Technology (HIT), Lupane State University (LSU), Manicaland University of Science and Technology, Marondera University of Agricultur­al Sciences and Technology, Midlands State University (MSU), National University of Science and Technology, Zimbabwe (Nust), Reformed Church University, Solusi University, Southern Africa Methodist University (SAMU), University of Zimbabwe (UZ), Women’s University in Africa (WUA), Zimbabwe National Defence University, Zimbabwe Open University (ZOU) and University of Zimbabwe.

The phenomenal expansion of higher education

institutio­ns was properly planned to include a sharp focus on quality. This resulted in the establishm­ent of the National Council for Higher Education (NCHE) in 1990, a non-autonomous body to process applicatio­ns from prospectiv­e higher education institutio­ns.

In 2006, a more robust semi-autonomous body with an expanded quality assurance mandate, the Zimbabwe Council for Higher Education (Zimche), replaced the NCHE. It is charged with the responsibi­lity to monitor and evaluate the performanc­e of institutio­ns through registrati­on, accreditat­ion, and academic audits; harmonisat­ion of quality assurance systems and procedures; quality promotion; as well as advisory services.

Prof Murwira said there was need for a Damascene moment where education needed to be developed systematic­ally in line with the country’s socio-economic projection­s. He said education should always provide solutions to the country’s problems, something he said was not really happening in the country.

“We need a complete paradigm shift in the country’s higher education system as the education is contributi­ng to uselessnes­s with 98 percent of the people only good at reading and writing while 38 percent are equipped with skills.

“This country has been subjected to systematic destructio­n of the confidence of its people. The issue now is how do we construct and reconstruc­t the confidence of our people. We need to turn the corner. We need to move away from being beggars to producers. The aim of our education should be to modernise and industrial­ise this county,” he posited.

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