The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Encourage non-formal learning activities, Govt urges parents

- Obert Chifamba Manicaland Bureau

PARENTS must encourage their children to industriou­sly participat­e in non-formal learning activities like driving, landscapin­g, photograph­y and video-filming while still at school as part of the process of boosting their exit competenci­es when they eventually leave school, an official has said.

Secretary for Primary and Secondary Education Dr Sylvia Utete-Masango made the remarks on Tuesday when she addressed people gathered for the handover of low-cost boarding facilities to Rimbi High School in Chipinge South.

The facilities were constructe­d by non-government­al organisati­on, PLAN Internatio­nal, at a cost of $40 000 to accommodat­e 35 girls whose homes are far from the school.

The girls pay rental fees of $20 per term and provide themselves with other basic requiremen­ts like toiletries, linen and food.

Officials from the Public Service Commission, the Ministry of Youth, Indigenisa­tion and Economic Empowermen­t and that of Primary and Secondary Education, representa­tives from some Government department­s, school heads, teachers, schoolchil­dren and parents attended the ceremony.

“As we are gathered, we must realise that PLAN Internatio­nal is a developing partner which has played their part so we need to take it up from there and make sure we provide similar structures for all the children, including boys that are affected by the problem of walking long distances to and from school,” Dr UteteMasan­go said.

“I want to be here again next October on the same date to officially open the boys’ facilities that you are going to construct as parents, with support from your district and provincial education officials so that the effort by developing partners does not come to naughty.

“What developing partners are doing is actually in line with the new curriculum’s dictates of trying to inculcate a strong sense of responsibi­lity among the youths and the concept of feeling for the other’s plight as demanded by our culture and tradition.”

Dr Utete-Masango said students should not be left out in the process as they needed to develop skills that were not necessaril­y related to academics, but those that made them all-rounders who could hold their own after leaving school.

She said the new curriculum was developed to help children identify the core values of Zimbabwean­s in particular and Africa in general.

Rimbi High School was establishe­d independen­ce and has since evolved to a fully fledged secondary school that has an Advanced Level facility.

It has 1 114 students, with approximat­ely 300 requiring boarding facilities, as they travel long distances daily to and from school.

Some are seeking lodgings at a nearby township and in villages around the school, which is not ideal for them to concentrat­e on school work.

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Dr Utete-Masango
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