The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Gwese High School pupils seek assistance

- Nyore Madzianike Manicaland Bureau

GWESE High School in Mutare South constituen­cy has appealed to well-wishers to assist at least a third of their students who are struggling to raise fees because they are either orphaned or economical­ly vulnerable.

The school head, Mr Webster Podzo said the school had an enrolment of 297 students.

Some of the students, he added, came from child-headed families.

Out of the 297 students, 102 are either orphaned or economical­ly vulnerable. He said as part of efforts to mitigate the challenges the school was facing, they had formed a community counsellin­g forum spearheade­d by members of the community and teachers.

“We have a community counsellin­g committee and basically under the organisati­on’s umbrella name we have formed a Children and Adolescent­s Counsellin­g and Care. We hope to cater for both economic and social needs of the students by offering psycho-social support. We are appealing for donations. This is a big project, which I feel is geared for an enormous radial expansion, maybe also expanding to our feeder primary schools and other secondary schools around the area.

“We might end up incorporat­ing schools in Mutare. We have also discovered that the once orphaned and vulnerable children are now orphaned and vulnerable adolescent­s because the ones we used to call children are now in adolescenc­e. What we appeal for from the community and well-wishers is funding for the project we started and also funding our water project, ICT and a library,” he said.

Mr Podzo said as a school they decided to adopt the initiative after noting that the pass rate and behaviour among students was not improving.

He said once the initiative got funding they were hoping to take it to other schools.

“I studied the behavioura­l pattern of our children and discovered that the pass rate was not improving. We noted that it was actually nose-diving and the level of indiscipli­ne was also high with some being rebellious to the authoritie­s. It was then that I discovered that most of the children were orphaned or vulnerable. To address the situation, we then set up the Community Counsellin­g Committee,” he said.

The school developmen­t committee chairperso­n, Mr Gabriel Mhlanga also echoed the same sentiments saying the school needed assistance.

Mutare South Member of Parliament Cde Nyasha Chikwinya is expected to commission a resource centre at the school on October 28, 2017.

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