The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Chikanga in dire need of high schools

- Manicaland Correspond­ent

SECONDARY schools in Manicaland must apply for upgrading to high school status and save students from travelling long distances in search of schools that offer A-Level studies.

Acting Manicaland deputy provincial education director (secondary schools) Mr Charles Muganu revealed this in an interview with The Herald recently.

Said Mr Muganu: “For a secondary school to become a high school, it has to meet certain requiremen­ts. These requiremen­ts include having facilities such as a science laboratory. If a secondary school does not have a laboratory it does not qualify to be a high school because in high school students should study Sciences, Commercial­s and Arts subjects. Hence without science laboratori­es it is difficult for a secondary school to become a high school.”

Mr Muganu revealed that Chikanga and St Mary’s secondary schools in Mutare had applied to become high schools last year and their applicatio­ns were still being processed.

“The reason Chikanga highdensit­y suburb does not have high schools is that it is still new compared to Sakubva, which has had high schools since 1980,” he said.

“However, the Ministry of Primary and Secondary Education is willing to create more high schools in the district but are unable to do it due to lack of funding. As a ministry we used to support secondary schools with a 75 percent grant. This was done to improve secondary schools to high schools and the money would be used to establish science laboratori­es.”

Mr Muganu said that because of the scarcity of high schools in Chikanga high-density suburb, students were walking long distances to enrol at high schools in nearby suburbs.

He indicated that there should be more schools in Chikanga highdensit­y notwithsta­nding the fact that suburb was new.

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