The Herald (Zimbabwe)

ECD made compulsory, 9 years primary education for kids

- Walter Nyamukondi­wa Mashonalan­d West Bureau Chief

IT will now be mandatory for all children to enrol in early childhood developmen­t classes at four years, with the new Zimbabwe Early Learners Policy (ZELP) now extending primary education to nine years with the new early foundation.

ZELP seeks to entrench foundation­al literacy and numeracy which will give impetus for children to excel better as they progress along the education value chain.

This is aimed at laying a solid foundation for the country’s human capital developmen­t in line with the National Developmen­t Strategy 1.

The policy is anchored on five pillars including research and innovation, legal and policy framework, human capital developmen­t and governance.

It will push for greater involvemen­t of parents in the education of their children starting at ECD level. This is both a psychologi­cal and technical imperative for the balanced developmen­t of children.

It will also use the play and learn technique to harness children’s creative ability, help identify and nurture their talent at an early stage.

Government expects to enrich the quality of children coming out of the education system and prime them for the evolving world, which is now anchored on technology and innovation.

It also engenders coordinati­on of Government department­s and ministries which were previously fragmented in contributi­ng towards the developmen­t of children.

Previously, Ministry of Primary and Secondary Education would provide education while the Ministry of Health and Child Care would attend to the child’s health needs and the Department of Social Welfare would also provide services separately. The policy will breakdown the barriers to collaborat­ion and ensure seamless cooperatio­n in the effective developmen­t of a child.

Speaking at the launch of ZELP, Primary and Secondary Education Deputy Minister Angeline Gata said the policy will compel parents and guardians to take all children to ECD on reaching four years. “ZELP will promote parental involvemen­t in the education of children starting at ECD level,” explained the Deputy Minister.

“All children should go for ECD and it is not going to be optional. The policy makes it mandatory and it is the obligation of every parent and guardian to ensure that children go for ECD. This will strengthen foundation­al learning as building blocks for later developmen­t.”

The policy also looked at emergency strategies related to climate change, pandemics and other exigencies to ensure teaching and learning continued unhindered.

This might include use of digital technologi­es, radios and the packaging of lessons on flash drives.

Critical outputs of the policy include raising citizens that were guided by values of respect and care, social cohesion and sensitivit­y to diversity, creativity and scientific enquiry, honesty and integrity, gender sensitivit­y, tolerance and empathy, lifelong learning, commitment and hardwork among others.

The policy seeks to develop cognitive, linguistic, physical wellbeing and protection of the child. It amplifies President Mnangagwa’s call for inclusive developmen­t which leaves no one and no place behind in the provision of education especially in marginalis­ed communitie­s.

Unicef education specialist Ms Clara Mulamba said the policy was critical and promoting and consolidat­ing the country’s education system which has constantly seen it being counted among the best in Africa and beyond.

“The policy needs to be supported so that it is fully implemente­d for the benefit and developmen­t of children,” said Ms Mulamba. “As Unicef we have been supporting the country’s education system and we will continue to support the implementa­tion of this policy for the realisatio­n of its noble objectives.”

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