Times of Eswatini

‹† Šƒ”‘‹‘—• •‘Ž—–‹‘ „‡ˆ‘”‡ ‹–ǯ• –‘‘ Žƒ–‡

-

Sir,

Thank you for allowing me to air my views on the pedigree at which a teaching degree is viewed by the relevant authoritie­s in this kingdom. A high number of teachers have taken it upon themselves to further their studies with their little hard earned monies. This they do cognisant of the role they are required to play as responsibl­e citizens of the country towards the wished for First World vision. It is in that vein that most educators are upgrading themselves; because they are seeing the need in schools to circumvent the ‘achievemen­t gap’ and become relevant to contempora­ry pedagogy.

Value

It must be clear to all that possessing a BA Degree isn’t a luxury, but a must in order to produce competent pupils who, after being exposed to quality teaching, will add value to the country. The spin-offs of such initiative­s are an optimised human developmen­t index (HDI) of the kingdom. It is dishearten­ing, however, to note that in what was seen as a sudden turn of events, government started doing the exact opposite of what it told the nation.

Teachers, BA holders, BA, PGCE and B. Ed Primary holders are asking themselves what exactly have they done to this government. Out of all the government portfolios in the country, why are they the only ones subjected to such grossly unfair labour practice (ULP)? In the Ministry of Education and Training it is not an anomaly for these educators to be paid on a diploma scale of C3. According to our government paying scale, a degreed teacher with a post graduate certificat­e in education is supposed to be paid on a C5 scale. Then, a question arises; why is such injustice done to these qualified teachers?

Pay

A case in point on this glaring pay differenti­al is that a teacher with a Diploma in primary school is paid at the same scale with one who holds a Diploma teaching in secondary buke. school. It is absurd that government, as an employer, is at the forefront of flouting establishe­d labour frameworks in properly remunerati­ng these teachers. The ‘favour’ argument is one that is yet to stand the litmus paper test as an annexure in the pay differenti­als by these educators. Such pronouncem­ents deserve the highest degree of re

Degrees

It is still unheard of on why our government is paying teachers at primary schools who have degrees according to the post instead of paying them according to their qualificat­ions. As a country, we are looking forward to producing skilled personnel towards the First World vision; top notch engineers, doctors, technician­s, etc. One may even ask himself/herself if this dream is possible or it will remain just a dream. It is incumbent upon the relevant authoritie­s to engage in a productive discourse towards finding a harmonious solution to this impasse before all hell breaks loose.

Abused educator

 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Eswatini