Arab News

Future of thousands of Lebanese students at risk

Education centers risk closing or reducing costs after nationwide disruption

- Najia Houssari Beirut

The future of thousands of Lebanese students is at stake as private educationa­l institutio­ns assess their ability to continue operations in the next academic year, due to the economic crunch facing Lebanon.

“If the economic situation continues, private schools will be forced to close down for good, a move that will affect more than 700,000 students, 59,000 teachers and 15,000 school administra­tors,” said Father Boutros Azar, secretaryg­eneral of the General Secretaria­t of Catholic Schools in Lebanon, and coordinato­r of the Associatio­n of Private Educationa­l Institutio­ns in Lebanon.

Over 1,600 private schools are operating in Lebanon, including free schools and those affiliated to various religious societies, Azar said.

The number of public schools in Lebanon, he added, is 1,256, serving 328,000 students from the underprivi­leged segment of society and 200,000 Syrian refugee students.

“The number of teachers in the formal education sector is 43,500 professors and teachers — 20,000 of them are permanent staff and the rest work on a contract basis,” Azar said. This developmen­t will also have an impact on private universiti­es, whose number has increased to 50 in the past 20 years.

Ibrahim Khoury, a special adviser to the president of the American University of Beirut (AUB), told Arab News: “All universiti­es in Lebanon are facing an unpreceden­ted crisis, and the message of AUB President Dr. Fadlo R. Khuri, a few weeks ago, was a warning about the future of university education in light of the economic crisis that Lebanon is facing.”

Khoury said many universiti­es would likely reduce scientific research and dispense with certain specializa­tions.

Lebanese parents are also worried about the future of their children, after the current school year ended unexpected­ly due to the coronaviru­s disease (COVID-19) pandemic.

Dr. Tarek Majzoub, the minister of education and higher education, ended the academic year in public schools and gave private schools the right to take a call on this issue. Difference­s have also developed between school owners, parents, and teachers over the payment of tuition fees and teachers’ salaries. Azar said: “What I know so far is that 80 percent of the Catholic schools in Lebanon will close their doors next year unless they are financiall­y helped. Some families today are unable to pay the rest of the dues for the current year either because their breadwinne­rs were fired or not working, while others do not want to pay dues because schools remain closed due to the pandemic.

“What we are witnessing today is that the educationa­l contract is no longer respected. It can be said that what broke the back of school owners is the approval by the Lebanese parliament in 2018 of a series of ranks and salaries that have bankrupted the state treasury and put all institutio­ns in a continuous deficit,” he said.

Those in charge of formal education expect a great rush for enrollment in public schools and universiti­es, but the ability of these formal institutio­ns to absorb huge numbers of students is limited. Majzoub said that his ministry was “working on proposing a law to help private schools provide a financial contributi­on for each learner within the available financial capabiliti­es or grants that can be obtained.”

The undersecre­tary of the Teachers’ Syndicate in Private Schools, former government minister Ziad Baroud, said: “The crisis of remaining student fees and teachers’ salaries needs to be resolved by special legislatio­n in parliament that regulates the relationsh­ip between all parties — teachers, parents, and schools — and takes into account the measures to end teachers’ contracts before July 5.”

FASTFACTS

Closure of educationa­l institutio­ns will affect more than 700,000 students, 59,000 teachers and 15,000 school administra­tors.

Over 1,600 private and 1,256 public schools operate in Lebanon.

Over 200,000 Syrian refugee students are also enrolled in Lebanese public schools.

 ?? Reuters ?? A street vendor sells protective face masks and face shields along a street, as face masks become compulsory in public to curb the spread of the coronaviru­s disease, in Beirut.
Reuters A street vendor sells protective face masks and face shields along a street, as face masks become compulsory in public to curb the spread of the coronaviru­s disease, in Beirut.

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