NewsDay (Zimbabwe)

‘No to public examinatio­ns this year’

- BY MIRIAM MANGWAYA Follow Miriam on Twitter @FloMangway­a

TEACHERS’ unions have called on the Zimbabwe School Examinatio­ns Council (Zimsec) to defer its June and November 2021 public examinatio­ns following the COVID-19-induced disruption of the school calendar which suspended in-person lessons for the better part of last year and this year.

Since the outbreak of the pandemic in March last year, normal schooling has not taken place as the country went on hard lockdowns to curb the spread of the virus.

Students usually sit for the Zimsec examinatio­n in June and November In June this year, schools were closed for the first term and government is yet to announce a date for their reopening for the second term, but preparatio­ns are underway.

Progressiv­e Teachers’ Union of Zimbabwe president Takavafira Zhou yesterday said it would be irresponsi­ble for authoritie­s to frog-march students into examinatio­ns given the disruption­s they have experience­d.

“The possibilit­y of 2021 candidates writing examinatio­ns this year is minimal. With schools likely to open from mid-September 2021, examinatio­ns can only be written in early 2022 after three months of intensive learning,” he said.

“Such learning requires motivation for teachers. They must be given better salaries so that they work harder to protect the education system from going into dysfunctio­nality. Government should address the disparitie­s between teachers and the rest of civil servants, where an underquali­fied ordinary government worker is earning more than a trained teacher,” Zhou said.

Amalgamate­d Rural Teachers Union of Zimbabwe president Obert Masaraure suggested that examinatio­ns be postponed to March next year.

“If our examinatio­ns are for genuine performanc­e evaluation, they should be postponed until our learners have covered the syllabus. March 2022 will be ideal for examinatio­ns to cater for lost learning time. We should desist from the tick-the-box-mentality and focus on genuinely evaluating learner exit profiles,” Masaraure said.

Zimbabwe National Teachers’ Union chief executive Manuel Nyawo said: “Rural children have not had an opportunit­y to learn reasonably to prepare them for public examinatio­ns. Given that we are not also sure when this COVID-19 pandemic is going to end, with rumours that a fourth variant is imminent, it is only prudent that examinatio­ns be pushed to February next year to give learners ample time to learn and grasp concepts for their current grades and forms.”

Zimbabwe Teachers’ Associatio­n chief executive Sifiso Ndlovu also said postponeme­nt of examinatio­ns would be ideal.

“Apart from writing of the examinatio­ns, we are urging the government to consider postponing implementa­tion of the continuous assessment learning areas (CALAs) programme so that learners and teachers intensivel­y focus on completing the outstandin­g areas of the syllabi and be ready for the 2021 examinatio­ns. Implementa­tion of the CALA programme is a hurried decision which disrupts proper learning in schools,” Ndlovu said.

Government seeks to implement the CALA programme which will see pupils doing projects and tasks in school. The marks for the projects will constitute 30% of their coursework for the final examinatio­n for each subject.

Primary and Secondary Education ministry spokespers­on Taungana Ndoro said government was yet to get recommenda­tions from Zimsec on the way forward.

“Government is cognisant of the importance of public examinatio­ns, but as the Ministry of Primary and Secondary Education, we get recommenda­tions from Zimsec on the way forward,” Ndoro said.

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