The Manica Post

First term starts on high note

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◆ requisite tools to discharge their duties.

Zimbabwe School Developmen­t Associatio­n/Committees (ZSDA/c) general secretary, Mr Everisto Jongwe said teachers are in their classes delivering lessons.

But while everything pointed to a positive start, police were called in to ensure sanity at St Faith’s High School in Rusape last Friday as some parents that had escorted their children for Form One orientatio­n became restless after it emerged that the Anglican Diocese of Manicaland had allegedly ran a parallel enrolment exercise and collected a mission fund of US$600 that the school was not enforcing, thereby making the enrolment numbers shoot through the roof.

St Faith’s High School, which takes pride in its high-flying passes, has traditiona­lly limited its enrolment to about 130 learners per stream.

However, its 2024 Form One enrolment shot to 240 due to an alleged clandestin­e recruitmen­t by the diocese — resultantl­y stretching everything at the school beyond limit — dormitorie­s, classrooms, utensils, furniture, food and teaching staff.

The Form One learners are currently being accommodat­ed in Form Five dormitorie­s, and the school has between now and the end of February to sort the mess.

The parents were incensed when the orientatio­n, which was pencilled for 11am, dragged on as the administra­tion, School Developmen­t Committee (SDC) and the Responsibl­e Authority (the church) haggled over the matter.

Hundreds of parents who had arrived at the school from 7am were only attended to at 3pm after the arrival of the police and officials from the Ministry of Primary and Secondary Education.

St Faith’s head, Mr Arnold Makamba who sensed danger and rushed to Rusape Central Police Station to ask for help to avert an explosive situation refused to comment on the matter citing protocol.

PED Mr Shumba said the chaotic scenes may lead to the expulsion of some of the improperly enrolled learners from St Faith’s High.

He said Section 10 of the Education Act (Chapter 25:04) empowers the school head only to enrol learners.

“Somebody was over enthusiast­ic, and ended up doing what they are not supposed to do. According to Section 10 of the Education Act, enrolment is the responsibi­lity of the school head.

“In our Handbook on the role of the school head, one of the duties that he/she cannot delegate is enrolment because you might find the school in this situation.

“Whoever was enrolling in a parallel manner created this problem, and my instructio­ns are very clear — only the rightful person enrols the rightful learners and anything else must be solved outside the school,” he said.

Mr Shumba likened the chaos to a scenario where two brides emerge from different directions for a wedding ceremony.

“I have instructed the Makoni District Schools Inspector (DSI) to ensure that normalcy prevails at that school. I am waiting to see how they will accommodat­e the affected learners because somebody acted irresponsi­bly by doing what they weren’t supposed to do,” he said.

Mr Shumba said if the school improvises on infrastruc­ture to accommodat­e the learners, he is keen to facilitate for additional teachers from the relevant authoritie­s.

“But if we have no classrooms and dormitorie­s, where do we accommodat­e the learners in this rainy season? If they have all these in place, an applicatio­n will have to be made and forwarded to the relevant authoritie­s to ensure that everybody has access to quality, inclusive and holistic education,” he said.

However, Anglican diocesan registrar, Mr Ashel Mutungura refuted the allegation­s, saying there was no parallel recruitmen­t exercise.

He said the diocese does not interfere in the running of the school.

“There is nothing like that, as we speak, all Form Ones are in their dormitorie­s. If there was a problem with all Anglican schools then you could say what are you doing? This has to do with the SDC and its cahoots involved in the enrolment.

“If learners were enrolled and paid their fees, that should tell you who was enrolling them. It is the head, so there can never be parallel enrolment.

We leave the enrolment to the school administra­tion because we do not run schools.

“The diocese will never recruit learners, and it never recruited anyone. We have seven other boarding schools, including St David Bonda Girls’ High and St Augustine’s High, which are some of our big schools, and they have no problems. Why St Faith’s High only? It has to do with the individual­s involved,” he said.

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