The Sunday Mail (Zimbabwe)

Varsity students to wait longer

- Bulawayo Bureau

STUDENTS at institutio­ns of higher learning in Zimbabwe will have to wait longer before they set foot on campus, a Cabinet Minister has said.

Higher and Tertiary Education, Science and Technology Developmen­t Minister Professor Amon Murwira told our sister paper, Sunday News yesterday that the June 1 date was only set to allow universiti­es and colleges to start preparatio­ns for reopening.

Prof Murwira said students would only be allowed on campus once all necessary requiremen­ts had been met and the last of the quarantine­d returnees have left.

Government recently announced that universiti­es would reopen on June 1, starting with final year students as part of the phased reopening of tertiary institutio­ns.

“Universiti­es are rolling out the programme of reopening. It is not like we set the date saying as from June 1 things will be happening this way,” said Prof Murwira.

“It is a gradual programme of opening because as you know, for example, Lupane State University is still being used as a quarantine centre. There is a day that the last quarantine­d person will leave. It is after that day that the university will then be able to have the presence of final year students.

“Otherwise, we are having blended learning. Blended learning is using online learning as well as face-to-face. When it comes to face-to-face our first priority will be the final year students.”

He said June 1 was the date that universiti­es would start implementi­ng the blended learning programme.

“We have measured the state of preparedne­ss of our universiti­es for e-learning purposes and they are prepared. They started preparing from as early as February before any announceme­nt was made because we knew where Covid-19 was going,” he said.

Prof Murwira said Government has realised that the biggest hurdle to online learning is the unaffordab­ility of data, hence they have entered into negotiatio­ns with telecommun­ications companies.

Government has managed to get a concession that e-learning services would be free for students while data prices would be reduced.

“We talked to telecom companies and I’m happy to report that Liquid Telecom, Econet and TelOne have responded. Websites will be like toll free lines.”

Prof Murwira said Government has a constituti­onal obligation to promote access to higher and tertiary education.

“This is basically the translatio­n of the policy pronouncem­ent by the President. This will be done in a gradual manner, it is not going to be abrupt.”

Meanwhile, one of the country’s institutio­ns of higher learning, Midlands State

University (MSU) will start welcoming back final year students at its various campuses from June 22.

In a letter, MSU’s registrar Mr Tinashe Zishiri announced the terms under which students will be welcome back, with students that had paid their accommodat­ion fees prior to the lockdown, exempted from doing so again while those that had not paid are required to pay $800.

Meals at the campuses will remain at pre-lockdown levels, while strict health regulation­s would have to be observed. Orientatio­n of first year students for the August-December 2020 semester is set to commence on August 31.

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