From: as on
Unique scheme helps poor children back into school

http://www.thestandard.co.zw

Wednesday, 11 August 2010 15:32

MASVINGO - Nyelet Makaya and Rumbidzai Marume may be young but they are
fully aware that they have been rescued from a possible life of misery.
The little girls from Rujeko primary school recently recounted how a
local
non-governmental organisation rekindled their hope for a better future
by
enrolling them in its "textbooks for tuition fees" scheme.

Nyelet (8) and Rumbidzai (11) are among thousands of primary school
pupils
benefiting from a partnership between Dananai Children (Dachi) Care and
689
schools in the province.

Under the scheme, Dachi provides schools with textbooks and in return
the
disadvantaged children are allowed to attend classes for a period
determined
using the value of the books.

School authorities assist with the tallying of the value of the books
against the fee structure to determine how many children can be covered
by
each consignment.

"My fees are being paid for with textbooks from Dachi," says Rumbidzai
who
is in Grade VI.
"In the past, I would go for many terms without paying fees because my
mother did not have the money.
"The school authorities used to send me back home and I would still
come
back for classes without paying.

"At times, my mother would come and beg them to allow me to learn while
she
looked for the money.
"In most cases, they would ask her to pay but when this did not happen
I
would feel much better as I would attend classes without anyone
bothering me
asking for the fees."

Rumbidzai had a similar story to tell as Nyelet and 64 other
beneficiaries
from Rujeko.
The school's teacher-in-charge, Grace Mambanje, said most of the
beneficiaries could not afford to pay fees even during the Zimbabwe
dollar
era.
Each pupil now pays US$20 fees per term following the dollarisation of
the
economy last year.

Mambanje said the project known as the Block Grants programme was
benefiting
both the school and the pupils.
She said while two pupils shared a textbook in the past, each of the 1
000
children at the school now had a textbook for all subjects.
Mambanje added that the performance of most beneficiaries had improved
significantly since the introduction of the scheme.

"Most of these pupils previously lost a lot of valuable learning time
being
sent home to ask for school fees they would not get and in some cases,
others were forced to assist their parents in trying to raise the fees
after
school. All these things contributed to their poor performance in
classes," she said.
Paul Matsime, a monitoring and evaluation officer with Dachi's
implementing
partner, Family Aids Caring Trust (Fact) Masvingo, said the United
Nations
Children's Fund (Unicef) provided the books for the scheme.

He said some schools had been supplied with books worth seven years of
primary school tuition fees for some beneficiaries.
Matsime also revealed that in cases where some pupils graduated from
primary
schools or simply dropped out of the programme for one reason or
another,
others would be taken on board to fill the gap.

Unicef chief communications officer, Micaela De Soussa, said her
organisation worked with various NGOs across the country to implement
the
scheme, with some schools also receiving book cupboards, chalk, flip
charts
and other education materials.

De Soussa said the Education Transition Fund (ETF) which is expected to
be
launched soon, will complement the scheme.
"The Block Grants programme together with the first phase of the ETF
prioritise primary schools," she said.

"We already have 50% material for the first phase of the ETF and we are
waiting to get the remainder so we can embark on a massive distribution
to
all primary schools across the country.

"At this stage, a lot of children may worry about what will happen
after
primary school-level but those worries will be partly answered under
the
second phase of the ETF which will cover all secondary schools."

The programme is part of a US$70 million fund approved in 2007 under
Unicef's
programme of support for orphans and vulnerable children (OVCs).
The multi-donor fund was established in response to the national action
plan
for OVCs aimed at reducing children's vulnerability through supporting
them
in areas of education, health care, social services and household
supplies.

The programme is one of the most ambitious efforts aimed at reviving
the
country's tottering education sector. Teachers say it is and a step in
the
right direction towards the attainment of the universal access to
primary
school education as spelt out in the UN's millennium development goals.
The programme also complements the revived Basic Education Assistance
Module (Beam) which is benefiting 60 pupils at Rujeko.

Ministers David Coltart and Paurina Mpariwa for education and social
services respectively, could not be immediately reached for comment.
But Mambanje has a piece of advice to government - improve teachers'
working
conditions to complement the donors' efforts.
She said government and its partners could also offer more support to
the
beneficiaries some of whom cannot afford decent clothing and come to
school
on empty stomachs.

More support is needed to assist deserving children who could not make
it to
either the Block Grants or the Beam schemes, she said.

BY JENNIFER DUBE