The
newly-launched education system has abolished national examinations for
primary school leavers and extended basic education to four years at
secondary level—meaning students will sit their final examination after
11 years in primary and secondary school.
The policy makes Kiswahili the medium of instruction from primary school
to university level, thereby ditching English —which has dominated
Tanzania’s education system from secondary to tertiary level.
But it will take decades for the new system to take root because
extensive preparations will have to be carried out before English is
phased out. The policy, which President Jakaya Kikwete launched
yesterday, also gets rid of school fees at both public primary and
secondary levels and guarantees free education.
President Kikwete said the new policy was in line with Vision 2025 and
takes into account global economic, social and technological changes.
“In the next seven years, we will have built capacity whereby every
child who starts Standard One will reach Form Four,” he said during the
launch of the policy in Dar es Salaam.
But, given the timeframe, there are doubts that the new policy will
yield significant results in the next decade. Critics say school fees
in public schools are just a small portion of the cost of education,
given that parents are required to make numerous contributions.
According to the Permanent Secretary in the Ministry of Education and
Vocational Training, Prof Sifuni Mchome, the new education system will
incorporate vocational education in the basic education syllabus so that
students who do not make it to Form Five have skills to contribute to
the development of the country.
“It’s our hope that when students complete this basic education, which
is compulsory up to Form 4,” Prof Mchome said, “they will be at an age
ready to contribute to the country’s development.”
Unlike the current policy, which focuses on filtering and rejecting
students without skills through final exams, according to Prof Mchome,
the new one raises the number of educated Tanzanians with skills.
“We need a critical mass of skilled labour for the country’s
development,” he explained, “but you can’t get it through the current
traditional system, which only filters and children go back home after
failing Standard Seven final exams.”
Mr Kikwete declared it a significant day in the history of the education
sector and said the new policy was a must so the country could proceed
in line with global economic and technological changes.
The President assured the public that the new direction would take
Tanzania to the next level, where the nation will have skilled people
with both practical and theoretical knowledge.
Is Kiswahili a solution to education woes?
Speaking yesterday during the launch, the assistant director for policy
at the ministry of education and vocational training, Mr Atetaulwa
Ngatara, said it was proper that Kiswahili be the channel by which the
skills are transferred to students. Language studies will then be
available to enable students to communicate in English. “To think that
learning in English will lead to students communicating in English is
wrong,” he said. “Communicating in English is something else, which has
to do with language studies.”
The document says the government will continue strengthening English in
teaching along with Kiswahili during the transition period because using
only Kiswahili will require a lot of resources.
Kiswahili is currently the language of instruction at primary level and
English remains a subject. Thereafter, English becomes the language of
instruction from secondary level to higher learning.
According to the policy, making Kiswahili the language of instruction
at all levels of education is aimed at bringing sustainable efficiency
in providing the skillful workforce that is needed for national
development.
But in a globalised economy where English dominates almost
everything—from trade to politics—it is not clear which way Tanzania
wants to go in the next five decades.
After years of being driven by market forces, private schools in
Tanzania will have a regulator to ensure that the cost of education is
realistic and provides value for money. The idea is to make sure that
school owners do not overcharge parents who shun public schools in
search of quality education in the mushrooming private schools.
President Kikwete said the policy would set indicative fees for private
schools and put an end to the exploitative fees some unscrupulous
school owners charge. Consistency in text books
The policy also provides consistency in both text and reference books
used to teach in both public and private schools, contrary to the
current situation where every school chooses what it considers suitable.
This will eliminate the trend where schools use different books for the
same subjects, which has been blamed for the poor performance of
students.
“It’s impossible that every school uses its own reference book when the
final examinations are the same,” the President said. “How do we
expect children to pass in these conditions?”
No national examination for Standard Seven
According to the assistant director for policy in the ministry of
education and vocational training, Mr Atetaulwa Ngatara, students will
be tested to check their level of understanding at each level before
they get to Form 4. “Let’s say there will be a test at standard three,”
he explained. “Teachers will arrange special programmes to help those
who fail to get over their weaknesses and they can then proceed to
another class.”
But judging by the fact that the reading culture has almost died off,
dropping national examinations for primary school leavers will likely
have negative consequences in terms of the quality of graduates.
The new policy further declares that the government will make nursery
education compulsory for not less than a year for children aged between
three and five.
Basic education—from Standard One to Form Four—will take 10 years.
Standard One pupils should be aged four to six, depending on ability of
the child, and the government will ensure that education at this level
is free.
According to Mr Kalistus Chonya, an economist in the policy department
of the ministry, implementing the new policy will not happen immediately
as the policy must go through several more stages.
The document President Kikwete launched was a national policy that will
produce an executive policy. It will then lead to a Bill that will be
tabled in the National Assembly.
Mr Chonya, who was not in position to say when the new policy will take
off, said there were still other stages to be worked on, including
preparing strategies and an action plan.
Monday, 16 February 2015
Mtihani wa Darasa la Saba wafutwa
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