Wednesday, 11 March 2015

literacy rate in Zimbabwe

The literacy rate in Zimbabwe is embarrassingly deteriorating

Zimbabwe's most touted literacy rate of  more than 90% has been disputed as having been outdated since the figures are based on the data collected by UNESCO and the government over a decade ago. The literacy rate of those over 15 years of age is dropping by half a percent every year and that is likely to escalate to 1% a year.

The Zimbabwean education situation is likely to worsen if the poor economic and political conditions in the country continue to prevail. The Zimbabwean literacy rate might even drop to 70% by 2020 if nothing is done with regards to solving political and economic problems which have proven to have a bearing on the education sector of the nation.


Zimbabwe's much touted literacy rate of more than 90% has been disputed as having been outdated since the figures are based on data collected by UNESCO and the government more than a decade ago. - See more at: http://www.harare24.com/index-id-news-zk-13815.html#sthash.ooIk4w6k.dpuf
Zimbabwe's much touted literacy rate of more than 90% has been disputed as having been outdated since the figures are based on data collected by UNESCO and the government more than a decade ago. - See more at: http://www.harare24.com/index-id-news-zk-13815.html#sthash.ooIk4w6k.dpuf
Zimbabwe's much touted literacy rate of more than 90% has been disputed as having been outdated since the figures are based on data collected by UNESCO and the government more than a decade ago. - See more at: http://www.harare24.com/index-id-news-zk-13815.html#sthash.ooIk4w6k.dpuf


Zimbabwe's much touted literacy rate of more than 90% has been disputed as having been outdated since the figures are based on data collected by UNESCO and the government more than a decade ago.

We roughly estimate that the literacy rate for those over 15 is dropping a half percent each year and that will accelerate to 1% each year as those who left school after 2005 reach age 15," writes Zimbabwe Reads on its website.

The same organization goes on to state that the Zimbabwean education situation is likely to worsen if the current conditions continue to prevail adding that Zimbabwe might not even be the continent's highest literary country.
- See more at: http://www.harare24.com/index-id-news-zk-13815.html#sthash.KVskFvGl.dpuf
Zimbabwe's much touted literacy rate of more than 90% has been disputed as having been outdated since the figures are based on data collected by UNESCO and the government more than a decade ago.

We roughly estimate that the literacy rate for those over 15 is dropping a half percent each year and that will accelerate to 1% each year as those who left school after 2005 reach age 15," writes Zimbabwe Reads on its website.

The same organization goes on to state that the Zimbabwean education situation is likely to worsen if the current conditions continue to prevail adding that Zimbabwe might not even be the continent's highest literary country.
- See more at: http://www.harare24.com/index-id-news-zk-13815.html#sthash.KVskFvGl.dpuf
 Low levels of literacy, and education in general, can impede the economic development of a country in the current rapidly changing, technology-driven world and Zimbabwe is currently at a risk of  becoming a completely economically crippled nation due to these poor education levels that are continuously decreasing.
The Zimbabwean government can only pay teachers' salaries since it is collecting ever less tax in the shrinking economy as more and more companies lose patience with the administration and pull out yet today, the government estimates that approximately a million children, mostly from primary schools, will need help with school fees. 

Classrooms used in Zimbabwe

Zimbabwe's much touted literacy rate of more than 90% has been disputed as having been outdated since the figures are based on data collected by UNESCO and the government more than a decade ago.
- See more at: http://www.harare24.com/index-id-news-zk-13815.html#sthash.8tDsd2jD.dpuf
Zimbabwe's much touted literacy rate of more than 90% has been disputed as having been outdated since the figures are based on data collected by UNESCO and the government more than a decade ago.

We roughly estimate that the literacy rate for those over 15 is dropping a half percent each year and that will accelerate to 1% each year as those who left school after 2005 reach age 15," writes Zimbabwe Reads on its website.

The same organization goes on to state that the Zimbabwean education situation is likely to worsen if the current conditions continue to prevail adding that Zimbabwe might not even be the continent's highest literary country.

"If current conditions continue, Zimbabwe will have a literacy rate of 70% in 2020. At this stage, it seems unlikely that Zimbabwe still has the highest literacy rate in Africa, with the more reliable estimates from Botswana (85%) and Tunisia (87%) probably surpassing it," it states.

Zimbabwe Reads observes what it refers to as "a very disturbing tendency" of high rate of children dropping out of school since 2005 where it states that about 15% of the country's children never enter the school system while a further 30% never make it to secondary schools.

According to the organization, the number of patrons in almost all the libraries in the country continue to decrease since the late 80s with the current figures standing at as less as half the 1989 figures.

"In 1989, there were more than 150,000 registered public library users using 76 public libraries. The user numbers for 2011 are certainly less than half of that. The Bulawayo Public Library reported 10,289 patrons for the year preceding July 2011; the National Free Library had 8016 patrons (but only 250 paid the registration fee to borrow)."

The organization has also noted that most libraries in the country carry materials that are published only in English at the neglect of local languages estimating fewer than 50 titles in indigenous languages. Most books with titles in local languages are reported to have been published long ago and have been kept in stock by local bookshops like Mambo Press.

The Zimbabwean government and UNESCO reports that the country has a literacy rate of more than 90% with the current Minister of Education David Coltart intensifying efforts to restore the education sector which had sharply declined as a result of the economic meltdown which characterized the country for a period spanning to more than a decade.

Meanwhile the United Kingdom through its Department of International Development (DFID), recently injected 24 million pounds (around 38 million USD) into the United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF) in Zimbabwe, to support the country's second phase of the Education Transition Fund (ETF II) which is a multi-donor pooled fund set up at the inception of the inclusive government in 2009 by Education, Sports, Arts and Culture Minister David Coltart in partnership with UNICEF in a bid to bridge the sector's funding gap from emergence to recovery. - See more at: http://www.harare24.com/index-id-news-zk-13815.html#sthash.8tDsd2jD.dpuf

 This is the current situation in Zimbabwe and it is likely to even get worse if our politicians continue to turn a deaf ear to these crucial problems that the nation is facing.
Zimbabwe's much touted literacy rate of more than 90% has been disputed as having been outdated since the figures are based on data collected by UNESCO and the government more than a decade ago.

We roughly estimate that the literacy rate for those over 15 is dropping a half percent each year and that will accelerate to 1% each year as those who left school after 2005 reach age 15," writes Zimbabwe Reads on its website.

The same organization goes on to state that the Zimbabwean education situation is likely to worsen if the current conditions continue to prevail adding that Zimbabwe might not even be the continent's highest literary country.

"If current conditions continue, Zimbabwe will have a literacy rate of 70% in 2020. At this stage, it seems unlikely that Zimbabwe still has the highest literacy rate in Africa, with the more reliable estimates from Botswana (85%) and Tunisia (87%) probably surpassing it," it states.

Zimbabwe Reads observes what it refers to as "a very disturbing tendency" of high rate of children dropping out of school since 2005 where it states that about 15% of the country's children never enter the school system while a further 30% never make it to secondary schools. - See more at: http://www.harare24.com/index-id-news-zk-13815.html#sthash.8tDsd2jD.dpuf
Zimbabwe's much touted literacy rate of more than 90% has been disputed as having been outdated since the figures are based on data collected by UNESCO and the government more than a decade ago.

We roughly estimate that the literacy rate for those over 15 is dropping a half percent each year and that will accelerate to 1% each year as those who left school after 2005 reach age 15," writes Zimbabwe Reads on its website.

The same organization goes on to state that the Zimbabwean education situation is likely to worsen if the current conditions continue to prevail adding that Zimbabwe might not even be the continent's highest literary country.

"If current conditions continue, Zimbabwe will have a literacy rate of 70% in 2020. At this stage, it seems unlikely that Zimbabwe still has the highest literacy rate in Africa, with the more reliable estimates from Botswana (85%) and Tunisia (87%) probably surpassing it," it states.

Zimbabwe Reads observes what it refers to as "a very disturbing tendency" of high rate of children dropping out of school since 2005 where it states that about 15% of the country's children never enter the school system while a further 30% never make it to secondary schools. - See more at: http://www.harare24.com/index-id-news-zk-13815.html#sthash.8tDsd2jD.dpuf
Zimbabwe's much touted literacy rate of more than 90% has been disputed as having been outdated since the figures are based on data collected by UNESCO and the government more than a decade ago.

We roughly estimate that the literacy rate for those over 15 is dropping a half percent each year and that will accelerate to 1% each year as those who left school after 2005 reach age 15," writes Zimbabwe Reads on its website.

The same organization goes on to state that the Zimbabwean education situation is likely to worsen if the current conditions continue to prevail adding that Zimbabwe might not even be the continent's highest literary country.

"If current conditions continue, Zimbabwe will have a literacy rate of 70% in 2020. At this stage, it seems unlikely that Zimbabwe still has the highest literacy rate in Africa, with the more reliable estimates from Botswana (85%) and Tunisia (87%) probably surpassing it," it states.

Zimbabwe Reads observes what it refers to as "a very disturbing tendency" of high rate of children dropping out of school since 2005 where it states that about 15% of the country's children never enter the school system while a further 30% never make it to secondary schools. - See more at: http://www.harare24.com/index-id-news-zk-13815.html#sthash.8tDsd2jD.dpuf
Zimbabwe's much touted literacy rate of more than 90% has been disputed as having been outdated since the figures are based on data collected by UNESCO and the government more than a decade ago.

We roughly estimate that the literacy rate for those over 15 is dropping a half percent each year and that will accelerate to 1% each year as those who left school after 2005 reach age 15," writes Zimbabwe Reads on its website.

The same organization goes on to state that the Zimbabwean education situation is likely to worsen if the current conditions continue to prevail adding that Zimbabwe might not even be the continent's highest literary country.

"If current conditions continue, Zimbabwe will have a literacy rate of 70% in 2020. At this stage, it seems unlikely that Zimbabwe still has the highest literacy rate in Africa, with the more reliable estimates from Botswana (85%) and Tunisia (87%) probably surpassing it," it states.

Zimbabwe Reads observes what it refers to as "a very disturbing tendency" of high rate of children dropping out of school since 2005 where it states that about 15% of the country's children never enter the school system while a further 30% never make it to secondary schools. - See more at: http://www.harare24.com/index-id-news-zk-13815.html#sthash.8tDsd2jD.dpuf

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