Editor's Quote: "The test of democracy is freedom of criticism". D. Ben-Gurion
About us
  • IQ4News
  • Contact Us
  • Become a Contributor
  • Contributors
  • Charity of the Month Application
  • Advertising
  • Terms & Conditions
  • Privacy Policy
  • Disclaimer
  • Copyright Notice
  • Feedback
IQ4News, Ubuntu through New Media
  • Home
  • Business
  • Politics
  • Sport
  • Art & Entertainment
  • Technology
  • Education
More
  • Health and Medicine
  • Environment
  • Development
  • Media
  • Only in Africa
  • Opinion
  • IQ4News TV & Audio
  • iThink
  • Special Coverage
Tuesday 21st May 2013, 11:17 UTC
Home

Burundi’s push for universal education

Professional Journalist: IQ4News Monday, 15 October, 2012 - 16:14
Education
Source: IQ4News
Education

Burundi’s push for universal education

Editor's Choice

Most...

  • Viewed
  • Commented
1. NIGERIA: Agency Urges Speedy Implementation of National Health Plan
2. KENYA: Competition among County Governments in Earnest
3. NIGERIA: Additional Troops Deployed to Border States, As Northern Group...
4. KENYA: Property Investors Target Low-Income Earners
5. KENYA: Muslim MPs Seek Apology Over the Use of Pigs in the Occupy Parliament...
1. NIGERIA: Multiple Explosions Rock Police Station and Prisons in Katsina
2. NIGERIA: Jonathan Appoints 12 Judges for Industrial Court
3. NIGERIA: TROOPS DESTROY TERRORISTS BASES AND WEAPONS
4. Africa: Whose promise?
5. Nigeria and Benin Republic to strengthen bilateral agreement

Submitted by IQ4News on Mon, 15/10/2012 - 4:14pm

IQ4News's picture
Enrolment rates at an all time high, but challenges remain

By Jocelyne Sambira

Offering free education, making it compulsory and supporting it politically has been the winning strategy behind Burundi’s successful bid to ensure that virtually all children get a primary school education. In this interview with Africa Renewal, UNICEF’s representative in Burundi, Johannes Wedenig, expatiates on government’s positive role in this development.

He explains that in Burundi there was clear political will, translated into action, with the backing of the country’s international partners. Among those partners, UNICEF has joined with the government in a Back to School campaign that offers teaching materials, desks, sanitation facilities and text books.

There have been some major drawbacks to such an avalanche of new students, Mr. Wedenig admits. Not enough of qualified teachers, classrooms, desks and books has created real bottlenecks. So one of the “side effects” to the surge in school attendance, notes Mr. Wedenig, has been overcrowding and an increase in the pupil-to-teacher ratio (see African schools keep an eye on the prize).

High dropout rates

Primary school enrolment has gone up in both urban and rural areas. However, the UNICEF representative points out, “with regards to infrastructure, access to school [in terms of distance], qualifications and even distribution of teachers, obviously the rural areas have a bigger challenge than the cities,” although the disparities are not that significant.

According to Mr. Wedenig, the real problem is retention — keeping students in school. “Overall, we lose 50 per cent of the children before they complete primary school. And we lose another 50 per cent of those who transition to secondary school before they finish.”

Among various reasons for the loss of students, he believes that girls face the greatest difficulties. “At intake, you have basically parity. You even have in some few provinces more girls than boys. But then at a certain age, girls drop out more than boys.” The problems multiply at puberty, he explains. The issues include the lack of separate sanitation facilities for boys and girls, early marriage and teenage pregnancies.

In some cases, more boys drop out than do girls, especially in villages close to Tanzania. They are drawn to possible jobs across the border, in booming economic activities like mining.

Grade repetition is another factor behind high dropout rates. Low achievers are often required to stay in the same class another year before promotion to a higher grade. Most repeaters are thus older than their fellow classmates. “It is not an easy situation to manage,” Mr. Wedenig notes.

Focus on the system

The problems compound across the entire education system, Mr. Wedenig explains. “If you have a low intake in early childhood development for instance, it is sure that you would have lower achievements and retention in primary school. If you have high dropouts in primary, low transition to secondary and high dropouts in secondary, obviously you will have a problem in terms of the quality not only for university and tertiary education, but also for teacher colleges and for the future of teaching.”

It is therefore important to look at the whole education system, he says. Focusing on just one dimension is not the best response. A comprehensive strategy is needed.

One solution is to invest more in education. Since financing “has not been increasing in the same amount as the number of children has increased,” he explains, “it will obviously have an impact on the services you can deliver.” The quality of education is also a priority, as well as the “child friendliness” of the system.

Burundi recently adopted a new system called “école fondamentale,” in which children are encouraged to be more creative and more competitive, so as to be on par with other students in the East African Community. The pedagogy is participatory, with students at the centre of learning and teachers acting as facilitators.

Mr. Wedenig sees it as a good political step, but it has to be well managed. “You really have to analyse the impact of your policy decisions on the financial resources, the human resources, the infrastructure resources,” as well as the system’s capacity to absorb and retain students and provide quality education. If that is achieved, he says, it will “warrant the investment.”

Child comes first

The real challenge, Mr. Wedenig stresses, is dispensing an education that contributes significantly to the development of a child’s capacities at an early stage. “If you have a child who is stimulated during the early years, you will have a child who will succeed in an optimal way during primary, secondary and tertiary education.”

Ensuring schools that are friendly to children, combating gender discrimination and violence against children, and addressing teenage pregnancies are all essential, he says.

Burundi is on its way to meeting the Millennium Development Goal of achieving education for all, Mr. Wedenig notes, and that end is certainly worth the effort. But the country also needs to understand how the increase in the enrolment rate will affect the entire system and make necessary adjustments, which may not be easy.

No matter the challenges, access to basic education is a right, he stresses. “You have no other alternative but to provide. It’s the obligation of the government, of the international community and of the family and parents.”

—Africa Renewal online

Tweet

Post a New Comment

Comment with Facebook

  • Africa
  • Burundi
  • Education
  • Education
  • Feature
  • Johannes Wedenig
  • Major
  • mining
  • Person Career
  • Person Location
  • Primary
  • representative
  • representative in Burundi
  • Tanzania
  • teacher
  • Technology
  • Technology
  • United Nations International Children's Emergency Fund
  • Southern Africa
  • Education
  • Login or register to post comments
  • Share this IQ4News Article

Mimiboard

Your IQ4News
Login |Register |Subscribe |Jobs
News by Country
, A, B, C, D, E, F, G, I, J, K, L, M, N, P, Q, R, S, T, U, V, Y, Z
News by Tags
Refugees/IDPs QPR Tunisia
fuel subsidy Mobile Borno State
transcripts Egypt Birmingham
Review Toumani Diabate mentoring
Follow Us
  • African News - Twitter
  • African News - Facebook
  • African News - LinkedIn
  • African News - RSS

  • Google+
  • African News - RSS
  • African News - RSS
Poll
Can Ghana trust the judiciary service to give a good judgment on the post election court case?:
Photojournalism
  1. EDITORIALCARTOON: One Laptop Per Child
  2. EDITORIAL CARTOON: Museveni and Mugabe at Kenyatta's Inauguration
  3. EDITORIAL CARTOON: President Kenyatta clarifies on Free Maternity!
  4. North Korea's Nuclear Threat!
  5. AMICUS CORUPTIAE
"On the Air"
  1. AUDIO INTERVIEW: Sister Rita Schwarzenberger, speaks on how her Organisation is fighting Rickets in Nigeria
  2. AUDIO INTERVIEW: DEMO Africa Director on Innovation and Investment in Africa
  3. AUDIO INTERVIEW: Founder of LAGBook on Social Media
  4. AUDIO INTERVIEW: Film-maker Simon Bright on his documentary 'Robert Mugabe...What Happened?'
  5. iRoking Battles Music Piracy in Nigeria with its Digital Platforms
Country Profiles
  1. Nigeria
  2. Kenya
  3. South Africa

Charity of the Month

IHIVF
Click to Donate
Education
Nigeria: Unified Tertiary Matriculation Examination - Matters Arising
IQ4News
  •  
  • more

PR Newswire

  • About Us
  • Advertising
  • Terms & Conditions
  • Privacy Policy
  • Disclaimer
  • Copyright Notice
  • Feedback
  • IQ4News South Africa Jobs
©IQ4News
Powered by Dharma Media Productions