ZIMBABWE’S CURRENT LITERACY RATE DISPUTED
By Beaven Tapureta
Zimbabwe Reads, collaborative effort between
Zimbabweans and international friends aiming to create a reading culture in
Zimbabwe, has published a report on the plummeting local reading culture. The
report dispels the general excitement that has been going on about the high
literacy rate (91.9%) which Zimbabwe enjoys ahead of other African countries.
According to the report, this optimistic
figure was provided a decade ago by UNESCO and the government, and it is
unlikely that the same figure still stands today, given a number of factors
that have come into play in the country since about 2005.
Literacy rate is here used to mean the
percentage of people over the age 15 who can read and write.
Zimbabwe experienced deep economic and political
crises in the last decade, a situation that has affected the education and
relative sectors.
According to the report, since 2005 the
number of school dropouts increased due to pressure of school fees, the number
of registered public library users diminished and reading for pleasure became a
rare phenomenon.
Public libraries which used to be
pleasurable places for most Zimbabweans in the 80’s and 90’s, the report says, have been turned into warehouses of worn out
books as budgets have left these libraries unable to acquire additional books.
International donations, cited as the
only way to solve the problem, have not been sufficient mainly due to the
eco-political scenario in the past years.
Given all these negative trends, the
report maintains that if things go unchecked, Zimbabwe will have a literacy
rate of 70% in 2020.
However, the report acknowledges the hope
brought about by the Education Transition Fund launched in 2010 and is being coordinated
by UNICEF and the Ministry of Education, Sport, Art and Culture and funded by a
number of foreign governments.
The Fund, which continues this year, has brought
relief to schools as about fifteen million textbooks in core subjects were made
available to children in 5,675 primary schools and seven million textbooks to
2,333 secondary schools in 2010 and beginning of 2011.
The report notes that book donations from
non-governmental organisations such as Book Aid International, World Vision,
and US-Africa Children’s Fellowship were also helpful in enhancing the
availability of books in schools but these have always not been enough.
That Zimbabwe has become a local and
international ‘news peg’ and that many of its citizens have converted to
Christianity is no doubt. Newspaper and Bible reading cultures have improved in
the last two years, the report says, with internet use remaining low.
There continue to be challenges facing
reading culture as observed in the report, with the main challenge being that
textbooks alone cannot bridge the reading gap.
If the report is something to reckon
with, then local reading culture is at risk and this calls for government,
non-governmental organisations and all other stakeholders to act timely to
quell the situation.
Although various efforts are being done
to improve Zimbabwe’s reading culture, most Zimbabweans have not yet fully come
to terms with the demise of many organisations that used to promote reading in
cities and rural areas.
One of these organisations is the now
defunct Zimbabwe Book Development Council (ZBDC) formed in 1992 to create a
reading culture in Zimbabwe with primary focus on children’s literacy.
ZBDC successfully ran reading promotion programmes
such as the annual National Reading Week, the Book Fund Project, Children’s Reading
Tent and the Children’s Book Forum.
These programmes empowered rural
libraries and children by making available funds for libraries to buy locally
published books (excluding textbooks) and pitching reading tents to provide a
non-school environment for children to read, perform poetry and dance, draw and
engage in other literary activities.
The Children Reading Tent was popular at
the annual Zimbabwe International Book Fair that its absence in the last few
years has been painfully conspicuous and debilitating.
The Literature Bureau also made efforts
to create a reading environment by conducting mobile rural libraries and
running competitions for authors although there were colonial nuances attached
to the institution.
While the Education Transition Fund has
made progress in providing schools with learning materials and technical
assistance, there is more that needs to be done without mourning over past
failures but seriously engaging all stakeholders in a collective campaign to
resuscitate reading interest and habits.
The report by Zimbabwe Reads is based on a reading survey done with donor
organisations, booksellers, publishers, librarians and educators in the last
months of 2011.
Comments
I wish Ghana had such stats, even if they have dropped. I can say that there is absolutely no reading culture to begin with. People read text books because they have to pass their exams. If you saw someone reading a book in a public transport, it is more likely to be a Christian literature or a self-help book (in the lines of Rich Dad Poor Dad et al.). The appalling situation has caused a local NGO Mbaasem Foundation to come up with a Literary Manifesto with which to consult the government to take adequate action. Reading for pleasure is almost nonexistent.
I wish authorities in this country will learn from what you did, are doing, to turn things around.
Nice piece. Really enjoyed it.