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Volume 13, Issue 3 ![]()
COVER PAGE
FEATURE
REGIONAL NEWS PRACTICAL INFORMATION
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Regional News
The association has been pressing for a salary of US$4,600 a year for lecturers and about $8,000 for professors. One professor said the grievances for higher salaries and better conditions have fallen on deaf ears for the past five years and that it was now time to take a different course of action.
The minister of education denounced the strike, calling it counterproductive.
Panafrican News Agency
Moreover, it is estimated that only 20 percent of those enrolled in primary school reach the secondary school level. Similar problems exist at the university level.
There are a number of factors that account for Kenya's high dropout rate, which is contributing to the country's illiteracy. In much of the country, for instance, there are not enough schools and children have to walk great distances to get to classes each day. As a result, many of them stop attending school.
Another problem has to do with the overloaded curriculum. Students are overwhelmed by the huge amount of course work they are expected to cover at each level of education. In addition, parents and students do not think that an education will lead to jobs after graduation. Exacerbating matters, the high unemployment rate is likewise causing students to give up on their education: If there are no jobs after they graduate, why bother going to school at all?
Political factors have also contributed to the rising dropout and declining enrollment rates. In the Rift Valley and some of the coastal provinces, tribal clashes have forced many pupils to leave school. As a result of the skirmishes, many teachers have been displaced, which has led to a decline in the quality of education in those areas.
Certain customs and cultural practices have also impacted negatively on education. Within some communities, female genital mutilation is still prevalent. According to many experts, girls who have undergone the trauma of circumcision cannot concentrate on their studies and tend to dropout of school altogether. Early pregnancies and the AIDS epidemic have also contributed to the steady increase in student dropouts.
Drug addiction is another related problem. It is estimated that 47 percent of all high school students in Nairobi are taking drugs.
The Nation
Participants exchange views, discuss issues and map out strategies for the future. Some of the more prominent issues this year include the use of the Internet and IT in the classroom, off-campus access to computers and access and control of access to IT in educational institutions. The conference was first held in 1996 when South African University and Technikon IT Directors Group decided to bring institutions together to focus on IT development.
Additional information about the conference can be found at www.upe.ac.za/citte2000.
ITWeb
Over the past 10 years or so, the number of students completing the advanced level of secondary school has risen dramatically. The surplus of qualified students who are unable to gain access to higher education has put tremendous pressure on the country's tertiary system.
The Inter-University Council for East Africa Newsletter
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