Students should heed positive spirit at MoE

The Ministry of Education appears to have changed to tack for the good in 2008. It appears the ministry is gradually doing away with their irrational and uncompromising approach that had become their hallmark.

The latest developments could be pointers that the ministry has effectively become a listening establishment. This is a highly commendable positive development. This week the Minister of Education, Jacob Nkate, officially received 19 buses to be used for school trips. Just this week when the ministry officials were confronted with a student class boycott over the untenable and unhygienic situation at the Tlokweng College of Education (TCE), the ministry promptly responded by setting in motion renovations at a cost of P2 million at that institution. The most heartening occurrence came when the ministry officials readily acknowledged the magnitude of the problem, even apologising for the delay in addressing them. This is a far cry from the ministry's previous defensive approach. 

The TCE students had also raised concerns regarding the quality of food served in their refectory and called for the engagement of an external catering company. The ministry appears not to be averse to that proposal either, but reasoned that securing such services would involve a tendering process. We understand the students have unanimously agreed to resume classes but they were not yet decided on whether to continue taking their meals from the refectory. We would encourage them to take their meals. After all, the ministry has promised to also attend to that problem. There has also been a class boycott that started last week by the students at the Gaborone Technical College (GTC). They presented a four-point petition to the ministry last week Thursday that covered allowances, the Botswana Technical Education Programme (BTEP) course content, course duration and poor management. 

Editor's Comment
Micro-procurement maze demands urgent reform

Whilst celebrating milestones in inclusivity, with notably P5 billion awarded to vulnerable groups, the report sounds a 'siren' on a dangerous and growing trend: the ballooning use of micro-procurement. That this method, designed for small-scale, efficient purchases, now accounts for a staggering 25% (P8 billion) of total procurement value is not a sign of agility, but a 'red flag'. The PPRA’s warning is unequivocal and must be...

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