Identifier
Created
Classification
Origin
10LUSAKA52
2010-01-25 14:50:00
UNCLASSIFIED
Embassy Lusaka
Cable title:  

HOLLOWED HALLS: ZAMBIA'S TERTIARY EDUCATION SYSTEM

Tags:  SCUL SOCI KIRC KPAO ZA 
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R 251450Z JAN 10
FM AMEMBASSY LUSAKA
TO SECSTATE WASHDC 7602
INFO SOUTHERN AF DEVELOPMENT COMMUNITY COLLECTIVE
UNCLAS LUSAKA 000052 


STATE FOR AF/S LAYLWARD, STATE ALSO FOR AF/PAPD LALLISON,
PRETORIA FOR EWILLIAMS AND CPRIESTER

E.O. 12958: N/A
TAGS: SCUL SOCI KIRC KPAO ZA
SUBJECT: HOLLOWED HALLS: ZAMBIA'S TERTIARY EDUCATION SYSTEM

UNCLAS LUSAKA 000052


STATE FOR AF/S LAYLWARD, STATE ALSO FOR AF/PAPD LALLISON,
PRETORIA FOR EWILLIAMS AND CPRIESTER

E.O. 12958: N/A
TAGS: SCUL SOCI KIRC KPAO ZA
SUBJECT: HOLLOWED HALLS: ZAMBIA'S TERTIARY EDUCATION SYSTEM


1. (SBU) Summary: Chronic absences. Poor preparation.
Classroom inebriation. And that's just the professors. While
gains have been made in elementary and secondary education,
insufficient capacity, resources, facilities and training
have crippled Zambia's ability to educate its citizenry at
the tertiary level. Only two percent of Zambians possess a
bachelor's degree or higher. Those who matriculate to
state-run universities often fall prey to illicit activity in
their efforts to afford basic costs. Private institutions are
slowly filling the void, making some headway in developing
international university linkages and meeting limited needs.
However, absent stronger government commitment to and higher
funding for tertiary education, Zambia is unlikely to achieve
its development goals. Student and faculty reports of lax
standards and allegations of mismanagement of funds suggest
that opportunity may lie in offering direct faculty access to
curriculum resources and student leadership training. End
summary.

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Another brick in the crumbling wall
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2. (SBU) The dilapidated condition of Zambia's two state-run
universities, University of Zambia (UNZA) and Copperbelt
University (CBU),evokes little optimism about the prospects
for tertiary education. At UNZA, the country's "flagship"
institution, poorly maintained facilities lack electricity,
computers, reliable online access, furniture, and adequate
classroom and housing space for the 10,000 students.
Zambia's 2010 budget does include a 16 percent increase in
education spending, but that is largely reserved for
long-overdue administration and faculty wage increases. Lack
of physical capacity at the two universities means the vast
majority of qualified student applicants are rejected,
leading many instead to pursue less marketable two-year
diplomas at public technical colleges. Technical colleges
themselves suffer from teacher recruitment shortfalls and
construction that fails to keep pace with student demands.


3. (SBU) According to the Ministry of Education (MOE),less
than a quarter of eligible higher education applicants ever
matriculate. Those who do and obtain campus housing reputedly
do so based on connections and nepotism. Students live six to
a room built for two, as those granted a room rent out floor

space to make ends meet. Faced with desperate measures to
afford tuition and housing, a predominant portion of the
student population, male and female, trade sexual favors to
predators who routinely cruise campus areas. UNZA's HIV/AIDS
outreach office has not divulged the student HIV/AIDS rate.
Anecdotal evidence suggests prevalence is higher than the
national average of 14.3 percent.


4. (SBU) Faculty face scarce academic resources, limited
access to materials and minimal curriculum guidance. The
student bookstore lacks "required" reading for classes and
university libraries are woefully under-resourced with lax
security that fails to ensure protection of donated works.
UNZA's library houses few books published in the last decade
and no access to online journals of information. One
professor of American literature admitted that a lesson about
"Huck Finn" consisted of students photocopying selected pages
for discussion rather than reading the actual book. Students
report that classroom instruction is not rigorous and rarely
consists of anything other than faculty anecdotes and debates
about current political bickering. Rarely do classroom
discussions encourage development of critical thinking
skills.


5. (SBU) From top to bottom, apathy, corruption and
incompetence have combined to create a barely functioning
state-run tertiary education system. Faculty claim material
donations rarely make it out of administrators' offices.
Administrators grapple with chronic absenteeism among
faculty. Many faculty members hold two to three jobs to
supplement their income and often ditch class to attend to
demands from other employers. Reports of alcoholism among
faculty recently led administrators to admonish them via
written notice and decree that alcohol will no longer be
served in campus cafes before 4 p.m. Lack of administrative
oversight has allowed professors to reduce four-hour courses
to two, cancel classes for a month, and fail to engage in
research, despite contract mandates to do so. Erratic class
schedules and lack of meaningful classroom engagement
manifest in regular student attendance rates of less than 50
percent.

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Private universities pull substitute duty
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6. (SBU) Motivated administrators and professors have struck
out on their own to establish private universities. A small
cadre of UNZA professors founded Zambian Open University
(ZOU),touted as "a university without walls." Now with an
enrollment of more than 5,000, ZOU is a distance learning
institution that caters to primary and secondary school
educators who could attain no more than a two-year
certificate or vocational diploma. The university's board
chairperson speculates that with the youth bulge, the country
faces a deficit of 20,000 teachers, a dire situation ZOU
hopes to ameliorate. ZOU seeks to increase its enrollment to
20,000 by 2020, offering five Bachelor of Education degrees
ranging from early childhood to adult education, along with
Bachelor of Arts and Bachelor of Law degrees.


7. (SBU) Newly founded private religious universities are
also beginning to offer four-year degrees. Northrise
University, established by a U.S.-educated Zambian couple,
emphasizes faith-based learning but offers bachelor's degrees
in business and information technology, with plans to add a
four-year agriculture degree. Northrise has linkages with
reputable Iowa and California institutions that offer study
abroad opportunities for Zambian students at the Northrise
tuition rate. Catholic University focuses on religious
education with additional bachelor's degrees in business,
geography and development studies. Each of the private higher
education institutions seeks expanded U.S. university
linkages.


8. (SBU) In late 2009, President Banda singled out ZOU,
praising its self-sufficiency. He called for greater public
private partnership and extolled his own government's work to
create a policy environment that allows individuals and
organizations to establish educational institutions "without
any difficulties." In the same breath, however, he called for
greater government regulation and control of private
universities.

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When Zambia fails to make the grade
--------------


9. (SBU) Barring significant changes in education policy,
increased funding and renewed political will, the state-run
tertiary education system in Zambia will further deteriorate.
State universities maintain less stringent, circa-1964
admission requirements, set by a government sensitive to the
substandard pre-independence education system. Inefficient
processing of high school exit exams requires matriculating
university students to endure a gap year void of academic
activity. Lecturers seek higher salaries and better teaching
conditions: MOE reports that between 1984 and 1994, UNZA lost
more than 230 lecturers, 161 of whom were PhDs, mostly to
other institutions in southern and eastern Africa.
Reportedly, UNZA seeks to phase out its English curriculum
due to declining enrollment. This would be a serious blow to
a country of substandard English language ability. UNZA's
chancellor blames the sorry state of affairs on lack of a
national vision for higher education. He warns that the
dearth of university graduates threatens Zambia's ability to
realize Vision 2030, the country's long-term development
plan. MOE has announced plans to establish a Higher Education
Authority to coordinate all higher education, but full
implementation is likely to consume time Zambia does not have.

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Comment
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10. (SBU) Comment: Frighteningly, our assessment is that a
Zambian university degree is no assurance of academic
achievement or quality. Lack of access to adequate tertiary
education makes economic growth and poverty reduction a
Herculean - if not impossible - task for Zambia. In a country
where 50 percent of the population is under the age of 18,
such a severely undereducated youth population makes Zambia
ripe for instability. Academic chaos at state-run schools
precludes large-scale Mission engagement via government
channels. However, the Mission can make inroads with
aggressive outreach to faculty, targeted resource allocations
and nurturing of individual students' critical thinking
skills. Filling the void of access to information and
material resources presents the greatest opportunity for the
Mission. Consequently, Post intends to expand its Information
Resource Center, American Center and American Corner, and
more systematically pursue linkages with U.S. colleges and
universities. Additionally, post will explore a longer-term
educational advising strategy that establishes college prep
clubs to groom students at an earlier age than senior high
school, offering English language exposure and constructive
activities during the gap year.


KOPLOVSKY