Paying huge mounts for your children’s education?

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EENHANA – Education is the key and to cut the finest of the keys, parents are often paying through their noses to have their children given the utmost learning exposure.  This has given private tutoring the reins, but are parents really justified in paying huge amount for their children’s education?

There was a time parents only “pushed” their children into the hands of private tutors as the last resort.  In such cases, it would be to fix certain aspects in their children’s education that was proving a hard nut to absorb.  The goal was to get the child to grasp the subject after a thorough private drilling in the hands of a teacher paid to ensure that a child has learnt.  But that is in the past.Today, private tutors are all over the education setting.  They offer their services at a canter and money is their ultimate desire.  Agencies are plenty, employing private tutors.  Some learners are made to double, attending classes normally seeing private tutors on the sidelines.  This is now going on as a norm in Namibia.  Others have nothing to do with classes.  All they want is to pass their examinations.  So all they ever know are private tutors, who drill into them the ABCD of approaching examinations.

The crux of the issue is that parents want the best results for their children when it comes to education.  That’s why they go to a great length to spend large amounts of money in private tutoring to ensure that at the end of their education odyssey, they come out with the best possible results.  Of course, there are many advantages private tutoring offers. “The strength of private tuition lies in the flexibility with which tutors can approach the needs of their students, unhampered by the over-regulations which has messed up school education to the point where private tuition is much more in demand.  To provide good education, teachers need to be free to teach extra hours,” says Gordon Chirambo of Eagle Sight Training Centre here in Eenhana

Gordon Chirambo says some students are generally lazy, they easily lose motivation to study and engage in unhealthy activities like researching on the Internet and games.

“A private tutor can get the students back on the right track when they stray.  For example, private tutors can help parents to reprimand their children if they become too playful.  They can assign homework to them, so that they can spend their time in a more meaningful way.  Private tutors can thus act the role of a disciplinarian,” he says Gordon adds that sometimes learners have personal problems and find it hard to confide in their teachers and parents. “Depending on the caliber and professionalism of the private tutor, the child might find it easier engaging the private tutor who lends a listening ear.  One on one tutoring is a much more controllable environment, and therefore, far less susceptible to interference and sometimes learners may have missed key points because of illness or distraction and private tutors can identify areas that need work and bring them according to the speed of understanding”.

However, there have also been arguments against this arrangement.  It’s normally believed that private coaching is for rich parents. Johannes Paulus, a learner here says his parents are not financially well-off to offer him a private tutor. “Private tuition may be a financial burden to many parents who are poor like ours.  However, when the learner is slow and needs a tutor outside school, tuition is a necessary evil.  Some learners treat their tutors as a walking dictionary, expecting them to furnish answers to the homework given by school, without thinking through the solutions by themselves.  This can make them mentally lazy,” Paulus says.

Ann Mary- Kapolo, a trainee at Eagles Sight Training Centre says her parents have organised  her a private tutor although she is not normally in the mood for tutorship after spending the whole day in the classroom. “I have to spend another two hours in the evening with my tutor, Gordon Chirambo.  In school, we also have remedial lessons after the normal classes.  This makes us strain so much because we don’t have time to engage in-curricular activities and socialising.  Even during the weekend, I have to attend classes,” she says

Meme Katrina Ndeshimona, a mother of a learner at Mwadikange Senior Secondary School says there are many parents who have unreasonable expectations from their children.  “They insist that their children engage private tutors even though the children perform well academically,” she says.

Ndeshimona  quickens to say although the idea of engaging a private tutor is benign, especially when the learner is weak, private coaching has been commercialised by some teachers who demand big pay despite the fact that they teach for only a few hours. “Parents pay school fees.  I don’t see the reason why teachers should demand extra lessons if they can’t deliver in normal classroom.  Some of them don’t take their work seriously but will spend more energy when paid to tutor,” she says

She adds that the benefits are plentiful if parents manage to find a good tutor who can add value to their children to achieve scholarly  success.  However, she believes that the government should step in and regulate private tutoring in Namibia. “There are many people who have established private tutoring centres in Namibia.  However, some of them don’t have the necessary skills or piplomas and degrees to teach the subjects they claim to offer.  These are quack teachers who are taking advantage of desperate parents to milk money from them.  They should be investigated and action taken against them especially those not registered according to the Namibian Education Act,” she says

Another parent and a teacher at Oshela Senior Secondary School at Okongo, Charles Mukwenda,  says he has engaged a private tutor from Zimbabwe for his child maintaining that the advantages of private tutoring far outweigh disadvantages. Sometimes, learners are unable to concentrate during lessons for various reasons such as distractions, not feeling well or explanation gaps.  Therefore, they miss many key points taught during lessons.  Under such circumstances private tutors can re-explain the topics learnt, reiterate key points, abstract concept and help to solve problems students find difficult to tackle,” he says

He adds that he has seen improvement in his child’s performance since he engaged the services of a private tutor.“This keeps him from taking part in unproductive activities like watching television, movies and social network sites after school.”

 

By Clemence Tashaya