Stuart White and Meas Sokchea
Friday, 18 May 2012
Phnom Penh Post
Tens of thousands of teachers are expected to walk out of classrooms
this month and take jobs working as officials in commune elections,
campaigning for which begins today, says the National Election
Committee.
According to Mom Soth, a director of training with the
NEC, there are more than 116,000 jobs available, manning polling
stations and election offices. An estimated 55 per cent of them will be
filled by teachers, he said.
However, if NEC figures are correct,
more than 60,000 teachers will be working on the election, some for a
few months. By comparison, the Ministry of Education employed a total of
about 94,000 teachers for the 2006-2007 school year, leading some to
wonder whether Cambodia’s educational system has the teachers to spare.
“If
the NEC will try to take out teachers for a number of months, then of
course it will affect the education of the students,” said Eang Vuthy, a
program manager for Bridges Across Borders, an NGO that deals with
education advocacy.
“In Cambodia, we have a huge number of students in classrooms.”
Mak
Vann, a secretary of state with the Ministry of Education, said he
wasn’t familiar with the details of the matter, but that teachers’
contributions to free elections were important, and their absences
wouldn’t seriously impede student’s learning.
“The classes are not closed,” he said. “The classes will still run; [we] have plenty of replacement teachers.”
“Otherwise,
who is able to do these jobs?” he asked, noting that teachers are often
the most qualified candidates in rural areas.
UNESCO
statistics show that Cambodia has nearly 50 primary school students for
every teacher, a figure more than twice as high as neighbouring
Vietnam’s, and three times as high as that of the United States.
Theoretically, a smaller ratio of students to teachers, UNESCO materials
say, “enables the teacher to pay more attention to individual students,
which may in the long run result in a better performance of the
pupils”.
According to Eang Vuthy, now is an especially poor time for teachers to be leaving their posts.
“In
a few months, there will be high school exams, and normally, students
need an extra class to prepare for the exam,” he said. “But if the
teachers are going to work for the NEC, then it will affect schools and
students.”
“This is not a good idea,” he added.
Tep Nytha,
secretary general of the NEC, says that overall demand for qualified
election workers has grown, but teachers aren’t specifically targeted
for recruitment.
“The recruitment is open for the public to
apply, not just teachers, but mainly teachers have the abilities to work
for the NEC,” he said. “And when they work for the NEC, they have to
ask permission from their respective institutions, but the NEC isn’t
involved in that.”
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