Fighting illiteracy or discouraging high education? - Instablogs
Fighting illiteracy or discouraging high education?
Mohammed Taha , BS: Nov 9 2009
Made Popular Nov 10 2009
Morocco :

Fighting illiteracy or discouraging high education?

A new program was launched recently by the Moroccan government to build 1246 schools especially in those ‘urban non-urban’ places to facilitate access to schooling in the rural areas.

This program-that is worth MAD 12.76 bullion- is aimed to improve the educational supply in the country and lower the illiteracy rate in morocco to 5% by 2015.

In my opinion, the government is tackling this phenomenon in the wrong way. The main problem is not in the insufficient of schools; the problem is in the education system itself.

We don’t need people to learn just how to read/write their names; we need people to help in the prosperity of the country socially, economically, politically etc etc. I dare any one of those who put this stupid education system in morocco to send their kids to a public school. They send their kids to learn abroad and when they come back, they find the best positions in the country are waiting for them.

Why they teach people in Arabic and when they graduate they find everything is francophonized and they need to master French language to get a job? If they have decided to degrade their language this much, why didn’t they teach them everything in French? Like seriously, don’t these people laugh at Moroccans?

The Government doesn’t respect educated people to begin with. For example, the statistics show that Morocco is the fourth highest rate of illiteracy in the whole world; however, most of the jobless people in Morocco are the ones with high degrees. Isn’t it weird to find PhD jobless people in an illiterate country? Who gets the jobs here?

People now don’t want to go to school because they think it’s just a waste of time. I have asked many graduated jobless guys I know and they told me they regretted wasting all this time and money at school/university.

Oh!!! Should I add that the minister of education has just insulted teachers two weeks ago? A setting held by teachers to protest against his insult but no one cared. The Minister is still there getting paid by the taxes those insulted teachers pay to the country.

The only possible answer I could come up with that certain people in this country hate Moroccans and they do their best to keep the country as it is. Those highly educated jobless people are being punished for being a threat to their positions. Since Morocco has declared its independence from the stupid French colonization, only certain few families exchange, among each others, ministries and many other important positions in the country.

They don’t encourage creativity or freedom of speech, they want people to learn how to read and write so when they buy those poor people’s votes with few dirhams, they make sure they vote for the “right” party.

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1 Stars
Omar
Rabat, Morocco
The government should reinforce more its efforts in this field and other fields because it's considered a serious phenomenon in our country. So raise high the flag of our country in 2015.
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the flag of our country is always high and it’ll get higher and higher inshallah, if anyone didn’t realize how much Morocco is progressing in many fields then he’s blind, but we still need to work harder and harder. This plan to eradicate illiteracy by 2015 is good but it’s not enough, I think they should change the education programs as well, thanks for your comment :)
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Imane
Rabat, Morocco
we are obliged to fight illiteracy ,if we want to cope with the new technologies, it's time for the moroccan to take the right path .as far as the solutions is concerned i think the best way to fight illiteracy is by sensitizing people of the importance of education in their daily life.
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I do agree about the second part of your comment, I guess we should learn from the Malaysian policy to deal with this destructive phenomenon, thanks for the comment :)
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Maureen
Brisbane, Australia
why are there more illiterate women than men in Moroccan?
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there are more graduated women than men, women get more jobs then men, why you didn’t ask about that?
the rate of illiterate women is slightly higher because of several reasons one if them is : in the countryside, schools are far away from certain villages and people are afraid to send their little girls alone,
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Ken
Calgary, Canada
Illiteracy is a serious scourge. It hinders economic progress and development. Moreover, it has made of Morocco an ignorant country as it was ranked in the next to last position in terms of illiteracy. It is also a social phenomenon widely-spread in most Arab countries and the world especially the developing world. It has many different repercussions.
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Morocco is indeed suffers from illiteracy but it’s not an ignorant country. for example, my grandma is illeterate and she discusses political issues better than most of the people on this blog. Sooner or later, Morocco will eradicate illiteracy but what’s next? in my opinion, we don’t need people to just learn how to spell, we need qualified people in all the domains and this won’t happen with a stupid education system.
thanks for your comment, it was highly appreciated :)
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Great great article Tea. I always have this issue on my mind, I truly think Arab countries need to do something about their educational systems. U rightly said it: we don’t need graduates who know how to write their names and speak with proper grammars. we need people who know how to think, and function on a higher level... we lack this unfortunately!!!

Thx for the article again Mr. :)
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Azher
Ahmedabad, India
Exactly, Literacy does not mean you will know every thing about your subject . it is matter when you will have some thing to share by your own thinking then and then Literacy would come in right meaning.
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