Parents urged to support learners
Breadcrumb
The back to school bells will ring as the second semester begins tomorrow.
The Ministry of Education, Arts and Culture urges parents and guardians to be supportive of schools and their children.
The back to school bells will ring as the second semester begins tomorrow.
The Ministry of Education, Arts and Culture urges parents and guardians to be supportive of schools and their children.
The Chairperson of the Kavango East Regional Youth Forum, Moses Sikerete, has called on the Ministry of Education, Arts, and Culture to give the leadership enough time to come up with a solution to the dispute around the construction of a new school in Rundu's Ndama Informal Settlement.
There is a need to foster and nurture an eco-conscious generation of young people who will protect Namibia's fragile ecosystem as we face environmental challenges.
The Ministry of Education, Arts, and Culture says it does not have a curriculum in which learners are taught to become homosexuals, as perceived by some segments of society.
The Deputy Minister of Education, Arts, and Culture, Faustina Caley, has highlighted the shortage of teaching and learning resources, along with insufficient support, as crucial factors requiring immediate intervention in the Kavango East Region.
The Ministry of Education, Arts, and Culture (MoEAC), in collaboration with the Africa Federation of Teaching Regulatory Authorities (AFTRA) and the Namibia National Teachers Union (NANTU), will conduct the 10th AFTRA teaching and learning conference in Windhoek from May 9 to 12.
Parents of learners who are attending an unregistered lower primary private school in Windhoek's Goreangab area want the Ministry of Education, Arts, and Culture to urgently register the school.
Deputy Minister of Education, Arts, and Culture, Faustina Caley handed over four hostel blocks, a matron's quarter, a kitchen, a dining hall, two ablution blocks, and two teacher houses to Omuhonga Combined School.
The facilities were constructed at a cost of more than N$79.5 million.
The Katutura Central Constituency in conjunction with the Khomas Regional Council have donated Wi-Fi service and computers to the Katutura community library through the Minor Capital Project.
The Wi-Fi was installed by Telecom Namibia at the cost of N$250 000.
Under-achievement and under-participation of boys in education have become a national concern and stakeholders are actively exploring ways to support the boy child.
A two-day colloquium was initiated by the University of Namibia (UNAM), to look into the topic.