Nyerere’s Recommendations for the Policy of Education for Self-reliance
Introduction
Nyerere, J. (1974). depicted the collective mass of
society as ‘self’. Therefore, Education for Self-Reliance (ESR) means
delivering knowledge about ‘self-reliance’. According to Nyerere, the policy of
self reliance means that Tanzanian’s development should depend on her natural
resources. The concept of Education For Self Reliance is also about
self-confidence, independence, responsibility and democratic involvement
(Rahumbuka, 1974). Although ESR is supposed to liberate an individual and society,
most of the African countries such as Tanzania seem to be lacking these
elements as revealed by the problems facing the citizens including poverty,
ignorance, moral decadence, false beliefs, social disintegration, economic
dependence, exploitation and social injustice. The purpose of this paper is to
provide an overview of the general aims of Education for Self Reliance and to
highlight Nyerere’s recommendations for the policy of Education for Self
Reliance with reference to Tanzania.
General Aims of Education for Self-Reliance
The ESR system of education in Tanzania had the
following general objectives: To equip learners with knowledge, skills and
attitudes for tackling societal problems; to prepare the youth for work in
Tanzania’s predominantly agricultural society; and to enable learners know,
appreciate and develop a culture of Tanzania that preserves the national
tradition, individual freedom, responsibility, tolerance and respect (Tanzania
Ministry of Education, 1982). Thus ESR aimed at developing in each citizen an
inquiring open mind; ability to learn from others; basic confidence in one’s
own position and ability to learn and contribute to the society. The education
encompassed Ujamaa or socialist outlook, which entail a sense of individual and
collective responsibility in all areas of activity and a willingness to
co-operate and share on equal terms and an ability to appreciate and develop
national culture (Tanzania Ministry of Education, 1982).
Nyerere’s Recommendations for the Policy of
Education for Self-reliance
Nyerere’s policy of Education for Self-reliance
contains specific recommendations, which are advocated on the basis of
historical, social, political, philosophical and economic considerations of a
society (Hinzen and Hundsdorfer, 1982). The recommendations for educational
reforms include: education should be of relevance to the Society; educated
individual must serve the society, education must be problem solving and
education must be work oriented.
Education Should be Relevant to the Society
Nyerere reiterated that education at all levels
should be relevant to the community in which a learner lives. A learner should
be in a position to live in a village and contribute, through work, to the
development of that particular village. The foreign conception of education,
that the Educated must serve the Society, which is usually isolated for the
society, should be shunned and instead be replaced by value-oriented and
integrated education Rahumbuka, G. (1974). In accordance with Nyerere’s objective
in the ESR which was to restructure the colonial-oriented system of education
and make it relevant to the societal needs stated that:
Education has to foster the social goals of living
together for the common goal. It has to prepare our young people to play a
dynamic and constructive part in the development of a society where all people
share equitably for the good of the group, and which its progress is quantified
in relation to human well-being, not cars, prestige buildings, or other such
things, whether privately or publicly owned. Therefore, our education must
teach a sense of commitment to the general society and help the society to
accept the standards suitable to a better future not those appropriate to the
colonial past Nyerere, J. (1974).
Nyerere’s emphasis on the importance and relevance
of education to society bears much similarity with the Russian policy of
education, which stipulates that to educate a member of the soviet society
means to educate that person so that he/she can understand the interests of the
Russian society and that such a person shall have no personal interests which
are opposed to the collective interests (Curtis, 1968). In the same way, the
educational system of Tanzania should be relevant to the society in order to form
an individual who can easily cope with the real situation in Tanzania and be
able to utilize his/her education, in his or her own circumstances and give
contribution to his/her own society. Nyerere’s conviction on the power of a
teacher to create the quality education reveal as he says, “the teacher’s power
is the power to decide whether “service” or “self” shall be dominant motive in
Tanzania of 1990 and thereafter” Nyerere, J. (1968).
Nyerere, in education for self-reliance emphasizes
that all able bodied people including the intellectuals must work. He states:
For the truth is that many of the people in Tanzania
regards education as meaning that an educated man is too precious for the
uneven and devastating life which the society still live… even during the
holidays we believe that young people and women should be protected from uneven
work; neither they nor the society expect them to spend their time on stiff
physical labour or on jobs which are not comfortable and are not pleasant….it
is a reflection of the attitude we have all adopted (Nyerere, 1967).
Therefore, Nyerere urges and calls for a method of
learning by doing. The practical method recommended is not only to aim at
manual labor, but such learning by doing must be directed towards a productive,
constructive or creative end which should lead in the long run to solving the
problems of the society. Nyerere shows dissatisfaction with the students’
participation or contribution in solving problems of society, when he says:
How many of our students devote their holidays doing
a job which could recover people’s lives without money; jobs similar to digging
a drainage channel for a village, or representing the construction and
explaining the importance of deep-pit latrines? Few have done such work in the
National Youth Camps or through nation building schemes, organized by schools
but they are the exception rather than the rule Rahumbuka, G. (1974).
Nyerere is appealing to the educated to liberate the
masses from human suffering. The concept of education emerges at the same time
in Freire’s book, On Liberating Education through his method of critical
dialogical encounter. The publication of Freire’s book coincides with the
proclamation of Nyerere’s education for self-reliance. Freire’s second major
educational book, Pedagogy of the oppressed was published in 1972. This work
too advocates problem-solving education, which is called ‘liberating
education’. It is thus difficult to say whether or not Nyerere’s policy of
education for self-reliance was influenced by Freire’s works. As regards
relevance of education, Nyerere is establishing a delicate balance between the
desire to access universal knowledge and the imperative to make that knowledge
of use in our situation.
The Educated Should Serve the Society
Since it is the society, which has educated an
individual, the learner has a debt to his or her respective society after
his/her completion. In his speech to the University of Liberia in 1968, Nyerere
showed clearly that the society invests in learners when he observed that:
We are spending large and disproportionate sums of
money on a number people so that in the future, they should make a
disproportionate return to the society. Just the same way as we invest in our
tractor, we are investing in a man’s brain: and just we expect the tractor to
do much work for us which is many times as a hand-hoe, so we expect the student
we have trained to make many times as great contribution to our well-being as
the man who has not had this good fortune. We are giving to the student while
he is at University, so that we may receive more from him afterwards. There is
nothing altruistic about it; poor people cannot afford financial altruism. We
have the right to expect the things from university graduates and others who
are professionals of any kind; we do not just have a hope, but expectation
(Nyerere, 1974).
The relevance of education advocated by Nyerere has
the ultimate goal of ensuring that eventually, the educated become servant of
society in the struggle to eradicate disease, famine, poverty and ignorance.
The learners should know that the community educates them in order that they
may become effective and productive members of the society.
Nyerere’s education for societal service is in line
with Plato’s statement that; “a fully educated person possesses not only
knowledge but wisdom as well; and that he will see the moral necessity of
putting his wisdom and his knowledge of all things to the service of the
society in which he lives.” The basic philosophy here is that the individual
will contribute his service, resulting from his or her education for the
prosperity of the society. The educated individual should know that he or she
is a property of his or her community; hence, a person is an individual only to
the extent that he or she is a member of a clan, community or a family (Mboya,
1963).
Educated Individuals Should be Integrated with
Society
Nyerere has repeatedly warned that if the educated
are to serve the masses of Tanzania, they must realize and recognize themselves
as being part of the society (Nyerere, 1968). As De la Rue puts it, ‘no just
society can be built on the bases of a privileged elite ruling a poor majority”
(Cliffe and Saul, 1973). If the educated are to serve the masses efficiently,
then it is vital to ensure that the ‘servant’’ is a part of the system he or
she is expected to serve otherwise the service rendered will be no more than
lip-service. The educated people if left to be in a camp of their own can apply
methods and maneuvers, which will ultimately, ascertain their own class
preservation imposing their superiority over the masses in order to keep the
status quo. In this regard Nyerere comments:
Educated people in other words, can only be
effective when they are full members of the society they are trying to change,
involved in its good and bad fortune, and commitment to it whatever happens
(Nyerere, 1974).
The educated persons should integrate themselves
with the masses as well as influence them. If they do the contrary, it is a
betrayal, since the society has invested in them.
Education should be Problem Solving
For educated people to serve the people and help in
solving the problems affecting the society, it is implied that the educative
process must involve not only training in specific skills and techniques
through a method of practical work geared to problem solving, but also
acquiring those habits which make him or her virtuous. These virtues will make
him or her religious minded, courageous, truthful, good-natured and the like.
This type of education will help him or her manage ones affairs of this world
with foresight. Consequently, he will be happy and be able to contribute to the
happiness of the society as a whole Rahumbuka, G. (1974).
Education should be Work Oriented
Nyerere, as he has already indicated, prescribes
that education should be work oriented and that the educated must be inculcated
into a commitment to community service. He held that education should be
service geared to eradicating illiteracy, ignorance, improving health standards
and life expectancy, and perhaps above all the service that will enable the
citizens to exploit and utilize their country’s natural resources for the
benefits of the workers and peasants of Tanzania. In line with Nyerere’s view
of ESR, Peter (1966) define the need for specialized education when he says,
‘education has also to prepare a comparatively smaller number of specialists in
fields such as medicine, geology, hydrology, agriculture, fisheries,
engineering, and textile engineering and veterinary science”.
The education provided must be vocational in
orientation as opposed to the platonic culture of elitist education for its own
sake. Socrates approved the training of men and women who would be engaged in
specific jobs to solve the problems of ignorance, poverty and disease in
society. Socrates however warns that
specialization must go with efficiency or high performance. Only through a
combined approach to the problems of society can there be a pay off which
ultimately benefits each individual in the society (Cliffe, L. and Saul, S.
(1973).
Nyerere’s prescription for the educated individual
to serve society does not subordinate the good of the individual to the good of
the community as Plato holds. Nyerere, like Aristotle, believed that an individual
acquires full happiness by being part of the society not only because man is
rational but also because the individual human being, both social and
political, has always lived in some kind of society (Curtis, 1965). The chief
good of an individual lies in his being a member of society. This aspect shows
the importance of specialization in different fields for the sake of building
the whole society as one body. Each member of the society has his or her own
talent, for instance being a teacher, an engineer, a farmer, a political leader
among others. However, all these talents should be for the sake of building the
respective society as one body. Therefore, vocational training is vital in the
society. Nyerere had this vision, and this is why his ESR’s system of education
focused on different objectives following the different levels of education.
Nov 23, 2019.
The
purpose of education for self-reliance according to Mwl. Julius Kambarage Nyerere the first president of Tanzania;-
To alleviate poverty and to make
people independent to sustain themselves; due to the education for
self-reliance according to Mwl. J K Nyerere ideas this education helps people
to improve from the low level of life development to higher level in order to
get human basic needs and also to be able to practice in different activities
for brought development and to increase individual and nation economic without
depending to others.
Help people to be able to manage
their environments; due to the practice of the education for self-reliance may
helps much people in controlling their surrounding because this education make
student to know how to overcome their problems in to the society. This is
because education for self reliance teaching the students in theory and
practice ways.
To help in shaping responsible and
accountable citizen in the community; due to the education for self-reliance
can lead people to know what they are supposed to do in the society in order to
bring his or her economic development and other aspects like political, social
as well as cultural practice in higher level.
To help people in rational
thinking; due to the ideas of Nyerere in education for self-reliance people
must have an ability of thinking in critically ways when he or she want to do
or solve a certain problem in a society, because people may get positive
impacts after doing or solving certain problem in critical thinking ways.
The
following are the weakness of education for self reliance
Sanga, I. (2016). .
Teachers lack of knowledge and
skills to utilize experience developed by learners when participating in
education for self reliance activities this is like carpenter so teacher lack
knowledge on how to teach her student in manual activities.
Student spend much time out class,
this is because education for self reliance involve different activities such
as agricultural, student were lake out the class frequently in order to study
partially thus why tend to spend much time the class than in teaching particle
in the class.
Teachers does not participate in activities,
for example agriculture, this means that many of them are actively participated
in classroom activities especial teaching and learning of the students but they
are not ready to carry out activities like agriculture.
Poor infrastructure such as roads,
market, building, so through of poor infrastructure contribute much to the
failure of education for self reliance in Tanzania because infrastructure
needed for practice so as to students become more efficiently in their
education.
REFERENCES
Cliffe, L. and Saul, S. (1973). Socialism in
Tanzania, Vol.2, p. 43. Dar es Salaam: East Africa Publishing House.
Curtis, S. (1965). An Introduction to the Philosophy
of Education. London: University Tutorial Press.
Curtis, S. (1968). An Introduction to the Philosophy
of Education. London: University tutorial press.
Hinzen, H. and Hundsdorfer, V. (1982). Education for
Liberation and Development: The Tanzania Experience. Retrieved
Kingsley, P. (1962). Education and Philosophical
Thoughts. Boston: Allyn and Bacon Publishers.
Nyerere, J. (1968). Ujamaa Essays on Socialism.
London: Oxford University Press.
Nyerere, J. (1974). Man and Development. Dar es
Salaam: Oxford University Press.
Rahumbuka, G. (1974). Towards Ujamaa: Twenty Years
of Tanu Leadership. Dar es Salaam: East Africa Literature Bureau.
Tanzania Ministry of Education (1982). Some Basic
Facts About Education in Tanzania. Tanzania: Ministry of education.
Sanga, I. (2016).
Education for Self Reliance: Nyerere’s policy Recommendations in the
Context of Tanzania. African R
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