Moroccans favour private education

2006-09-14

Many Moroccan parents prefer private schools because they feel the institutions offer more to their children and can give them a brighter future.

By Sarah Touahri for Magharebia in Rabat – 14/09/06

[File] Private schools are chosen by most parents who can afford it.

The number of pupils being sent to private schools in Morocco has noticeably risen over the past few years, as parents want to ensure their children receive high-quality education. Around 500,000 pupils are currently being taught to read and write by the private sector.

Khalid Al Idrissi, a teacher in a state school, chose a private school this year for his four-year-old daughter.

"I gave the decision a lot of thought. My daughter needs to start learning two languages, Arabic and French, from a very early age. Also, the state school is overcrowded. That's why I thought it would be better to put my daughter in a more favourable environment," he said.

Most of his colleagues, and other who have the money, have made the same decision.

"I definitely wouldn't send my child to a public school. In the private sector, there are lots of extracurricular activities, like music and painting, which encourage children to thrive," says student Imrane Rajae.

While the public has great confidence in private schools, their quality depends on cost.

"The prices aren't fixed, it's a matter of supply and demand. You have to know where the best place is for your child. Sometimes a school may not provide the education you're looking for, as I've found out from experience," says photographer Sarhane Aissa. His eight-year-old daughter has been in three schools, which he all found unsatisfactory

"At the first school, she was given too much homework and she found it hard to keep up. At the second, they didn't pay enough attention to the children's health. This year, I've had her enrolled in a school near where I live. I just hope it'll be the last time I have to move her," he said.

"Parents shouldn't choose just any old private school. They should get to know everything about the school: the curriculum, the other children, the standard of teaching. That's what I did before sending my son to private school when he was three-years-old," declares engineer Abderrahmane Kadiri.

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All private schools are obliged to provide the state curriculum as a minimum, but they are free to add any activities they consider necessary. Any school which fails to comply with the standards set by the Minister of National Education is closed down.

The Moroccan government is committed to developing private education, hoping the private sector will work alongside it to ensure that everyone receives an education.

According to the Minister of National Education, only 6 per cent of children are currently being taught in the private sector. The National Charter on Education and Training has set a target of 20 per cent to by 2010.

Most private schools are in urban areas, with shortages existing in rural areas. Presently, 47 per cent of private schools are situated along the stretch of Atlantic coastline between Kenitra and Casablanca, while the remaining 53 per cent are scattered among larger cities in other regions of the country.

This content was commissioned for Magharebia.com.
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comments

Oukaci Posted 2006-09-15

I think that the choice of the majority of Moroccans to generalize private education (I prefer the elitist education) in detriment of public education (I prefer the collective education) is a good decision. In that regard I will place our Moroccan friends with people that have realized that you can't rise to the respectable nation's level unless you invest in education: the secular education. Besides, education is a pleasure and requires enormous means that states can't give everybody, especially that: education is by essence discriminatory. Our religion taught us something: that we are not equal but that we have to apply justice. So to think that we can produce a nation with a collective culture is absurd. Good luck dear Moroccan friends.

abdeljalil eddahbi Posted 2006-09-15

Excellent article! Except the image...?!

khalid Posted 2006-09-17

Will the majority of the Moroccans meaning the less fortunate be able to afford it?

حسناء Posted 2007-03-27

The article in itself is excellent, but since you're talking about private education you have to put the picture of private education.

سقر Posted 2007-07-04

In fact the number of students in private schools have increased, here we're talking about the rich categories, as poor people have no share in these institutes. The system in Morocco has tried and is still trying to promote the quality and results of the private education in order to destroy and obliterate what's called public education. It has given importance to the private education which cannot be accessed by everyone according to the expression of the minister of National Education.

محمد Posted 2008-01-16

The article is very good and the topic is interesting. But it would have been better to show the source of the information.

طارق Posted 2008-02-28

A very interesting topic. Although Moroccans show an interest in private education, this doesn’t mean that the latter offers a good quality in education.

محند Posted 2008-03-25

I prefer private education because the results at the public secondary schools (ENS) these last years have proven that there is an insufficiency in teaching and a weakness on the part of the teachers.

رنية Posted 2008-08-11

It is certain that there is a big difference between private and public education. However, this doesn't deny that the private education has its drawbacks and that the public has its advantages.

najat Posted 2008-08-22

Please send me the latest ministerial decrees about public and private education in Morocco. –Thank you

Tariq Posted 2008-11-18

Hi,this is great idea and I'm in process of building a private school in Marrakech that shouyld open by September 2011. I totally agree with people that they should take their kids to private schools not public.

صخر Posted 2009-05-06

What is the monthly fee in a private school.

ahmed Posted 2009-08-23

In general, I think that private education is better than public education where there is a carelessness and lack of interest. I prefer to teach my children in private education.

hatim Posted 2009-09-05

I am a student. I want to study in a private school. I study in the first year of the baccalaureate.

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