Soapbox:
Betrayal of conscience
By Mohsen Zahran
The latest embarrassing disclosure of wide-scale cheating and a
labyrinth of corruption in secondary education examination in Minya
governorate, and perhaps elsewhere in Egypt, exposed not only flagrant
deception but also a betrayal of responsibility, trust and conscience.
Officials at various levels in the education, security, health and
other sectors, as well as parliamentarians, have been implicated.
Although the attorney-general and his staff rushed to the scene to
investigate, the episode remains scandalous to the government and the
Egyptian people, for it revealed beyond doubt that the education system
is in crisis. Although cheating is not new, this tragic breakdown of
conscience has sent tremors everywhere in Egypt and abroad.
The sorry state of Egypt's education system has been the subject of
many studies, media exposes and conferences, it being deemed unfit to
propel Egypt forward and to meet the challenges of poverty, the pressing
demands of population explosion, and long awaited progress and
prosperity.
Corruption in education is known to involve teachers, administrators,
officials, parents and society in general. It is mirrored in a heady mix
of poor standards, archaic curricula, exorbitant private lessons,
profit- seeking private schools and universities, poor salaries, a
shortage of facilities and resources and over population. Diplomas and
certificates continue to be awarded at the expense of quality of
education. Students are trained in repetition and enter higher education
with scant comprehension or proper learning.
This crisis is not limited to education but finds parallels in the
service and production sectors, and in the political system itself.
Waste and temporary fixes abound, and society continues to flounder. The
current situation is akin to the bell tolling loudly -- a call for all
to wake up and act conscientiously without hesitation. The nation is in
danger.
Any hope for a promising future must rest on dedicated leadership to
institute urgent reform, coupled with a renaissance of attitudes in
service of extensive, intensive and comprehensive development on all
fronts and at all levels. The time is now and the place is here.
This week's Soapbox speaker is a professor of planning at
Alexandria University.