Renovated Islamabad schools still lack classrooms
ISLAMABAD: Ayesha Imran, a 12-year-old student in the seventh grade, is one of over 200 students victim of negligence on the part of the public school system. Along with her classmates, she has been studying under the open sky, due to an absence of classrooms in her recently renovated school in the federal capital.
“I’ve had a headache because of the hot weather,” she said, fanning herself with her notebook. “It’s too hot today.”
Ms Imran is a student at the Islamabad Model School for Girls (IMCG I to VIII) Kot Hatyal, Bhara Kahu, where over 200 students are studying without classrooms.
Alisha Rubab, a sixth grader, said she considered herself lucky after seeing seventh graders studying out under the open sky. The sixth grade’s classes are held in the veranda, she said. However, the veranda offers them little respite from the heat, as there are no fans installed for them. In addition to the sixth grade, grades three and four are also studying on the veranda.
Students forced to study outdoors, new classrooms to be built once all schools renovated under education reforms programme
The federal government recently renovated 22 schools, including this one, under the prime minister’s education reform programme. The programme has cost millions of rupees, but these students do not seem to have benefited.
Last year Maryam Nawaz, the prime minister’s daughter, made a ‘surprise’ visit to this very school, and according to the teachers, promised that new classrooms would be built. An official from the Federal Directorate of Education (FDE) expressed surprise over the government’s move.
“The immediate need of students at government schools is classrooms, but the government after spending millions of rupees renovated 22 schools and are now going to repeat the same model [facelift] in another 200 schools, but no one is thinking about constructing new classrooms,” he said.