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Building a future for Mozambique
Student activities
Click on the following links for further information about
this case study:
- Locate further maps of Mozambique, and the places named in the
case study, and record heights above sea level,
temperature, precipitation, natural vegetation and agriculture for each.
- Brainstorm in pairs how the lives of Mozambicans might
be affected by such factors. For example, how might the landscape
and natural vegetation assist or discourage agricultural activity?
- How might the temperature or precipitation affect
daily activities, or those at certain times of the year?
- What do these findings contribute to your overall
understandings of life in Mozambique?
- Imagine you had been given responsibility for helping
Mozambique recover after the war. Aside from building schools,
identify five other programs you would have initiated to help the
people. Devise a priority order for the programs. Give reasons for
your order.
- Write a newspaper article detailing some of the positive news
from Mozambique, perhaps by pretending to interview local people
for their opinions.
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- Mozambique's adult literacy rate has increased slightly in
the last five years, but is still only 37 per cent.
(Australia - adult illiteracy is almost 0 per cent)
- Sixty-four per cent of illiterate people are female.
(Australia - female illiteracy is almost 0 per cent)
- Of all school-age children, 69 per cent of boys and 51 per
cent of girls attend school. (Australia - almost 100 per cent
of school-age boys and girls attend school)
- Only 51 per cent of all children reach grade four.
(Australian - 99 per cent of children reach grade four)
- There are 55 pupils per teacher at primary school and 33
pupils per teacher at secondary school. (Australia - 17 children
per teacher at primary school and 12 children per teacher
at secondary school)
(Most recent estimates from Human Development Report 1995 and
Social Indicators of Development 1995)
- In what ways do you think your life would be different now, or
in the future, if you had only been educated to grade four?
- Use evidence from the story and the above statistics to
explain why girls are more often illiterate than boys.
- Explain how improvements in education could help contribute
to Mozambique's recovery in the long term.
- Education for women and girls is considered essential to
ensuring healthy families and communities, and for assisting women
to have fewer children if they wish.
- Many Mozambican girls are married with their first child by
their late teens.
- Mozambique has an infant mortality rate of 148 children
per thousand live births, and the world's highest under
five mortality rate of 282 deaths per thousand. (Australia -
infant mortality rate is 7 per cent; under-five mortality rate is
8 per cent).
- With contraception unavailable or not used, and cultural
beliefs in the need to have more children to care for aged
parents and make up for those children who will die young, the
total fertility rate is 6.4 births per woman. (Australia - 1.9
per cent)
(Most recent estimates from Human Development Report 1995 and
Social Indicators of Development 1995)
- Brainstorm in small groups how educating girls and women can
lead to healthier families and communities, and how education
can assist women in having fewer children if they wish.
- In what other ways might education assist women and
their communities?
- Individually, in pairs or in small groups, investigate one or more
of the following:
- the traditional lifestyles (for example, social
structure, relationships with the environment, food
production, quality of health and local trade systems) of Mozambicans
- methods used by the Portuguese to control the land, people
and resources of Mozambique from the early period to later
this century, and why and how the rule ended
- Mozambique's current and potential natural resources for its
own use as well as for export
- Present your findings as either formal reports, poster
projects, oral presentations, role plays of key events or
creative writing such as diary extracts, letters, short
stories, historical douments or interviews with
particular individuals or groups.
- Using evidence from the case study, roleplay or draw a set of
cartoon frames representing the typical day of a Mozambican girl
or woman.
- Estimate how many hours a day you spend watching television.
How would your life be different without television? Think of both
the advantages and the disadvantages.
- Returned Australian Voluteers, with a wide range of experiences, are often willing
to visit schools as guest speakers. Think of a work experience
or location about which you would like to know more and contact
your local Australian Volunteers International. (Contact details in Teachers'
notes.) You might also begin to consider if and how you could
become involved in future programs.
- Most of Australia's overseas aid to Africa goes to Mozambique. For
an overview of recent Australian aid initiatives, visit the
Australian Government's overseas aid program internet site
(click here), read
Focus, December 1994, or obtain AusAID's colourful publications
or statistical summaries of programs. (Contact details in
Teachers' notes.) Make a colorful
poster showing how Australia's overseas aid program assists Mozambique
or Africa in general.
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