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Egypt moves to redress teacher shortages in public schools

President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi instructed the appointment of 30,000 new teachers annually for a period of five years, but some warn that the shortfall is so large that even this figure won’t do.
Pupils attend a class at the Mahaba school in Ezbet al-Nakhl, a shanty town north of the Egyptian capital Cairo, on Oct. 13, 2018.

During a Jan. 18 meeting to review the draft budget for the next fiscal year, Egypt’s President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi instructed Finance Minister Mohamed Maait to include seven new measures in his plans. Among them were two related to the public education system, including the appointment of 30,000 new teachers annually for a period of five years, and a new incentive for teacher development worth 3.1 billion Egyptian pounds ($197 million) in total.

The aim of the mandate to significantly increase the number of teachers, according to the press statement, is to meet the development needs of Egypt’s public education sector, and the directive was praised by Education Minister Tarek Shawki as a “historic decision.” In a phone call to "Happens in Egypt" on MBC Egypt, Shawki expressed hope that the first group of 30,000 new teachers would be in place by the beginning of the next school year.

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