[civsoc-mw] Women demo on equality.

KPD maluwakpd at gmail.com
Sat Oct 10 04:01:58 CAT 2020


TC,

We never stop learning. Thank you and you are a lucky youngman.

Central region  had more seperate schools than other regions. (I believe).
Mtendere, Dedza, Likuni, Robert Black were exclusively for boys.

Nkhamenya, Lilongwe, Likuni and I think Lunjika were for boys. Mzuzu has St
Mary's and Blantyre had Stella Maris for girls.

Omwe ankapeza zibwenzi from Business Studies and Secretarial students were
mainly from mixed schools. Those from boys only secondary schools had to
make do with girld from Blantyre TTC.

I would say that system of separation created some psychological issues for
some boys.




On Sat, 10 Oct 2020, 03:46 trevor chimimba, <trevorchimimba at gmail.com>
wrote:

> KPD,
>
> Day schools were mixed. Boarding schools were mixed. There were girls in
> my class from from 1 to 4. BSS, Malosa, Mzuzu Government, Mzimba.
> Livingstonia. There were girls in my biology, chemistry, maths and English
> class in my freshman year. Law school it was an all male class (that does
> not prove any point: in the US there are more females graduating from law
> school than males).
>
> Sent from my iPhone
>
> On Oct 9, 2020, at 9:26 PM, KPD <maluwakpd at gmail.com> wrote:
>
> 
> Your time was my time.
>
> I thought those were day schools. Did we have boarding schools?.  In my
> post I said all schools without exception.
>
> The last time I was in a class with a girl was standard 8. I finished
> secondary school and university without girls in my class. Girls were
> admitted in softer sciences, nursing, teaching and secretarial studies.
>
> On Sat, 10 Oct 2020, 03:13 trevor chimimba, <trevorchimimba at gmail.com>
> wrote:
>
>> KPD
>>
>> We had boys only schools, girls only school and mixed boys and girls
>> schools. During our time the mixed schools were a majority. I doubt that
>> much has changed. So what point did I miss?
>>
>> Sent from my iPhone
>>
>> > On Oct 9, 2020, at 9:07 PM, KPD <maluwakpd at gmail.com> wrote:
>> >
>> > 
>> > TC,
>> >
>> > You missed a very small point.
>> >
>> > They don't have seperate girls and boys secondary schools. Whether
>> boarding or day schooling.
>> >
>> > What is the connection with migrant labour? Wasn't Malawi known as
>> labour supplier to central and southern Africa. Thousands went to Zambia,
>> Rhodesia and South Africa to work in farms and mines.
>> >
>> > My point was boys and girls grow together from primary to university.
>> They never separated like we did and that helped women challenge men in all
>> spheres.
>> >
>> > As for being aggressive, that was KBK and wait for his answer.
>>
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