A 2027 deadline for mandatory Heritage-Based Curriculum adoption is about to shake up every school in Zimbabwe, from government classrooms to elite private institutions.
All Zimbabwean schools must adopt the HBC by 2027
All Zimbabwean schools must adopt the HBC by 2027
- Primary and Secondary Education Minister Torerayi Moyo announced that the Heritage-Based Curriculum will become compulsory nationwide starting in 2027.
- The HBC is built around Zimbabwe's natural and cultural resources to churn out job creators rather than job seekers.
- Moyo made the announcement while speaking in the Senate.
- Concerns that some schools were brushing aside Zimbabwe's history and indigenous languages drove the policy shift.
- Government, council, and mission schools already follow the Heritage-Based Curriculum.
- Private and trust schools under the Association of Trust Schools offer both the HBC and the Cambridge curriculum.
- Harare International School runs the International Baccalaureate, a Geneva-based programme catering to ambassador and diplomat families.
- Cambridge Assessment International Education administers the Cambridge curriculum used by some private schools.
- Any school wishing to hang onto the Cambridge curriculum must file a formal application with the Secretary for Primary and Secondary Education.
- That application needs to spell out exactly how Cambridge will run alongside the mandatory national syllabus.
- No automatic exemptions are on the table, and the HBC takes top billing regardless.
- International Baccalaureate schools like Harare International School fall under the same incoming legal framework.