Skip to main content

Education as the joint responsibility of society






Return to basics


Editorial, Business Day, Johannesburg, South Africa, 14 January 2010

THE new school year has just kicked off. To ensure we do not fail the class of 2010, it is important that we reflect critically on what needs to change in our underperforming education system.

We must stop acting surprised when poor matric results are released. The obvious truth is that a school career spans at least 12 years. We know, for example, that our primary school pupils consistently score worse than our international competitors — including other African countries — on comparative test scores for core subjects such as maths and science. 
Why then should we be surprised that science results in matric are poor? Poor matric results are not reducible to a single event, such as a teachers’ strike, that unexpectedly occurred in the final school year. They are the consequence of a poisonous mix of systemic failures that in turn requires intervention at various points of pupils’ educational journeys.

The poisonous mix includes facts endogenous to the education system — such as inadequate teaching skill, needlessly bureaucratic teaching assessment tools, and poor commitment on the part of educators — as well as exogenous facts not attributable to teachers, such as learners from poor backgrounds arriving on empty stomachs, unable to concentrate in class.

It is pointless trying to pick out the dominant driver of underperformance. We need to deal each one of these contributing factors a fatal blow.

On the teaching side it is encouraging that the education department has done away with the needlessly time-consuming and complex evaluation of each learner’s performance. Teachers should now start focusing more fully on imparting knowledge and developing basic skills rather than stressing about the methodologically fraudulent philosophy of outcomes-based education.

Still, even with these important changes the department needs to provide additional scaffolding to teachers such as ensuring learner support material arrives in time and school facilities are repaired or provided speedily. Sadly, many schools have already started the year with vandalised buildings. A bigger portion of the education budget needs to deal with material inequalities between schools.

As for the exogenous facts, it is important for national and provincial cabinets to see education as a team responsibility rather than as a singular departmental one. This means that interministerial, clustered interventions are necessary. For example, the welfare department should be roped in to help poor students. Hunger correlates with poor performance, and should be eliminated.

We can defeat these systemic problems. But to do so we must start seeing education as the joint responsibility of society, educationists and the whole of the Cabinet.


Comments

DomzaNet said…
This is a remarkable leader from the country's principle platform of bourgeois opinion. It could as well have bee written by the teachers' union, SADTU, for which I am working now (I started last month).

Popular posts from this blog

A warm welcome

. Why blog on ARS NOTORIA? I have set up this website,  ARS NOTORIA ,  (the notable art) as an opportunity for like-minded people like you to jot down your thoughts and share them with us on what I hope will be a high profile blog. . ARS NOTORIA is conceived as an outlet: a way for you to get things off your chest, shake those bees out of your bonnet and scratch that itch. The idea is that you do so in a companionable blogging environment, one that that is less structured - freer. Every article you care to write or photograph or picture you care to post will appear on its own page and you are pretty much guaranteed that people will read with interest what you produce and take time to look at what you post. Personal blogs are OK, but what we long for, if we can admit it, are easy-going, loose knit communities: blogging hubs where we can share ideas and pop in and out as frequentl...

Phil Hall: The Taleban are a drug cartel disguised as an Islamist movement

Truly the Taleban could have arranged as many bombings and terrorists acts as they liked in the UK. There are many Pashtun young men and women in cities in the UK who still have large extended families back in Afghanistan and who could be forced into doing something they should not. But guess what. So far there have been no attacks by Afghans on British soil. Why? It is a mystery. News comes from Afghanistan and the recent UN report that the Taleban and the drug trade are intertwined and that now the Taleban, who are mainly Pashtun, are officially in command of an international drug cartel.  News comes from Afghanistan that Taleban drug lords go to Dubai to live high on the hog and gamble and sleep with women and luxuriate in all the that the freedom to consume has to offer, while their footsoldiers, peasant fighters, are deluded and told that they are fighting a patriotic religious war.  And though they are told they are fighting a religious war what really matters to t...

Our Collective Caliban

At the risk of seeming digitally provincial, I’m going to illustrate my point with an example from a recent Guardian blog. Michel Ruse, who is apparently a philosopher, suggested that, whilst disagreeing with creationists on all points, and agreeing with Dawkins et al on both their science and philosophy, it might be wiser and more humane (humanist, even) not to vilify the religious as cretinous and incapable of reason. Which seems reasonable, to me. According to many below-the-line responses he is a ‘half-baked’ atheist, ‘one of the more strident and shrill New Apologists’ and, apparently, “needs to get a pair’. And that’s just from the first twenty comments. A recent article by a screenwriter at a US site was titled ‘Why I Won’t Read Your Fucking Screenplay.’ Tough guy. I wonder how his Christmas cards read. I’m going to sound like a maiden aunt dismayed by an unsporting bridge play and can perhaps be accused of needing to ‘get a pair’ myself (although, before you...