Onderwys in die branding

Dit staan soos 'n paal bo water dat onderwys in SA vandag een van die aspekte is wat in 'n voortbestaanskrisis verkeer. Daar word al...

Woensdag 30 Januarie 2019

Onderwys in SA: Die waarheid kaalkop


Die toekoms van Christelike Afrikaanse onderwys moet gesien word binne die konteks van die groter onderwysprentjie in die land, ‘n prentjie wat pas deur TLU SA in ‘n mediavrystelling geskets is met die feite kaalkop soos dit is en sonder om doekies om te draai. Die mediavrystelling is slegs in Engels beskikbaar en word hiermee geplaas soos dit ontvang is.

EDUCATION IN SOUTH AFRICA - A MISCARRIAGE OF JUSTICE 
After 25 years of rule, the governing African National Congress (ANC) has a shaky record on almost all fronts. In 1994 the party was handed a top rate developed country on a plate. The ANC has added very little to this state of affairs, but they have destroyed much. The bulk of South Africans are poorer than ever, unemployment has skyrocketed, and nobody really knows the country’s actual population figures. This has led to unfettered crime, a breakdown in infrastructure and heavy tax loads on a few.
After gaining control of South Africa, it should have been an easy ride for the ANC. But a developed country needs some developed mindsets at the top. Revolution was a breeze but it soon became apparent that running an industrialised first world economy takes more than fists in the air and empty slogans. The party faithful should not have needed Black Economic Empowerment because the popular narrative was that they had been suppressed for hundreds of years. With the abolition of apartheid, restrictions were lifted and thousands of impatient black entrepreneurs and budding business tycoons should have descended on South Africa’s economic domain, laptops in hand ready to take advantage of the opportunities purportedly denied them in the past. This of course didn’t happen because had there been an historical indigenous entrepreneurial spirit, it would have manifested itself hundreds of years ago: Jan van Riebeeck would have found a civilization akin to other countries of the world when he set foot in Cape Town in 1652.
Alas the Dutch gentleman came upon what other explorers found as they sailed into the outer reaches of a Eurocentric world – a society in Southern Africa differing little from what was found in the rest of Africa and other parts hitherto unknown.
The entrepreneurial spark which had created great civilizations over thousands of years was lacking in less developed terrains, and the huge cultural chasm that was at the time so conspicuous between the settlers in Southern Africa and the people who had migrated southwards from Central Africa still in fact exists today. It manifests itself in many ways, but especially in the realm of education, attitudes to learning and what can be achieved from that learning.
The progeny of those early peoples in South Africa now find themselves locked together in a political system where the black majority rules while the minorities (whites and others) have the economic power and the knowhow needed to keep modern day South Africa afloat. This was not how it was supposed to be for the ANC. Whether through self delusion or wishful thinking, they imagined that taking the reins of power would be accompanied by the savvy to know how to wield those reins.
Billions of rands have been spent on black education with extremely poor results. It soon dawned on successive education ministers that trying to equalize outcomes across the broad South African spectrum was a pipe dream. The blame game was one of the government’s first forays in this uncomfortable situation: Bantu education was the problem. But many forgot that before the advent of the National Party in 1948, black education in South Africa had been a hit and miss affair. Under the British there was no formal education plan to educate the black population. That had been left by and large to the missionaries.
The prime minister at the time Dr. H.F. Verwoerd sent education specialists out to the countryside to see the chiefs and headmen about planning and building schools in the rural areas for the education of the blacks in their areas. There was stiff resistance - many chiefs questioned the need for Western-style education - they saw it initially as a threat to their hegemony. But the oft demonised “bantu education” was in fact the start of a process to try to bring millions of illiterate people into the modern world. It was a huge undertaking. There were no black teachers, and white teachers were sent out to rural areas to tackle a task which at the time was formidable.
Black languages had to be formalised where nothing existed except verbal traditions, and millions were taught to read and write. It was a rocky road and it is still a rocky road.
The ANC government has spent billions on black education in order to eradicate “inequality”. In doing so they have created a travesty - an education system where the results are massaged and where monumental self delusion is exposed in the tortuous manipulation of results which has now become par for the course in the education ministry.
RESULTS
In 2015, the ANC developed a system involving “progressed learners”. It entails pushing forward (progressing) over-age pupils who have repeated Grade 11 more than once. None other than South Africa’s trade unions have seen through this subterfuge and have questioned why pupils are “progressed” through to matriculation (school leaving) but where the majority of them are barred from writing the full final exams!
Out of the 128 634 pupils who failed Grade 11 in 2017 and were pushed to matric last year (2018), only 33 412 sat for all their subjects. Of these, 20 122 passed and 2 676 obtained passes that allow them to enrol at traditional universities. So of the national pass rate trumpeted by the Basic Education minister Angie Motshekga of 78,2%, a huge 95 222 pupils (around 63%) “progressed” matrics did not sit for all their subjects and were thus unaccounted for in the final result.
Of the total number of purported 128 634 “matric students”, only 2.1/2 percent managed a university entrance pass, while only around 27% sat for exams!
So what happened to the 63% odd students who sat in class and were financed by the taxpayer? Where did they go after they had been utilised to pump up “matric class” numbers, but who were in actual fact simply wasting their time because they didn’t write the full matric exams?
This ludicrous situation meant that teachers spent much time on students who would never write exams! Plenty of wasteful expenditure here! These progressed learners “solved the problem of overage pupils”, said Professor Larry Ramrathan of the UKZN School of Education Studies. But how was this problem solved? They simply occupied seats in class and wasted teachers’ time and ended up with nothing!
National Teachers Union deputy president Allen Thompson recently decried the government’s “progression” policy. He said it demoralised teachers who spent the entire year on matrics who were not allowed to write the full exam. He accused districts of “culling” progressed pupils just before they were due to write exams. “They are made to tick for a few exams so that they do not write seven subjects so even if they fail, this will not affect the pass rate”.
This is pure chicanery. It is a betrayal of black education and of those blacks who were promised “a better life for all” but who have been set up to fail so that the education minister can look good on the front pages of the newspapers.
Another trick up the sleeve of the Basic Education department is the “100% pass rate” travesty. The rural Gcewu High School in KwaMahleka in Pietermaritzburg’s trumpeted 100% pass rate raised eyebrows until it was found that only four of its 46 matric students wrote the whole exam. The other 42 students were encouraged to write the exams over two sittings, the second in June 2019. These “progressed” pupils were pushed into matric after failing Grade 11 twice. Whether they actually wrote the full exams later on is not mentioned.
Numbers count with the Education Minister, not the quality of outcome. In the Free State, some teachers told weaker pupils not to write the exams “because you will fail”. An example of twelve schools attaining 100% pass rate was printed in a Sunday newspaper but only a small minority of pupils wrote exams. This 100% pass rate was actually dishonest propaganda.
BUYING SPEECHES
A further manifestation of crafty results massaging is the new practice of parents buying speeches and essays on the internet. The whole point of an essay is to gauge the creative use of language and the ability to express oneself after researching a subject. This process is now completely lost. The concept of plagiarism is seemingly unknown.
Former education Professor Jonathan Jansen who is now overseas declared after the 2017 results that the SA education minister is guilty of “fake news”. “We know that 78% of SA children (almost eight out of ten) cannot read with understanding in Grade 4. A recent finding placed South Africa last among 50 countries with which South Africa was compared”. Says Professor Jansen: “Forget that we know 9% of Grade 6 black teachers cannot pass a Grade 6 Maths test. Forget that in some subjects the pass mark is 30%. In other words, ignore completely the available scientific studies of the actual state of the school system and pretend that the government is doing a good job and that the ruling party has delivered on its promises of a better life for all!”
This raises a question, says the professor. “What does it say about a government that celebrates the few who ran and survived the obstacle course from Grades 1 through 12 but ignores the majority who failed along the way? This education department is a disgrace to the nation. When the throughput of pupils from Grade 2 to matric is factored in, South Africa’s pass rate for the past three years ranges from 37% to 41%.”
EQUALITY
This is why there is affirmative action in South Africa, despite the fact that the ANC is in power. This is why Black Economic Empowerment was created where blacks are supposedly “empowered” by placing them in visibly prominent positions in already existing enterprises. In fact there is still very little sign of real black entrepreneurship emerging even after the ANC’s 25 years at the helm.
The problem is a serious one and is in fact tragic for millions of black people because they are expected to perform and excel within someone else’s culture. It is an injustice to those black students whose parents sacrifice everything to give them an “education” while they sit in school pretending to be students yet they are not allowed to write exams because they may spoil the Education minister’s fake results.
South Africa is indeed a very unequal society, but it simply mirrors the world at large. The only difference is that the haves and the have nots are together in one geographical area called the Republic of South Africa.

Vrydag 18 Januarie 2019

Regering meer militant op skoolterreine


ʼn Onrusbarende verskynsel wat sedert verlede jaar by die hoërskool Overvaal by Vereniging kop uit steek, is die militantheid van betogers by en op die terreine van Afrikaanse skole – militantheid nie net van betogers nie, maar wat ook deur Onderwysdepartemente uitgeoefen word en deur die Polisie toegelaat word. Pas het militante betogings by die Laerskool Schweizer-Reneke en Hoërskool Stilfontein voorgekom.
Te Schweizer-Reneke het die Noordwes LUR vir Onderwys Sello Lehari blatant in die skoolbestuur op die terrein ingemeng  en ʼn onderwyseres “afgedank” ondanks die feit dat sy deur die beheerraad aangestel is. Net ingryping deur die vakbond Solidariteit met ʼn hofaansoek in ʼn geval wat sterk rasgedrewe is teen die skool en die onderwyseres, het voorkom dat Lehari sy voorneme uitvoer om nog twee onderwysers “af te dank”.
By Laerskool Schweizer-Reneke het die Polisie die afstandsbeheer van die skool vir toegang gekonfiskeer en terselfdertyd toegelaat dat betogers die skoolterrein betree en geboue beskadig. Te Stilfontein het betogers ook fisiese skade aan die skool aangerig oor beweerde rassisme teen swart leerlinge.
Hierdie militantheid plaas ook ʼn groot vraagteken oor volhoubare Christelike Afrikaanse onderwys.

Donderdag 17 Januarie 2019

Plan om geskiedenis te transformeer


Na berig word, beplan die ANC-regering, in besonder die nasionale Dept. van Basiese Onderwys, om die leerplan vir die skoolvak geskiedenis radikaal te transformeer en dit boonop verpligtend te maak vanaf Gr. 10 tot Gr. 12. Vir hierdie doel is ʼn taakspan o.l.v. prof. Sifiso Ndlovu aangestel en het dit reeds ʼn voorlopige verslag met aanbevelings aan die minister oorhandig.
Die dryf is om geskiedenis te “dekolonialiseer” en dit meer “Afrosentries” te maak. Vir die doel daarvan word alle geskiedenis handboeke vir laer- en hoërskole herskryf om “die leuens, onwaarhede, verdraaiings en wanvoorstellings” te vervang met nuwe inhoud. Met die oog hierop maak die taakspan gedetailleerde voorstelle van watter inhoud in geskiedenishandboeke vir elke graad vanaf Gr. 4 tot Gr. 12 vervat moet word.
Dit kom in effek neer op verheerliking van die “struggle”–geskiedenis en meedoënlose veroordeling van “kolonialisme” en “apartheid”, m.a.w. alles van die blanke en in besonder die Afrikaner.
Derhalwe kom hierdie nuwe veldtog daarop neer dat die Afrikaanse kind en in besonder die Afrikanerkind op skool totaal vervreemd kan word van sy ware geskiedenis en tradisionele kultuurwortels. Gevolglik is die kernvraag, wat gaan uit die oogpunt van Christelike Afrikaanse onderwys gedoen word om hierdie uiters gevaarlike verwikkeling effektief teen te staan en te vermy?