Publicado: 17 julio 2022 a las 2:00 am
Categorías: Noticia África
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South Africa/July 17, 2022/Source: https://businesstech.co.za/
The Equal Education Law Centre (EELC) says school governing bodies should have the power to hold underperforming schools accountable.
South African schools, particularly in rural areas, are entrenched in dysfunction with little to no resource allocation and are ill-supported to provide children with opportunities to excel academically, said the EELC.
Earlier this year, Basic Education minister Angie Motshekga announced the matric pass rate for 2021 to be 76.4%; however it has been speculated to be far lower as the official results do not consider the high dropout rate.
The EELC reported that in contemporary South Africa, approximately 80% of high schools are ‘dysfunctional‘. These schools predominantly serve black and coloured pupils, it said.
To address dysfunction across schools, the group recommended that parents and school governing bodies be empowered to hold underperforming schools to account.
The EELC said that:
To achieve a more competent education system, the EELC called for the broadening and clarification of legislation in the form of new sections to the Schools Act (58B and 16A) as well as the setting out of norms and standards that give detail on the identification of schools in need of support and appropriate remedial interventions.
When addressing a school’s functionality, the EELC said that it is necessary to take into account more than just a school’s academic performance.
There is an over-reliance on academic results as a means of determining the fitness of a school, sidelining other issues such as the shortage of teaching materials, lack of learner transport, socio-economic difficulties faced by learners and parents, as well as fetal alcohol spectrum disorder, it said.
More power to HODs
The EELC argues that the current regulatory framework for underperforming schools fails to give heads of departments (HOD) enough power to make necessary changes.
Current legislation requires a HOD to identify underperforming schools and take all reasonable steps to assist in the problem.
Annual reports on the academic performance and use of resources at the school are also legally required to be drafted by the school principal and given to the HOD, added the EELC.
Schools can further produce internal School Improvement Plans (SIP) that the HODs are then required to review and make recommendations.
According to the EELC, the regulatory framework surrounding schools fails to recognise that the school principal and leadership team are often part of the problem.
The EELC added that provincial education departments have found that, in practice, support from the HOD in developing a SIP is often very limited.
The law centre argues that the HOD should be more closely involved from the outset in developing plans to better or analyse schools’ performance.
Source: https://businesstech.co.za/news/government/605460/proposed-changes-to-fix-south-africas-dysfunctional-schools/
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