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Date
: 14/02/05
Source: Ministry of Education
Title: Pandor: Parliamentary Media Briefing
Statement by Minister of Education, N Pandor, MP, at the GCIS
Parliamentary Media briefings
14 February 2005
A rapidly changing labour market has necessitated the reshaping and
realignment of skills and competencies of graduates from education
institutions.
Curriculum reforms and institutional transformation at FET and HE
institutions in recent years have been geared towards ensuring that
learners and students are equipped with skills they need to become
economically and socially active citizens. The Annual FET
Conferences, the latest of which was held in November 2004, have
brought business and employers closer to education partners to
improve the relevance of FET College programmes for better
articulation with the needs of the labour market. In addition to
this, the growth in the uptake of learnerships has been
particularly encouraging in the light of the collaboration between
the Department of Labour and Education around the National Skills
Development Strategy implementation.
1. Revival of the Human Resource Development Strategy
The January cabinet lekgotla mandated the urgent revival of the
human resource strategy. The aim of the renewal of the human
resource development strategy is to ensure integrated human
resource development planning and implementation, monitored on a
national, regional and sectoral level, with progress measured
against approved indicators.
2. Skills development programme reform: SETAS and FET
colleges
There will be a massive campaign to reform further education and
training programmes to reinforce the institutional reform project
started in our public further education and training colleges. This
will involve better matching of the requirements of SETAs and the
employers they represent with public institutions providing further
education and training.
The recapitalisation of FET colleges remains a priority to ensure
the best articulation of our national skills strategy with the
programmes provided by colleges. The recapitalisation will also
require investment from the private sector and business.
Higher Education programmes are being shaped increasingly through
the funding formula and through the human resource development
requirements of the country and access to programmes for scarce
skills areas is receiving attention. The areas of teaching, science
and technology have been identified for improved enrolment. Student
assistance schemes will be refined and aligned to national
development needs so as to address urgent skills
requirements.
3. Improving participation and quality in Mathematics and
Science
In recognition of one of the leading maths and science teachers in
our country, Mr OR Tambo, a trust fund will be established and
supported by interested partners and friends of education in honour
of Mr Tambo. The trust fund will be named after this great teacher,
and will be used initially to fund, resource and equip those
institutions that contribute to producing learners and graduates in
mathematics and science under difficult circumstances. Laboratories
and other infrastructure, through this fund, will be provided for
such institutions starting with the 102 Dinaledi schools for
mathematics and science.
We will also be undertaking a strengthening of our national maths
and science strategy and an audit of the performance of the
Dinaledi schools.
We have undertaken to pay teachers in subjects like maths and
science more and there will be further information available on
this in the budget.
4. Improving Technology in education
Centres of excellence for technology in education will be developed
so as to improve the utilisation of ICTs in all aspects of the
education enterprise. These centres will be located in FET
institutions that will be identified by the Departments of
Education and Communication. These centres of excellence will
isolate best practice, develop materials and pilot and adapt
technology which exists for application in the South African
context. Already, the collaboration between the Departments of
Communications and Education has yielded fruit in the reduction of
Internet and telephone tariffs by 50% for schools, and it is
envisaged that centres of excellence for technology in education
would enable the digital divide to be narrowed for South African
learners.
5. Implementation of Curriculum 2005 at FET level from 2006
The implementation of the FET Curriculum in 2006 will complete the
circle of transformation of the schools curriculum. The preparation
for this is already far advanced. A national core task team
comprising curriculum specialists and officials from all provinces
are ready to embark on an intensive training of teachers, principal
and school governing bodies in the first half of 2005. This is an
initiative that has received and will receive continued attention
to ensure its successful implementation.
6. National Student Financial Assistance Scheme
Over the past 10 years NSFAS has assisted more than 400 000
students with awards amounting to over R5 billion. During 2005 it
is expected that at least 100 000 of the most needy students at
public higher education institutions will be assisted with awards
ranging from as little as R2 000 to as much as R30 000 per student
depending on need that is determined through a national means
test.
Last year over R200 million was paid back by past students and made
available to future students. This raises the prospect that the
scheme could become self reproducing in the future.
7. Mechanisms for tracking output, outcome and impact of education
programmes
The Department has established systems and databases (including the
Education Management Information System) that are used for
monitoring output, outcome and impact. Specifically, these systems
are being refined to ensure that they provide a cross-linked set of
information on different aspects of education institutions. When
fully elaborated, these systems will assist to enable the tracking
of whether the poor get a larger share of state resources as a
result of poverty targeting. The frequent amalgamation of
information from the infrastructure databases such as the School
Register of Needs, Examinations and Assessment databases, Personnel
databases, socio-economic and funding information provide the
opportunity for better tracking of provision of education, of
developments in education institutions, and in the quality of
education that is provided across the country.
8. Education Summit in Durban
From 10 – 12 March an Education Summit will be held at the
Durban International Convention Centre. There an action plan for
the next ten years will be developed that will place education at
the heart of our strategy for growth and development.