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Date
: 18/06/2004
Source: Ministry of Education
Title: M Surty: Education Dept Budget Vote 2004/2005
BUDGET SPEECH BY DEPUTY MINISTER OF EDUCATION, MR MOHAMED ENVER
SURTY, National Assembly, 18 June 2004
Minister of Education
Provincial MECs and HODs
Speaker
Director General
Deputy Directors General
Department of Education Officials and Stakeholders in
Education
Dumelang!
As we celebrate a decade of our freedom, we are reminded of the
valiant struggle of our youth on 16 June 1976, a struggle to be
free from the shackles of poverty and oppression - a struggle for
the achievement of our freedom and democracy. As we continue with
our democratic revolution for change we must assert the importance
of grounding our education on the sound ability to read, write and
count. We have to move away from repetitive regurgitation to
imaginative innovation. To free and fulfil the potential of our
learners, we must develop their cognitive psychosocial, spiritual,
perceptive, emotional, physical and moral attributes. This calls
for an inclusive approach to education and training. As we
celebrate our decade of freedom, we must ensure that we align the
ability of the learner with the needs of the nation and imbue the
learner with the values of sharing and caring.
This visionary task is eloquently and aptly captured by Dr.
Constance Moloi in an article entitled "Voices From An African
School", where she states the following:
"Teachers need to think in new, synergistic ways. What we do in our
classrooms has far-reaching implications for social welfare, the
country's economy and the quality of life within and outside of
school. We need to be prepared for the continuous stream of changes
in education and elsewhere, new learning and teaching strategies
and the changes that are happening all around our schools. Teachers
must have a desire to want to perform with compassion for learners
and passion for their work. Transformation is not something out
there. In our case it was a change of the mindset that carved
within a township an aesthetic space that became a symbol of
beauty, pride and success defying the hostile environment. The
lesson to learn from these experiences is: Be the change that you
want to see in the world."
The Ministry of Education is deeply concerned about the state of
service delivery in education, especially for the poor. We have
pockets of excellence, in both rich and poor areas. We have more
schools doing better, and less doing badly. Thanks to the efforts
of some local district officials, dedicated principals, and
committed teachers, we have schools that have risen above their
circumstances, and excelled in all respects. Schools like Mthwalume
and Buhlebethu High Schools in the remote hills of southern
KwaZulu-Natal, where the children walk long distances at night,
each with their candle, for extra classes. But we also have schools
where the conditions just do not exist for a proper education,
despite the best efforts of our teachers and pupils.
A recent review of school governance demonstrated conclusively the
extent to which School Governing Bodies have become a part of South
African life. However, it was also clear that many school governing
bodies were not acting in support of the transformation agenda, and
had in some instances delayed the racial integration of schools. We
will therefore be taking an active interest in the legislative
processes, and will review aspects of education legislation and
regulation, which have the unintended consequences of impeding
integration, representivity and equity.
We will also be giving much attention to a few provisions in the
South African Schools Act and the Employment of Educator's Act.
Some of the provisions have not had the desired effect, and in too
many cases transformation has been hindered, rather than advanced,
by the wonderfully democratic, but often misinterpreted, legal
framework we have established for public schools. We have developed
some high quality, self-managing institutions, in both rich and
poor communities, but when children are excluded from these, we
must ask questions.
We will also be looking forward to the Government Review of
Schedule 4 and 5 functions. We do so because we are convinced that
local government has a role, and should indeed play a greater role,
in supporting education. This they could do by assisting with
facilities like libraries, sports fields, and other assets that can
be shared by a number of schools, and by the community.
The same principle must apply in regard to teachers. We do have a
shortage of qualified math and science teachers. The shortage has
been there since about 1960, and exists in almost every country in
the world. As a Department, we have made a good start with the
Dinaledi Project (Maths and Science and Information and
Communication Technology ICT Strategy). Through this
project, we have been able to address the professional development
needs of our math and science educators, provide resources and
establish support structures for the selected schools. We are
currently exploring ways in which this strategy can be expanded to
more schools, particularly in the rural areas of our country. The
challenge for our Department will be on resourcing the targeted
schools if this strategy is extended to more schools. Furthermore,
we need to explore ways in which this strategy can become a pathway
for learner's entry into higher education. Our Department will be
working closely with the Department of Science and Technology on
exploring some of the alternatives available for our math, science
and technology learners. We will therefore be looking at the
recruitment practices within our system, to ensure a more equitable
distribution of the top school principals and teachers.
We intend to use these schools as valuable resources and building
blocks for the development of vocational skills desperately sought
in our economy, and, to enhance our limited resource in the field
of research and development, which is critical in the dynamic of an
invigorated global economy.
We have already agreed with teachers on a new career path, which
will allow for this kind of position, where an Education Specialist
can be posted at a school to service a range of different
institutions. In addition, the matter of salary incentives to
encourage teachers with scarce skills to work in hardship posts, in
rural areas and in townships is under consideration. This will help
to address the flight of children from township schools and rural
areas, to schools in the suburbs, which have better qualified
teachers and teaching facilities. We will ensure that even the
poorest child receives his or her share of the best we can
offer.
Adult Basic Education and Training has been identified in the Ten
Year Review process as one of the weakest links of our efforts to
enable our people to develop their potential to the fullest. The
uptake of ABET programmes has been improving at a very slow pace,
as has been retention rate. The next year will see an accelerated
effort to an increase of 40 000 learners enrolled in ABET
programmes. The Department of Education will also partner the
Department of Labour in diversifying the curriculum in ABET to
include learnerships and other career - specific programmes that
will be relevant to the needs of ABET learners.
Equally important is for the system to strengthen its war against
illiteracy. That war is a war that Government cannot win without
the assistance of non-Government organisations, the private sector
as well as communities themselves. We hope to mobilise our schools
to teach their learners the importance of social responsibility by
starting community projects to fight illiteracy within their
communities.
All of these issues are part of the Human Resource Development
Strategy for South Africa, which is a key leverage towards the
development of critical skills in the country that must be properly
monitored.
What is on offer is a world-class curriculum, underpinned by the
values derived from the Constitution. These values are captured in
the Department of Education's document called the Manifesto on
Values, Education and Democracy (DoE, 2001). The document addresses
values such as human dignity (ubuntu), non-racialism, non-sexism,
equity, respect, tolerance and reconciliation. These values
permeate all learning areas. Our understanding through this
approach is to contribute in addressing key human rights issues,
entrenched in our constitution. It is however, disappointing to
learn that some of the basic human rights for our learners continue
to be violated in our schools. For example, we are aware that
corporal punishment is still in use in some schools, when the
policy is so clear that this is illegal. Our Constitution has
entrenched the rights of human dignity, freedom from cruel and
inhuman punishment and the right of children to be protected from
maltreatment, abuse or degradation. We must dismiss as ludicrous
and foolish the argument that corporal punishment is acceptable if
it is reasonably exercised. Our children are vulnerable and need to
be protected. We cannot under any circumstances allow violence
against our children even in varying degrees.
We have spoken about the dignity of learners in relation to the
execution of corporal punishment, similarly our communities must
give expression to the right of dignity to our educators who are
often criticised and reviled by communities without due regard to
the impossible conditions under which they work. We have a
responsibility of elevating and enhancing the status and dignity of
our educators who are a critical resource in the development of our
current and future generation of learners.
Linked to the manifesto and values, is nurturing a culture of
sexual and social responsibility in dealing with HIV and AIDS.
According to the manifesto every expression of passion is
over-clouded in some way that in a grim irony, thrives, - depends
on the alluring intimacy of sex. The challenge for our schools is
to influence our children's' ideas about sex and relationships even
before the onset of intimate encounters, they would play a unique
role in changing the course of the epidemic. There are two primary
ways in which the educational sector should engage with this
challenge. Firstly, to use its position as the primary transmitter
of knowledge, skills and values to the youth of our society - to
raise HIV awareness, to disseminate information about HIV and its
transmission, and to help change the attitudes of young people to
inhibit the spread of the epidemic. This can be done within the
curriculum, using public media, through extracurricular activity,
and through the role modelling of teachers and other authorities.
The second way is to ensure that students and teachers who have
been affected by HIV are not discriminated against, and to ensure,
too, that they are able to live productively for as long as
possible.
Promoting awareness of HIV and AIDS draws on the constitutional
values of responsibility, respect, and openness, but it also
encourages the acquisition of these values, for it teaches young
people about the respect and responsibility that must accompany
sexual activity.
We all recognise that our new democracy has taken enormous strides
in the past decade and we must sustain this by inculcating or
nurturing a new patriotism amongst our learners who must fully
embrace our non-racial, non-sexist democracy. Our President had the
following to say about the new patriotism: "The new patriotism
requires us to proceed from common positions about the nature of
the problems our country faces. We must share a common recognition
of the fact that all of us stand to gain from the transformation of
SA into a non-racial, non-sexist and prosperous country ... no
people is predestined to succeed or to fail. No child is born
hating. Our neighbours, whether black or white, are as human as we
all are and as South African as we all are".
The former Minister of Education, Professor Kader Asmal, to whom we
are grateful for his enormous contribution to the democratisation
of education, had the following to say, "If arrogance is the old
patriotism, then pride is the new patriotism - and so out of pride,
out of the new patriotism, stems the very opposite of chauvinism
and xenophobia: out of the new patriotism stem the values of
tolerance and acceptance, of equality and democracy, of dialogue
and negotiation and conflict resolution that make us uniquely South
African; uniquely South African in the uniquely global universe
that is the 21st Century".
This patriotism must manifest itself in the activities of our
national flag flying at every public school, the National Anthem,
and not selected portions of it, being sung at all our schools and
events with passion and enthusiasm, and a respect for,
understanding of and pride in all our national symbols such as the
Coat of Arms, which are aimed at uniting us in our diversity.
The Department of Education will take over the function of the
National School Nutrition Programme (NSNP) from the Department of
Health this year. In the first instance the Department has managed
a smooth transition to avoid an abrupt exclusion of learners who
are already in the programme. The Department shall within the next
few months ensure that all schools in the nodal areas identified by
the President benefit from the nutrition programme and that the
programme progressively extends to rural and township schools by
not later than 2006. The Department will further ensure that the
programme is aligned to the resource targeting principle of the
Norms and Standards of the School Funding, which progressively
allocates resources in favour of the poor. In essence, 60% of the
poorest learners in Grades R to 7 will receive a nutritious meal
during the school days. The programme is seen as part of the
Governments integrated food security programme that promotes the
establishment of food gardens in schools and communities as a
sustainable means of ensuring the health of our people. The
Department will partner other organisations in the establishment of
food gardens in schools to enable our women and youth to develop
opportunities as micro-entrepreneurs within the communities where
the schools are located. We would like to invite communities to
make more use of our schools. Remember they are public schools, not
state schools! Use them after hours, for social, cultural,
religious or sporting activities. Make them the centre of your
community - a place that children feel at home. School sport
events, or music festivals, create a wonderful sense of community
spirit, and help also to seal some of the gashes that remain in the
fabric of our society. Curriculum 2005 points to the need to
develop a holistic education for our children. School Sport is
clearly a part of such a holistic curriculum - enhancing physical,
psychological and emotional health and promoting co-operation, team
spirit and sporting values.
The schools are the cradle of talent for national and international
level sport. While the nation insists on representivity in sport
(and correctly so), it will not happen until there is managed and
constructive development at ground level in the schools. In order
to enhance South Africa's performance at Olympic level and for the
2010 Soccer World Cup, the Department of Education together with
the Department of Sports and Recreation will embark on programmes
for development that will target learners and educators in
schools.
Among the other areas on which we will focus as a Ministry are
rural education dealing with vulnerable children in distress, drug
abuse, learner and teacher safety and also the promotion and
development of arts and culture in the curriculum.
You will no doubt appreciate how huge this task is, and we urge our
parents, community based organisations, civil society and private
entities to join hands with us in a social contract to transform
our nation into a distinctive educated and enlightened nation. Our
vision is a shared vision; our task must therefore be a shared
task.