Government Gazette
Vol.400, No.19377, 19 October 1998
GENERAL NOTICES
NOTICE 2432 OF 1998
DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION
NATIONAL EDUCATION POLICY ACT, 1996 (ACT NO. 27 OF 1996)
ADMISSION POLICY FOR ORDINARY PUBLIC SCHOOLS
The Minister of Education, after consultation with each Member of the Council of
Education Ministers, hereby give notice in terms of section 3(4)(i) of the National
Education Policy Act, 1996 (No. 27 of 1996) of the admission policy for reamers to
ordinary public schools, as set out in the Schedule.
MINISTER OF EDUCATION
OCTOBER 1998
SCHEDULE
ADMISSION POLICY FOR ORDINARY PUBLIC SCHOOLS
Interpretation
- In this policy any expression to which a meaning has been assigned in the National
Education Policy Act, 1996 (Act No. 27 of 1996) and the South African Schools Act, 1996
(Act No. 84 of 1996), has that meaning.
Scope
- This policy, read with me age requirement for admission to ordinary public schools,
published in the same government notice, applies uniformly in all provincial departments
of education and ordinary public schools.
- The admission policy of an ordinary public school must be consistent with this policy.
Purpose
- The purpose of this policy is to provide a framework to all provincial departments of
education and governing bodies of public schools for developing the admission policy of me
school.
Administration of admissions
- The Head of Department must determine a process of registration for admission to public
schools in order to enable the admission of reamers to take place in a timely and an
efficient manner. The Head of Department and the school governing bodies should encourage
parents(1) to apply for the admission of their children
before the end of the preceding school year.
- The Head of Department is responsible for the administration of the admission of
learners to a public school. The Head of Department may delegate the responsibility for
the admission of reamers to a school to officials of the Department.
- The admission policy of a public school is determined by the governing body of the
school in terms of section 5(5) of the South African Schools Act, 1996 (No. 84 of 1996).
The policy must be consistent with the Constitution of the Republic of South Africa, 1996
(No. 108 of 1996), the South African Schools Act, 1996 and applicable provincial law. The
governing body of a public school must make a copy of the school's admission policy
available to the Head of Department.
- The Head of Department must co-ordinate the provision of schools and the administration
of admissions of learners to ordinary public schools with governing bodies to ensure that
all eligible reamers are suitably accommodated in terms of the South African Schools Act,
1996. Subject to this policy, it is particularly important that all eligible learners of
compulsory school going age are accommodated in public schools.
- The admission policy of a public school and the administration of admissions by an
education department must not unfairly discriminate in any way against an applicant for
admission.
- A reamer is admitted to the total school programme and may not be suspended from
classes, denied access to cultural, sporting or social activities of the school, denied a
school report or transfer certificates, or otherwise victimised on the grounds that his or
her parent -
- is unable to pay or has not paid the required school fees;
- does not subscribe to the mission statement and code of conduct of the school; or
- has refused to enter into a contract in terms of which the parent waives any claim for
damages arising out of the education of the reamer.
- The governing body of a public school may not administer any test relating to the
admission of a reamer to a public school, or direct or authorise the principal of the
school or any person to administer such a test. Where placement in a specific course or
programme, e.g. technical field of study, dance or music, is required and where it would
be in the educational interest of a learner, he or she may be requested by the Head of
Department to undertake a suitable test to assist a placement decision.
- The name of a learner must be removed from a school's admission register when the
learner
- leaves the school after grade 12 or after completing the compulsory school attendance
period, or is granted exemption from compulsory attendance according to section (4) of the
South African Schools Act;
- applies for a transfer to another school and the transfer is effected;
- is expelled from school; or
- dies.
- If a reamer of compulsory school going age fails to attend school, the Head of
Department may act in terms of section 3(5) and (6) of the South African Schools Act,
1996.
Documents required for admission of a learner
- A parent must complete an application form for admission, which should be made available
to him or her by the principal of the school together with the admission policy and the
code of conduct for learners of the school. The principal must ensure that parents are
given whatever assistance they may require to complete the form.
- When a parent applies for admission of a learner to an ordinary public school, the
parent must present an official birth certificate of the learner to the principal of the
public school. If the parent is unable to submit the birth certificate, the learner may be
admitted conditionally until a copy of the birth certificate is obtained from the regional
office of the Department of Home Affairs. The principal must advise parents that it is an
offence to make a false statement about the age of a child. (See Births and Deaths
Registration Act, 1992 (No. 51 of 1992).) The parent must ensure that the admission of the
learner is finalised within three months of conditional admission.
- On application for admission, a parent must show proof that the learner has been
immunised against the following communicable diseases: polio, measles, tuberculosis,
diphtheria, tetanus and hepatitis B. If a parent is unable to show proof of immunisation,
the principal must advise the parent on having the learner immunised as part of. the free
primary health care programme.
- When a learner transfers from one public school to another, the principal must complete
a transfer card and hand it to the parent, or forward it to the principal of the receiving
school. The learner's transfer card must be attached to the application form for admission
to the receiving school.
- If the transfer card is not available the principal of the receiving school may admit
the reamer and place the learner in a grade on the basis of the following documentation:
- the last report card issued by the previous school;
- other equivalent documentation from the previous school; or
- a written affidavit of the parent stating the reason for not having the transfer card
and the grade the learner attended at the previous school.
Admission of non-citizens
- The South African Schools Act, 1996 and this policy apply equally to learners who are
not citizens of the Republic of South Africa and whose parents are in possession of a
permit for temporary or permanent residence issued by the Department of Home Affairs.
- A learner who entered the country on a study permit must present the study permit on
admission to the public school.
- Persons classified as illegal aliens must, when they apply for admission for their
children or for themselves, show evidence that they have applied to the Department of Home
Affairs to legalise their stay in the country in terms of the Aliens Control Act, 1991
(No. 96 of 1991).
Learners with special education needs
- The rights and wishes of learners with special education needs, must be taken into
account at the admission of the reamers to an ordinary public school. The South African
Schools Act, 1996 requires ordinary public schools to admit reamers with special education
needs, where this is reasonably practical. Schools are encouraged to make the necessary
arrangements, as far as practically possible, to make their facilities accessible to such
learners.
- Where the necessary support which would facilitate the integration of a learner in a
particular educational context, cannot be provided, the principal of the school must refer
the application for admission to the Head of Department to have the reamer admitted to a
suitable public school in that province or to a school in another province.
- Before the Head of Department refers a learner as contemplated in paragraph 23, the Head
of Department must arrange for consultation with parents, educators and other support
personnel concerned. These consultations must form part of the assessment of the learner
before the learner is referred to another public school. This process should be handled as
a matter of urgency to facilitate the admission of a reamer as soon as possible to ensure
that the reamer is not prejudiced in receiving appropriate education.
- Assessment and consultation relating to a change of placement must be carried out by a
team based at the school in consultation with parents, educators and other relevant
support personnel. The Head of Department of the province concerned must approve the
placement.
Age requirements for the admission of a learner to an ordinary public school or
different grades of a school
- Learners are to be admitted to public schools and placed in different grades in the
school according to the age requirements published in the same notice.
- If a learner has been admitted to a public school at an age above the age norm for a
grade, such learner must, as far as possible, be placed in a fast track facility, or with
his or her peer group, unless it is not in the educational interest of the reamer. In the
latter case the learner must be placed in a suitable lower grade, and an accelerated
programme must be worked out for the learner to enable him or her to catch up with the
peer group as soon as possible.
- The age-grade norm does not apply to a reamer who is already enrolled at a public school
on 1 January 2000, except that paragraph 27 may apply if it is deemed to be in the best
interests of the learner.
- A reamer who is 16 years of age or older and who has never attended school and who is
seeking admission for the first time or did not made sufficient progress with his or her
peer group, must be advised to enroll at an Adult Basic Education and Training (ABET)
centre.
Repetition
- A learner who has repeated one or more years at school in terms of this policy is exempt
from the age grade norm, except that, if a learner is three years older than the norm age
per grade, the dead of Department must determine whether the learner will be admitted to
that grade.
- In principle, reamers should progress with their age cohort. Repetition of grades seldom
results in significant increases in learning attainment and frequently has the opposite
result. The norm for repetition is one year per school phase where necessary. Multiple
repetition in one grade is not permissible.
- The norm is not to be construed as promoting the practice of automatic promotion. A
learner's needs must be attended to through the efforts of the learner, and his or her
teachers, with support from the learner's family and peers.
School zoning
- A Head of Department, after consultation with representatives of governing bodies, may
determine feeder zones for ordinary public schools, in order to control the learner
numbers of schools and co-ordinate parental preferences. Such feeder zones need not be
geographically adjacent to the school or each other.
- If a feeder zone is created
- preference must be given to a learner who lives in the feeder zone of a school or who
resides with his or her parents at an employer's home in the feeder zone;
- a reamer who lives outside the feeder zone is not precluded from seeking admission at
whichever school he or she chooses. However, access to a chosen school cannot be
guaranteed;
- a learner who lives within the feeder zone of a school A must be referred to the
neighbouring school B. if school A is oversubscribed. If school B is oversubscribed, an
alternative school within a reasonable distance must be found by the Head of Department.
If that is not possible, school A must admit the learner;
- the preference order of admission is:
- learners whose parents live in the feeder zone, in their own domicile or their
employer's domicile;
- learners whose parent's work address is in the feeder area; or
- other learners: first come first served.
- A school with a specific field of study, e.g. a technical school, must have much larger
feeder zones to accommodate learners with specific aptitudes, interests or needs.
Register of admission
- The principal of a public school must keep a register of admission to the school. All
admissions of learners to the school must be recorded in the register of admission. The
register must contain the name, date of birth, age, identity number, if applicable, and
address of the learner as well as the names of the learner's parents as defined in the
South African Schools Act, 1996 (see footnote 1) and their addresses and telephone
numbers, where applicable.
- Entries in the register of admission must be verified against the birth certificate or
identity document of the learner concerned.
- Officials of the provincial education department must have access to the register of
admission.
Rights and obligations of parents
- The governing body of a school must inform all parents of learners admitted to a school
of their rights and obligations in terms of the South African Schools Act, 1996, any
applicable provincial law. Parents must specifically be informed about their rights and
obligations in respect to the governance and affairs of the school, including the process
of deciding the school budget, any decision of a parent meeting relating to school fees,
and the Code of Conduct for Learners.
- Parents have an obligation to support their children to attend school regularly.
Home education
- A parent who wishes to provide home education for his or her child must apply to the
Head of Department for registration.
- The Head of Department will register such a reamer if he or she is satisfied that the
conditions stipulated in section 51 of the South African Schools Act, 1966, are complied
with.
Right of appeal
- Any learner or parent of a reamer who has been refused admission to a public school may
appeal against the decision to the Member of the Executive Council in terms of section
5(9) of the South African Schools Act, 1996.
"Parent" means
- the parent or guardian of a learner,
- the person legally entitled to custody of a learner, or
- the person who undertakes to fulfil the obligations of a person referred to in
paragraphs (a) and (b) towards the learner's education at school.