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As Yet Another Wave of COVID-19 Looms, New Yorkers Ask: Should I Worry?

DRIVEN by an Omicron subvariant, Covid-19 cases have been ticking up steadily across Manhattan, Staten Island and parts of Brooklyn, threatening New York City with a fifth wave of coronavirus cases just weeks after the city lifted many mask and vaccine requirements.

The city is registering about 1,500 new cases a day and a positivity rate of nearly 3 percent, both figures more than double what they were a month ago. In Manhattan, where the last wave also first emerged, the positivity rate is above 6 percent in some neighborhoods.

In another potentially worrisome indicator, the prevalence of fevers across the city — which can offer a forewarning of Covid trends — has reached levels last seen at some of the worst points of the pandemic, according to data from internet-connected thermometers.

And anecdotal signs of spreading infection are evident across the region. On Broadway, the actors Matthew Broderick and Daniel Craig have recently tested positive, as have New Jersey’s governor and at least three members of the New York City Council.“We may be done with the virus, but the virus isn’t done with us,” Brad Lander, the city’s comptroller, said after he tested positive last week. The Omicron subvariant BA.2, which the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention now estimates makes up 84 percent of cases in the New York region, is even more contagious than its predecessor.

But so far it has not shown the same explosive speed as the earlier form of Omicron, which in late December and early January propelled cases in New York City past 40,000 per day. Instead, BA.2 is causing a slowly but steadily rising tide of illness. It has yet to produce a rise in hospitalizations, and deaths remain low.

As the subvariant spreads, city health officials expect the entire city to enter the medium risk category in the next two weeks, a threshold that Manhattan has already reached, they said Wednesday at a coronavirus briefing for Mayor Eric Adams. Officials are not expressing alarm, but they are preparing to increase the number of city-run testing sites from the 130 now operating, if necessary, and to distribute some six million free at-home tests.Data shows that new infections have predominantly been among adults under 35, who are less likely to be hospitalized. If the subvariant spreads more widely among older people and in nursing homes, it could have more serious impact. Citywide, 83 percent of people 65 and older are fully vaccinated, and 56 percent have had one booster shot.

Dr. Wafaa El-Sadr, an epidemiology professor at Columbia University, predicted there would be an “uptick” in hospitalizations but not of the magnitude seen earlier this year when Omicron packed emergency rooms, stretched hospital staffs nearly to the breaking point and killed more than 4,000 people.

“I don’t think this is going to be like the prior Omicron surge,” she said.

Health experts point to several factors that make them think that there will be fewer hospitalizations this time.

For one, some 800,000 New Yorkers have received a booster shot since the Omicron wave’s peak, and more doses of antiviral pills are flowing into the city than before, though the most effective one — Paxlovid — would quickly be in short supply if cases rise precipitously.

Epidemiologists also note that in addition to high vaccination rates, millions of New Yorkers — by some estimates, over 40 percent of the city — were infected by Omicron and now are likely to have strong protection against BA.2.

The potential for a new wave, coming just as many companies are calling employees back to offices and Mayor Adams is pushing for the city to return to a prepandemic normal, has left many New Yorkers unsure if this is a moment to show extra caution or to carry on. Many, but not all, vaccinated people experience relatively mild symptoms from Omicron, including BA.2.New York City mobilized against the coronavirus as few other American cities did: from the 7 p.m. cheer of spring 2020, to widespread acceptance of indoor masking, to the most stringent vaccine requirements in the nation. But that collective effort has waned.

In interviews, New Yorkers voiced sharply varied views over how to navigate current conditions. Some questioned whether this was the right moment for the city to lower its guard. But others expressed confidence that after two years, four waves and nearly as many shots, they were sufficiently protected and ready to return to a prepandemic normal.

“It’s confusing,” Catherine Jordan, 80, said, as she waited for a bus near the Queensbridge Houses, the public housing project in Queens where she has lived for about 60 years. “You don’t know what to do.”

Until someone in her circle gets sick, she said, she planned not to worry — and to keep going to family gatherings, church and her senior center. “If I worry, I wouldn’t come out,” she said.

Tirsa Delate, a 28-year-old artist and server who lives in Bushwick, Brooklyn, described feeling “a sense of vagueness and uncertainty in terms of where we’re at collectively with Covid.” She expressed relief at not having to wear a mask at work, but added that the city should reinstate mask or vaccine requirements if cases rise to worrisome levels.

Still others said they conduct a quick risk assessment each time they step indoors — checking crowds, debating a mask, trying to recall the latest case numbers, wondering when it will ever end.“We’re not eating indoors or going to bars or a lot of stuff we’d like to do,” Jim Cashman, 47, said Friday afternoon, as he waited with his family at a Covid testing van near Washington Square Park. An actor, Mr. Cashman said he was worried that if he tested positive, it would mean canceled work, not just for himself, but for co-workers, too.

As he spoke, his 8-year-old daughter, who had been circling on her shiny blue scooter, slowed down long enough to offer a gloomy prediction. “You don’t see people wearing their masks anymore,” she said. “So many people are going to have it.”

Several people who tested positive in recent days said this was their first case of Covid-19 — a trend supported by state data. Of the 8,692 New York City residents who officially tested positive from March 21 to March 27, only 692 were known to have been previously infected, according to the state Health Department.

Until she tested positive in late March, Nina Kulkarni, a New York City public-school teacher, had managed to avoid the virus despite teaching in-person classes since the fall of 2020. She doesn’t know where she was infected, but she had begun wearing her mask a little less often after the city lifted its mask mandate for school staff and students 5 and older on March 7.

She called on the city to reinstitute the mask mandates in schools, saying she has started to see absences going up. City data shows a slow but steady rise in public school Covid cases recently, to an average of 363 cases per day from about 150 per day three weeks ago.

“I did relax the mask, and I regret having done that,” she said. “We all want them to come off. I want them to come off. I hate them. But they do keep us safe.”

Even if this subvariant causes fewer hospitalizations, some experts agree more should be done to limit transmission, particularly given the risk of long Covid.

Dr. Denis Nash, an epidemiologist at the CUNY Graduate School of Public Health and Health Policy, said that the city’s decision to lift mask and vaccine mandates while the subvariant was spreading was “cavalier.”

“Our decision makers have embraced this paradigm that the only Covid crisis at this point is when the health care system becomes overwhelmed,” he said. “And anything between where we are now and that extremely bad scenario is something we are going to accept.”

Getting an accurate measure of the outbreak is increasingly difficult, as more people now use at-home tests — which are generally not included in the city’s official case counts. That means the actual number of people testing positive is probably significantly higher than the official daily count.

Noting that cases were increasing, Mayor Adams on Monday indicated an openness to reinstating mandates if necessary. “We are going to pivot and shift as Covid is pivoting and shifting,” he said.

He decided last Friday the city would maintain a mask mandate for preschoolers that it had planned to roll back. But he has not yet said he would bring back other school mask mandates or recently abandoned vaccine requirements, such as the need to show proof of vaccination at restaurants to dine indoors.

A broad workplace mandate that requires private employers in New York City to verify that their on-site workers have been vaccinated remains in effect, as do vaccine requirements for public sector employees. However, Mayor Adams opened a loophole last month when he lifted the requirement for professional athletes and performers based here, allowing the unvaccinated Brooklyn Nets star Kyrie Irving to play home games.While the growth in cases has been most apparent in Manhattan below 96th Street, about 40 of the city’s 180 ZIP codes now have positivity rates above 5 percent, including Long Island City, Queens; Greenpoint, Brooklyn; and Pelham Bay in the Bronx.

In Manhattan’s West Village, which had among the highest test positivity rates in the city last week, Lisa Landphair, 62, a psychotherapist, was sitting on her stoop Friday afternoon, reading a newspaper. She still wears a mask in stores, she said, adding that her main worry at this point is that she might pass the virus on to her husband.

“My partner is significantly older than I am, so I’m a little more concerned for him,” she explained.

But Steven Lightkep, a 29-year-old nurse who lives in Hell’s Kitchen, said he was ready to be done with the pandemic. “You’re going to get it if you’re going to get it, and if you’re not, you’re not,” he said as he walked to a neighborhood gym late last week. “I’m not going to stop living my life over it.”

NEW YORK TIMES

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England state school pupils as happy with life as private school peers – survey

YOUNG adults and teenagers who went to state schools in England are as happy with their lives as their peers at private schools, according to a new study by researchers at University College London.

The research found few differences in mental health or life satisfaction between the two groups, which surprised the study’s authors because of the substantial advantages in spending on wellbeing and support enjoyed by those at private schools.

Dr Morag Henderson, of UCL’s social research institute, the paper’s lead author, said: “Although school resource is greater in private schools, the academic stress students face might be too and so we see each force cancelling the other out.”

The study – published in the Cambridge Journal of Education on Thursday – is based on responses from a national sample of more than 15,000 people born in 1989 to 1990 who attended school in England, and were surveyed as teenagers and later in their 20s.

“While these methods do not prove causality, the absence of significant positive effects implies that there is no evidence that parents who decided to pay for private schooling were gaining mental health and life satisfaction advantages for their children,” the authors stated.

The research measured participants’ mental health by asking questions such as: “Have you been able to concentrate on what you are doing?” and “Have you lost sleep over worry?” It found little difference in responses between the two groups before and after adjusting for factors such as social background and educational achievement.

Those who attended fee-paying independent schools did report higher levels of life satisfaction in their 20s. But after responses were adjusted to exclude the effects of advantages such as higher income, house ownership and better exam results, the researchers again found no substantial differences in satisfaction levels.

Girls at private schools did report better states of mental health at the age of 16 than their peers at state schools but the same gap did not appear at the age of 14 or 15.

The study concluded that “there is no additional advantage of private schooling with respect to mental health and life satisfaction” for the cohort it studied. But it cautioned that private schools have further increased their spending on wellbeing and pastoral support in the years since the sample group attended school.

Dr Henderson said it was possible that the increased pastoral support “was just starting to make a difference” for private school pupils, who she thought might have received more support during the Covid lockdowns.

“This is speculation but it might be that we see state school students fare worse in terms of mental health compared to private school students, post-lockdown. This question is ripe for future analyses,” Dr Henderson said.

Earlier research among those born in 1970 found that attending a UK private school was associated with “heightened psychological distress” among women. But since the 1980s private schools have greatly increased their spending on supporting pupils.

THE GUARDIAN

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‘Millionaire’ NSFAS student Sibongile Mani used as a scapegoat to cover tracks of actual criminals – Support Group

WENDY MOTHATA|

A SUPPORT group called the Justice for Sibongile Mani said that the Walter Sisulu student accused of theft of NSFAS millions was used as a scapegoat.

Briefing the media this week, the group slammed Mani’s conviction and sentencing to four years in jail.

“We believe she is not a criminal as proclaimed by some in the media. She is an innocent who is used as a scapegoat to cover tracks of actual criminals that are still out there roaming around without taking any responsibility,” the group said.

Mani is currently out on bail after she was granted leave to appeal by the East London regional court.

In a bid to keep Mani out of jail, the group announced that the president of the WSU convocation, advocate Thembeka Ngcukaithobi will help Mani’s legal team in appealing the sentence.

Mani’s matter will be heard on the 11th of April.

Businessman and “The People’s Blesser” Malcolm X has since pledged to pay R500 000 in a desperate attempt to get convicted Mani out of jail.

Mani was found guilty of theft after she allegedly splashed R800 000 of the R14-million on parties and designer clothes.

The money in question was erroneously paid to her by Intellimali, a service provider contracted by the National Student Financial Aid Scheme (NSFAS), in 2017.

Last week, the East London Regional Court’s magistrate Twanet Olivier said that a suspended sentence was not appropriate for Mani and sentenced her to five years in jail.

Olivier further said that Mani spent money not on essential items to stay alive, adding that she spent the cash on luxury items “inspired by greed and not need.”

“The court has a duty to impose a fearlessly appropriate and fair sentence even if such a

sentence would not satisfy public opinion,” Olivier said.

“The only form of sentence deemed fit by this court is that of direct imprisonment and you

are sentenced to a term of 5 years imprisonment,” said Olivier.

According to the state, between 1 June, when the money landed in her account, until 13

August, when NSFAS uncovered the error, she had spent an average of R11 000 per day.

The then accounting major student was due to receive her monthly R1 400 food allowance, but because of what was described in court as a “ridiculous and absurd technical glitch”, R14 million was credited to her bank account. 

INSIDE EDUCATION

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Student arrested for fire at University of the Free State’s Qwaqwa campus

Free State (UFS) has confirmed the arrest of a student, saying they are hot on the heels of more suspects responsible for the near total destruction of two buildings amounting to millions of rand in damages.

In a statement on their website UFS spokesperson, Lacea Loader, says that the preliminary findings of an urgent investigation indicate that the buildings on campus grounds were intentionally set alight. The fire broke out at the UFS Qwaqwa campus on Monday evening.

She says that they are in the process of identifying more suspects. The institution will initiate disciplinary action against suspects who are registered as students.

Criminal charges will also be laid against perpetrators.

Loader says the two buildings, which housed a clinic and a computer laboratory, were almost completely destroyed. Damages are estimated at R35m.

The academic programme at the Qwaqwa campus continues, mostly online, for the remainder of this week.

“The campus remains open; the university’s protection services is on high alert and is monitoring the situation on campus closely,” Loader says.

It is alleged that students have recently been unhappy about payments of allowances that they are yet to receive from the National Student Financial Aid Scheme (NSFAS).

“To alleviate this, the UFS has so far this year offered students allowances for food and books amounting to more than R71 million, while they are waiting for their NSFAS subsidies to be released,” Loader says.

OFM News previously reported that two students were allegedly shot with stun grenades during a protest march at the UFS main campus in Bloemfontein on Monday.

Reporting by local agencies

Uncategorized

UCT sits on the throne as the top dog for Sport Science in Africa

SPORT Sciences in Africa have the University of Cape Town sitting on the discipline’s throne after it was announced that the university has been placed top, not just in South Africa but on the African continent, for the Global Ranking of Sport Science Schools and Departments.

The rankings were determined by Shanhai Rankings 2021 Global Ranking, and highlight the performances of over 300 universities.

Among these, 287 universities and 13 sports universities with sporting departments or units were compared and considered.

Professor Vicki Lambert, the director of UCT’s Research Centre for Health through Physical Activity, Lifestyle and Sport (HPALS) said: “We are a small group of dedicated researchers, including 12 NRF-rated scientists, enthusiastic postgraduates and a wide network of international collaborations.”

“We are committed to translation of our work, that it is inclusive and ‘difference-making’ to policy and practice and that we innovate, developing bespoke solutions relevant to the Global South,” she added.

In speaking to eNCA, Lambert noted that a key strength for the University comes from international collaborations and that the ranking, which is in the top 14% globally, is also accredited to research published in the top journals for a discipline among other indicators.

The rankings are considered by looking at different categories, from papers indexed in Web of Science, to total citations, citations per paper and papers published in the top 25% of journals, as well as those papers marking international co-authors collaborations.

The achievement follows other triumphs from UCT for 2021, including the university leading Africa in five key world university rankings. These include the U.S. News & World Report Best Global Universities Rankings, Times Higher Education (THE) World University Rankings, Quacquarelli Symonds (QS) World University Rankings, the Center for World University Rankings (CWUR) and the ShanghaiRanking’s Academic Ranking of World Universities (ARWU).

UCT NEWS

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Zimbabwe: O-Level Results This Week

ZIMSEC O-Level results for November 2021 are expected to be out this week.

In a statement, Zimsec said it had met the time period of two months after the last examination for 2021 was written on January 31, 2022.

Last week Zimsec released November A-Level results and statistics showed a 84,67 percent pass rate compared to 80,98 of November 2020.

Zimsec attributed delays of results to Covid-19 mitigatory measures which caused schools to shut down for a long period.

“The December 2021/2022 Advanced Level examination results were released on 5 April 2022 and the Ordinary Level examination results will be released this week.

“The 2021 school calendar was disrupted as the Ministry of Primary and Secondary education had to put in place mitigatory measures to curb the upsurge and spread of the Covid-19.”

The ministry also moved the examinations to later in the year to give time to complete teaching and learning and full coverage of the syllabus.

Hence examinations supposed to run from October to the end of November were moved to start on December 1, 2021 to enable candidates and teachers to complete the learning process that had been disrupted, read the Zimsec statement.

THE HERALD

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Inside Education launches quarterly print publication for educators and learners

IT’s finally here. Inside Education has launched its quarterly print publication. The publication will be distributed to all schools, universities and TVET colleges across the country.

The quarterly print publication, edited by veteran journalist Phindile Xaba, will feature regular columns such as science & technology, classroom management, financial literacy, school sports and revisions, to assist learners to prepare for their exams.

Matuma Letsoalo, Executive Chairman of K and K Media Group, which owns Inside Education, said he was excited about the launch of the new print publication.

He described the publication as a resource tool for both educators and the learners- aimed at improving the quality of education in South Africa.

“The new print publication will not only serve as a resource tool for educators and learners, but will go a long way in improving the quality of education in South Africa,” said Letsoalo.

“Our content is aimed at empowering teachers, learners and students. It is also a tool for encouraging good leadership, ethics and good governance within the education sector.”

Flying high| Matuma Letsoalo, Executive Chairman of K and K Media Group, which owns Inside Education

Letsoalo said Inside Education will distribute 120 000 copies for free to all schools, universities and TVET colleges across the country.

He said the new print publication was a long time coming because when he first initiated the Online platform devoted to education and all related matters throughout the continent few years ago, he didn’t realise there was such an appetite.

“It’s unique position to close the vacuum covering the entire education process from Early Childhood Development (ECD) to Lifelong Learning saw it become one of the continent’s leading resource for educators, learners and students, a necessary tool to encourage good leadership, ethics and astute governance within the education sector,” said Letsoalo who is former Mail & Guardian Politics Editor.

“Today, our digital platforms reaches over 3,1 million audiences. It is for this reason that we are expanding to print so we can reach schools in rural, peri-urban and other peripheral areas across the nine provinces in the country.”

Xaba, who was hand picked by Letsoalo to become editor-in-chief, comes from a history of editing multiple education publications, including The Teacher, formerly owned by the Mail & Guardian newspaper.

She said she was quite delighted to work in the space at this crucial time.

“I look forward to contributing towards being part of the solution and thanks to the publisher for the opportunity. Together with the assembled team of highly professional media people, we only aim to make this a support resource for teachers, learners, ECD facilitators, tertiary institutions and all artisan training facilities.”

– Inside Education

Uncategorized

Inside Education launches quarterly print publication for educators and learners

IT’s finally here. Inside Education has launched its quarterly print publication. The publication will be distributed to all schools, universities and TVET colleges across the country.

The quarterly print publication, edited by veteran journalist Phindile Xaba, will feature regular columns such as science & technology, classroom management, financial literacy, school sports and revisions, to assist learners to prepare for their exams.

Matuma Letsoalo, Executive Chairman of K and K Media Group, which owns Inside Education, said he was excited about the launch of the new print publication.

He described the publication as a resource tool for both educators and the learners- aimed at improving the quality of education in South Africa.

“The new print publication will not only serve as a resource tool for educators and learners, but will go a long way in improving the quality of education in South Africa,” said Letsoalo.

“Our content is aimed at empowering teachers, learners and students. It is also a tool for encouraging good leadership, ethics and good governance within the education sector.”

Flying high| Matuma Letsoalo, Executive Chairman of K and K Media Group, which owns Inside Education

Letsoalo said Inside Education will distribute 120 000 copies for free to all schools, universities and TVET colleges across the country.

He said the new print publication was a long time coming because when he first initiated the Online platform devoted to education and all related matters throughout the continent few years ago, he didn’t realise there was such an appetite.

“It’s unique position to close the vacuum covering the entire education process from Early Childhood Development (ECD) to Lifelong Learning saw it become one of the continent’s leading resource for educators, learners and students, a necessary tool to encourage good leadership, ethics and astute governance within the education sector,” said Letsoalo who is former Mail & Guardian Politics Editor.

“Today, our digital platforms reaches over 3,1 million audiences. It is for this reason that we are expanding to print so we can reach schools in rural, peri-urban and other peripheral areas across the nine provinces in the country.”

Xaba, who was hand picked by Letsoalo to become editor-in-chief, comes from a history of editing multiple education publications, including The Teacher, formerly owned by the Mail & Guardian newspaper.

She said she was quite delighted to work in the space at this crucial time.

“I look forward to contributing towards being part of the solution and thanks to the publisher for the opportunity. Together with the assembled team of highly professional media people, we only aim to make this a support resource for teachers, learners, ECD facilitators, tertiary institutions and all artisan training facilities.”

– Inside Education

Uncategorized

Inside Education launches quarterly print publication for educators and learners

IT’s finally here. Inside Education has launched its quarterly print publication. The publication will be distributed to all schools, universities and TVET colleges across the country.

The quarterly print publication, edited by veteran journalist Phindile Xaba, will feature regular columns such as science & technology, classroom management, financial literacy, school sports and revisions, to assist learners to prepare for their exams.

Matuma Letsoalo, Executive Chairman of K and K Media Group, which owns Inside Education, said he was excited about the launch of the new print publication.

He described the publication as a resource tool for both educators and the learners- aimed at improving the quality of education in South Africa.

“The new print publication will not only serve as a resource tool for educators and learners, but will go a long way in improving the quality of education in South Africa,” said Letsoalo.

“Our content is aimed at empowering teachers, learners and students. It is also a tool for encouraging good leadership, ethics and good governance within the education sector.”

Flying high| Matuma Letsoalo, Executive Chairman of K and K Media Group, which owns Inside Education

Letsoalo said Inside Education will distribute 120 000 copies for free to all schools, universities and TVET colleges across the country.

He said the new print publication was a long time coming because when he first initiated the Online platform devoted to education and all related matters throughout the continent few years ago, he didn’t realise there was such an appetite.

“It’s unique position to close the vacuum covering the entire education process from Early Childhood Development (ECD) to Lifelong Learning saw it become one of the continent’s leading resource for educators, learners and students, a necessary tool to encourage good leadership, ethics and astute governance within the education sector,” said Letsoalo who is former Mail & Guardian Politics Editor.

“Today, our digital platforms reaches over 3,1 million audiences. It is for this reason that we are expanding to print so we can reach schools in rural, peri-urban and other peripheral areas across the nine provinces in the country.”

Xaba, who was hand picked by Letsoalo to become editor-in-chief, comes from a history of editing multiple education publications, including The Teacher, formerly owned by the Mail & Guardian newspaper.

She said she was quite delighted to work in the space at this crucial time.

“I look forward to contributing towards being part of the solution and thanks to the publisher for the opportunity. Together with the assembled team of highly professional media people, we only aim to make this a support resource for teachers, learners, ECD facilitators, tertiary institutions and all artisan training facilities.”

– Inside Education

Uncategorized

Inside Education launches quarterly print publication for educators and learners

IT’s finally here. Inside Education has launched its quarterly print publication. The publication will be distributed to all schools, universities and TVET colleges across the country.

The quarterly print publication, edited by veteran journalist Phindile Xaba, will feature regular columns such as science & technology, classroom management, financial literacy, school sports and revisions, to assist learners to prepare for their exams.

Matuma Letsoalo, Executive Chairman of K and K Media Group, which owns Inside Education, said he was excited about the launch of the new print publication.

He described the publication as a resource tool for both educators and the learners- aimed at improving the quality of education in South Africa.

“The new print publication will not only serve as a resource tool for educators and learners, but will go a long way in improving the quality of education in South Africa,” said Letsoalo.

“Our content is aimed at empowering teachers, learners and students. It is also a tool for encouraging good leadership, ethics and good governance within the education sector.”

Flying high| Matuma Letsoalo, Executive Chairman of K and K Media Group, which owns Inside Education

Letsoalo said Inside Education will distribute 120 000 copies for free to all schools, universities and TVET colleges across the country.

He said the new print publication was a long time coming because when he first initiated the Online platform devoted to education and all related matters throughout the continent few years ago, he didn’t realise there was such an appetite.

“It’s unique position to close the vacuum covering the entire education process from Early Childhood Development (ECD) to Lifelong Learning saw it become one of the continent’s leading resource for educators, learners and students, a necessary tool to encourage good leadership, ethics and astute governance within the education sector,” said Letsoalo who is former Mail & Guardian Politics Editor.

“Today, our digital platforms reaches over 3,1 million audiences. It is for this reason that we are expanding to print so we can reach schools in rural, peri-urban and other peripheral areas across the nine provinces in the country.”

Xaba, who was hand picked by Letsoalo to become editor-in-chief, comes from a history of editing multiple education publications, including The Teacher, formerly owned by the Mail & Guardian newspaper.

She said she was quite delighted to work in the space at this crucial time.

“I look forward to contributing towards being part of the solution and thanks to the publisher for the opportunity. Together with the assembled team of highly professional media people, we only aim to make this a support resource for teachers, learners, ECD facilitators, tertiary institutions and all artisan training facilities.”

– Inside Education