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82% of grade 4 school kids can’t read this headline

DATA from the latest Background Report for the 2030 Reading Panel has found that most children entering grade 2 do not know the alphabet, while 82% of fourth graders cannot read for meaning – among other disturbing results.

According to GroundUp, the report found that nothing short of a sustained countrywide overhaul of the education system could lead to the ultimate goal of all children over the age of ten being able to read for meaning by 2030.

The 2030 Reading Panel is a group of leaders and researchers convened by former Deputy President Phumzile Mlambo-Ngcuka that looks to guide education in South Africa.

Extrapolating from Western Cape data, the report estimated that the share of grade 4 children that cannot read for meaning has increased to at least 82%, from 78% recorded in 2016.

The report found that about 60% of children have not learned most of the letters of the alphabet by the end of grade one, citing data from the Department of Basic Education (DBE) Early Grade Reading Study (EGRS), which has followed children from over 200 schools for more than seven years in the North West province.

By the end of Grade 2, over 30% still don’t know all the alphabet letters. The report also found that these children are “perpetually behind and in ‘catch-up’ mode, although they never actually catch up”.

Little is being done in the country to ensure that literacy is prioritised, the researchers said.

Nationally, the DBE is not giving the reading for meaning crisis-specific attention, said GroundUp.

Despite claims to the contrary from the DBE, the report found that there is no National Reading Plan and that the most recent “National Reading Strategy” was published in 2008.

In the 2022 Education Budget Vote, the budget specifically allocated for reading is R11 million to the Early Grade Reading Assessment. This targets 18 schools. The DBE only managed to reach nine schools, it reported.

Teacher shortage

Adding to the problems is the fact that South Africa faces a looming teacher crisis.

Half of all teachers are above the age of 50 and are set to retire soon, affecting teaching and learning in South Africa, the researchers noted.

According to the latest data, since 2016, universities have increased teacher supply, but provinces have not increased hiring, leading to larger class sizes.

Paul Esterhuizen, the chief executive of education NGO School Days, said that the department of education is not hiring an adequate number of teachers to replace the workforce.

He added that government needs to make it far more attractive for younger people – one way of doing so is by revising the occupation’s salary.

The report said that: “Despite younger teachers having lower salaries than older teachers, the retirement wave is unlikely to lead to large cost-savings on salaries due to a change in 2019 where teachers earn 1.5% more per year instead of the previous 1% more per year.”

“In early 2022, it was expected that replacing older (more expensive) teachers with younger (less expensive) teachers would lead to an overall cost-saving. This is no longer the case.

“Modelling at the end of 2022 shows that the average 2.9% decline in the cost of senior teachers is completely offset by the overall increase for teachers as a whole of 1.8%,” noted the report.

Business Tech

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I introduced social entrepreneurship to my trainee teachers – why it’ll make them better at their jobs

Zayd Waghid

THE daily headlines from South Africa are largely gloomy. The country’s government seems unable to address a years-long electricity crisis that is steadily worsening. Unemployment is high. Food prices are climbing.

But there are pockets of excellence – like stories of social entrepreneurship, an approach that uses business principles to create positive social and environmental impact. It involves identifying social problems using entrepreneurial principles to develop, fund, and implement solutions.

Though entrepreneurship of any kind is not easy, it can instil incredible tenacity in the face of adversity. There are lessons here. For the past seven years I’ve sought to help trainee teachers harness those lessons by introducing them to the concept of social entrepreneurship.

To do so, I start with “Who Cares?”, a documentary by Brazilian filmmaker Mara Mourão. It’s about social entrepreneurs from seven countries who discover new and innovative ways to solve some of society’s most pressing matters. They do so while working with few resources and catering to fundamental human needs that governments, particularly in the global south, cannot provide.

I use this film in my classes to assist future teachers in understanding how global problems influence countries and to encourage students to think critically and imaginatively about ways to help lessen inequality in their communities.

This is critical for teachers. Many of the students who graduate from our programme will go on to work in disadvantaged communities where social entrepreneurship could create real change. It could also give pupils a chance to explore how they might pursue social entrepreneurship as a career.

How it started

The major aim of existing school and university curricula is to prepare students for higher education and to acquire a degree and subsequently work for a company. The emphasis is on improving people’s own lives rather than thinking about how to assist the communities in which they reside. By teaching my students about social entrepreneurship, I offer them a practical way to enact social justice. This is the notion that everyone should have equal rights and opportunities in society’s social, economic, and political spheres.

In 2016, I set out to study whether a group of 43 future teachers could grasp and apply the concept of social entrepreneurship. I was drawn to social entrepreneurship education because it often incorporates hands-on, experiential learning, which may be more interesting and beneficial for students than traditional classroom instruction. This was appealing: it would allow me to see the effect of my teaching on real-world issues.

Mourão’s 2013 documentary delves into the lives of social entrepreneurs such as Nobel Prize winner Muhammad Yunus of Bangladesh, as well as others from Brazil, Peru, Tanzania, Canada, Germany, Switzerland and the United States, whose socially beneficial ventures have significantly and positively affected certain communities.

Prior to seeing the documentary, hardly any of the students understood what social entrepreneurship was. Some students saw a clear connection between it and corporate social responsibility. The latter, though, is more concerned with the financial and social aims of increasing a company’s competitiveness than with improving people’s lives.

Subsequent cohorts of trainee teachers have also not initially grasped the concept of social entrepreneurship. The rigid South African school curriculum appears to be the root cause of this conceptual gap. Most young people are not given the chance at school to think critically and creatively, and the curriculum doesn’t offer enough opportunities for students to learn about or implement social entrepreneurship.

Towards establishing a community

The film, both for the initial cohort whose reactions I documented in a research paper, and for those who have followed, seemed to spark the students’ curiosity. It also showed them that seemingly small projects can count as entrepreneurship. Creating a vegetable garden at school is a way to teach learners the necessary skills and knowledge to be self-sufficient and aware of economic and environmental sustainability.

But what would this look like in practice?

To find out, the 2016 cohort and I identified a historically underprivileged high school in Cape Town where we hoped to help develop various sorts of social innovation and entrepreneurship.

Then we discovered that the school was already involved in a community engagement project through an annual market day. The proceeds were used to host an annual awareness campaign aimed at recognising, appreciating, and honouring the contributions of elderly South African citizens in the community.

Rather than starting something new, the trainee teachers worked with pupils taking part in the market day to help build their social ventures. This involved applying what they learned from “Who Cares?” to develop business plans.

And they learned about another important aspect of social entrepreneurship: listening to communities rather than assuming they know how to solve existing problems. Communities can enlighten universities about what needs to happen, what is already being done, and what collaboration might look like, as seen in the example of the school above.

(Zayd Waghid, Associate professor, Cape Peninsula University of Technology)

THE CONVERSATION

Relebogile High school learners in danger after large sinkhole appears
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Relebogile High school learners in danger after large sinkhole appears

Gauteng Department of Education urged to urgently send engineers to Relebogile High School in Khutsong, where a large sinkhole has emerged, said DA Gauteng Shadow MEC for Education Khume Ramulifho.

The sinkhole at the Relebogile High School in the West Rand has affected the toilets and left holes in certain parts of the building.

”The DA is urging the department to send engineers to assess whether it is safe for our learners and teachers to continue using the school. This must also include the disaster management team to ensure that all necessary precautions are put in place,”  Ramulifho said.

Ramulifho said should it be found that it is unsafe to use the school or parts of the school, the department must urgently ensure that learners and teachers are relocated to a safe place where learning and teaching can take place without any further interruption.

Khutsong is known for having sinkholes, which become more prevalent after heavy rains. 

”The DA will be following up with the department on this issue. All our learners deserve to be taught in a safe environment that is conducive to learning and teaching,”  Ramulifho added. 

In 2011, a study by the department of education in Gauteng revealed that 153 schools were in high-risk dolomitic areas. A total of 500 schools in the province were built on dolomite.

In the Gauteng province in general, about 38 people have lost their lives so far as a result of sink holes. 

INSIDE EDUCATION 

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Veteran journalist Edwin Naidu appointed editor of Inside Education’s print edition

PHUTI MOSOMANE

SEASONED journalist Edwin Naidu has been appointed editor of Inside Education’s print edition, published four times a year and distributed free of charge to every school, university and college in the country.

Naidu is an experienced communicator in financial services and worked with some of South Africa’s best-known media publications. A former editor of the Teacher at the M&G, he has written extensively on education since 1992, writing for, among others, Sunday Independent, Mail & Guardian and University World News.

A former night news editor on the Star, Naidu has a media degree in journalism and media studies from Wits University and has been on scholarships to Oxford University in London and World Press Institute in the US.

He has written extensively on transformation, gender, climate change, and energy happenings on the continent, including contributing to two books: Nelson Mandela Opus (the world’s largest book on Mandela) and 100 The Mandela Years.

Won or received several accolades for reporting: In 2018, Naidu won the Mandy Roussow award for Great Idea in the Media Monitoring Africa lsu Elihle Awards.

He also won 3rd prize for his three-part article highlighting the issue of malnutrition and its impact on children in
South Africa and Africa.

Naidu is a finalist in the UN Women Gender Journalism Awards for a report in the Sunday Independent in 2021.

He is a past winner of the South African National Energy Award for best reporting, recipient of print story Gender education media awards, winner in the economics category: Gender Education Media Awards (2006), Second Runner in Higher Education Awards 2005, and a winner of the International Federation of Journalists’ Tolerance Prize for Peace, among other journalism accolades.

“Edwin is a respected and credible writer and voice on higher education in media. We are proud to have him on board and look forward to his steward as we strive to make Inside Education an authoritative education voice,” said Matuma Letsoalo, the executive chairman and founder of K&K Media Group, which owns two digital publications- Inside Education and Inside Politics.

INSIDE EDUCATION

Deputy Minister of Transport Sindisiwe Chikunga hands over 257 bicycles to Limpopo learners
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Deputy Minister of Transport Sindisiwe Chikunga hands over 257 bicycles to Limpopo learners

PHUTI MOSOMANE

DEPUTY Minister of Transport Sindisiwe Chikunga has handed over 257 bicycles to deserving learners at the Shirelele and Hlalukweni Secondary Schools in Limpopo.

The event was part of a back-to-school campaign with the Limpopo Department of Education held at the Collins Chabane Local Municipality in Vhembe District on Monday.

The national Department of Transport has been providing low-cost mobility solutions to learners, through the Shova Kalula Bicycle programme since 2001.

The goal to provide one million bicycles to learners countrywide, who walk a distance of 3 kilometers or more to school.

Chikunga said in the current financial year, Limpopo province has a total of 69 005 learners that need transport.

”There are 257 learners in two schools that have been verified to receive bicycles in Shirelele Secondary School (107) and Hlalukweni Secondary School (150) today,” Chikunga told parents and learners. 

The number of schools that have been identified in the Vhembe District is six (6), in four (4) municipalities.

The names of the schools included Shirelele Secondary School in Collins Chabane Local Municipality, Hlalukweni Secondary School in Collins Chabane Local Municipality, Maruluwe Secondary School in Musina Local Municipality, Mulenga Secondary Schools in Makhado Local Municipality and Rambuda Secondary School in Thulamela Local Municipality.

Chikunga implored all the beneficiaries to practice all that they have been taught during the safety induction and training as it is intended to empower them to stay safe on roads. 

”We urge you to also put to good use the road safety kits that you have received such as your helmet and reflector vests,” Chikunga added.
 
She said encouraged learners and their families who are living in poverty to never give up despite challenges experienced everyday including the absence of transport money, the full school uniform and shoes. 

”Please continue learning without barriers and we are here to give you your dignity back. So that you can walk tall towards your dreams,” Chikunga said. 
 
She urged teachers to not only open the doors of learning for children, but to provide the conditions in which they can learn: ‘An enabling and safe environment between a teacher and a learner, you are the parents to these children.  Teach them and protect them as you would to your own child. I wish you all the recipients a happy ride and to you all I wish you happy returns, may this be a good year for us all.”

Under non-motorized transport, the Department of transport has a bicycle distribution programme called Shova Kalula. The Shova Kalula Programme compliments the learner transport programme by focusing on learners who walk less than 5 km and walk more than 3 km to schools. 

”I hope that they have imparted to you some important life-saving education on the rules of riding a bicycle on the road and that you will practice what you have learned from them. As part of being responsible road users, it is important that as we handover the bicycles to you, you are able to understand basic road safety education; and have the capability to ride a bicycle,” Chikunga told learner. 

The Shova Kalula bicycle programme is an initiative of the Department of Transport.

The Department has so far distributed over 100 000 bicycles to learners in all provinces since the inception of the project.

The objective of the programme is to promote cycling and provide for a low-cost mobility solution, which shall enhance rural accessibility and urban mobility to enable the poor communities to participate in socio- economic opportunities,
including schooling.

Travel times of learners to schools are significantly reduced which has positive effect in the academic performance and school attendance.

The Shova Kalula National Bicycle project was introduced as a pilot project in 2001 in order to improve mobility and access to basic needs.
 
The programme aims to alleviate transport pressure on poor households and ensure access to public transport.

The National Department of Transport and provincial departments are implementing the project and the National Department is responsible for the overall performance and coordination of the project, procurement and delivery of
bicycles at the national level.
 

On the other hand, provinces are also required to procure and distribute bicycles to support the project, identify beneficiaries in consultation with the Department of Basic Education and assist with cycling safety education awareness at selected schools.

The project aims to support the Department’s National Learner Transport Policy, Rural Transport Strategy and the promotion of Non-Motorised Transport to access basic services and opportunities.
 
Provincial Departments of Transport and Education undertake the identification and selection of beneficiaries for bicycles in accordance with the following approved criteria in which learners must:

 Walk more than three (3) kilometres as a single trip to the school;
 Be between Grade 3 and Grade 12;
 Be able to understand basic road safety education; and
 Have the capability to ride a bicycle.

In the province of Limpopo, the programme is managed and implemented by the Department of Education in collaboration with the provincial Department of Transport.
 
The policy provides for the provision of learner transport through motorized (buses/taxis) and non-motorized transport (bicycles and walking).

This is meant to ensure that the department complements the existing learner transport programme in provinces, as there are learners who still walk more than 5km to schools.

She said while the department understands the importance of easing mobility through this programme, ”we are aware that much must still be done to ensure the safety of riders to and from schools.” 

Road Safety Education, Awareness and Training will be provided to the beneficiaries of the bicycles to ensure that learners have a full understanding of the road safety issues when riding the bicycles.

The Provincial Department of Transport in collaboration with the National Department of Transport has and will continue conducting the training. Dignitaries included executive mayor of Vhembe District Municipality Nengunda
Dowelani, executive mayor of Collins Chabane Local Municipality Shadrack Maluleke, and some traditional leaders present.

Transport deputy minister Sindiswa Chikunga. PHOTO: SUPPLIED

INSIDE EDUCATION

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ChatGPT in Classrooms: What to Know

ASK ChatGPT to write a five-paragraph essay on the symbolism of “The Great Gatsby”and it will produce a response within seconds. Plug in an algebra equation and it can solve it almost instantly and even explain its process.

That’s not all. The capabilities of the artificial intelligence chatbot tool, launched in November 2022 by San Francisco-based startup OpenAI, are vast. It can fix spelling and grammar errors, give feedback on writing, write poems and songs, create lesson plans for teachers and much more. It does it all in human-sounding text and with high efficiency.

Though ChatGPT is still in its infancy and limited in some ways, it has the attention of school administrators, teachers, parents and students, and its presence has garnered mixed responses, experts say. It’s brought ethical questions about how AI fits in education, and the potential for plagiarism and cheating is cause enough for some to shun the website altogether.

New York City Public Schools, the largest school district in the U.S., announced in early January 2023 that it was banning ChatGPT across all district devices and networks. Other big city districts like Seattle, Baltimore and Los Angeles have also blocked access to the app, and more may soon follow.

Some, however, say they’re excited about its potential to advance learning for some students and become a valuable tool in education. Those teachers are envisioning ways to adapt their teaching to incorporate it in their lessons, experts say.

“It’s been quite fascinating to see the education field react faster than I think I’ve ever seen them react to a new technology,” says Torrey Trust, associate professor of learning technology at the University of Massachusetts—Amherst.

As schools across the U.S. decide whether ChatGPT has a place in the classroom, here’s what parents and students should know.

What Is Different About ChatGPT?

As society has evolved technologically, so has education. Computers, cellphones, calculators and the internet have found a place in the classroom. Spellcheck and grammar-checking websites are also widely accepted tools, as are more advanced technologies like speech-to-text software and voice AI like Siri, Google Voice and Amazon Alexa.

So what makes ChatGPT different? Why is it generating such polarizing responses?

“From what I can tell, ChatGPT seems to be one of the most advanced natural language processing tools out there to date,” Trust says. “There’s something with this tool, with the simplicity of the user interface design, that anyone can log on and try it out. When you insert a prompt, what it comes back with is so close to what another human might say.”

ChatGPT is a “large language model,” which means it’s able to generate readable text on demand in a wide range of styles and for a variety of purposes. It can perform those tasks with noticeably more accuracy and coherence than previous models, experts say. Plus, ChatGPT is designed to be user-friendly, and it’s free.

Trust says ChatGPT has made AI visible in a way other technologies haven’t. Its capabilities have left some in awe while others, she says, feel “panicked” by its potential ramifications.

AI is present “through streaming recommendations, facial recognition to get into your phone or notifications and apps,” she says. “It’s around us, but it’s not something I think people think about on a daily basis. Something about this tool is like, ‘Oh my goodness, it’s so closely mapping to what humans might respond with or say. Is this cause for panic or concern?’”

Concerns About ChatGPT

One of the main concerns that educators have is that students might exploit ChatGPT’s capabilities to cheat on assignments – using the app to produce research papers and essays instead of doing the work themselves.

Edward Tian, a student at Princeton University in New Jersey, recently developed an app called GPTZero that he said in a tweet “can quickly and efficiently detect whether an essay is ChatGPT or human written.”

Trust says there was “a huge sigh of relief” by some in her education circles when this app, and other plagairism checkers, became available. Some teachers had ditched technology altogether and gone back to paper assignments and assessments, says Shana Ramin, a technology integration specialist with Oakland Schools in Michigan.

ChatGPT has its limitations as well, and educators fear that too much reliance on it could lead to more problems. For instance, Trust says she’s seen it solve math problems incorrectly as well as completely make up citations for a research paper, though visually it looked legitimate.

“I think with anything, it’s important to understand that it’s a new tool and you can’t just rely on it 100%,” Ramin says.

There are also concerns about privacy and data collection, as ChatGPT collects information like a user’s IP address, user interactions and the country where they’re located, Trust says.

The Children’s Online Privacy Protection Act of 1998, which was designed to protect the privacy of children under the age of 13, prohibits apps from collecting this kind of data on children. ChatGPT’s Terms of Use states that users should be 18 years or older, but it doesn’t verify the age of its users.

Trust says K-12 educators should not ask students to use the tool for educational purposes because of privacy concerns. “I don’t even know if I would get parent permission, because technically it’s not to be used by anyone under 18,” Trust says, adding: “Is that stopping anyone? Absolutely not.”

She says the best practice would be adults creating an account and using it alongside their students or children.

How Teachers and Students Are Using ChatGPT

Trust says her hope is for teachers to adapt their practices to ChatGPT rather than just focus on catching students cheating. For example, experts say they’ve heard of some teachers giving ChatGPT a prompt and analyzing its response with students as a practice in editing and critical thinking.

Ramin says it can be used to pare down difficult passages for lower reading levels, one of many ways the tool can help English language learners or students with learning disabilities. It can also provide sentence starters or help generate ideas for students who struggle to do so on their own.

“When we think about tools like this, often it’s just like, how can the standard student use it?” Trust says. “But we often forget about how beneficial tools like this can be for students with disabilities in helping their thinking, learning and executive functioning.”

Some teachers are also using it to make their jobs easier, says Matt Miller, an educational technology writer and speaker and author of “Ditch That Textbook.”

Some are using ChatGPT to help generate ideas for lesson plans and class activities, or plug in their students’ writing to get recommendations and edits, he says. Miller says teachers are “so absolutely strapped for time” that using ChatGPT for certain functions can help them do their jobs better and more efficiently.

“I’m still of the opinion that if we can take some of the monotony out of the hands of teachers, it frees them up to do what they were made to do as teachers,” he says. “Build relationships with students one on one, develop curriculum, come up with creative teaching ideas – all of that stuff that the grind doesn’t let them do and beats them down for.”

Ramin says teachers and students should see ChatGPT as a helpful tool, much like a calculator might be in math class, but it “cannot do a teacher’s job.” It’s there to help teachers reach their learning objectives. Whether it’s ChatGPT or another technology down the road, she says, AI isn’t going away and, if anything, is likely to be more of a part of classrooms.

“It’s definitely scary. I understand the desire to panic,” she says. Her department met and discussed whether it was something they needed to consider banning in the district, she says.

“But the more than I play around with it, the more I see the potential and I see the benefits. There’s definitely the potential for misuse, but I think that’s all the more reason why we need to be aware of it and understand it.”

US NEWS

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South Africa: New digital learning platform launched across ADvTECH schools

IN a first for the country, South Africa’s leading private education provider, ADvTECH, will this month start rolling out a unique, locally developed personalised learning digital platform across its schools.

ADvLEARN is a customised platform for ADvTECH Schools that provides personalised learning paths using adaptive technology to deliver data-driven insights and learning analytics. Students will therefore have a unique learning experience while constantly improving their understanding in core areas.

“We are very excited to have partnered with MathU to bring this groundbreaking digital learning platform to our Grade 7 to 12 students, a move which will further cement our reputation as a leader in education in the country, in line with our vision to stay at the forefront of global technological innovation and emerging best practices,” says Desiree Hugo, Academic Head at ADvTECH’s Schools Division.

ADvTECH Schools Division will initially use ADvLEARN to enhance learning in Mathematics (Grade 7 to 12), Physical Sciences (Grade 10 to 12) and Mathematical Literacy (Grade 10 to 12).

The pedagogy applied in ADvLEARN seeks to find the gaps in students’ learning, and then fill these gaps to ensure they improve their understanding in core areas. Through adaptive learning technology, the system supports both students who want to progress faster as well as students requiring reinforcement of key concepts.

MathU is a software as a service (SaaS) company based in Pretoria, specialising in artificial intelligence and software engineering. The team at MathU has developed an innovative software solution that uses state-of-the-art engineering principles to map, monitor, and assess student progress. The platform has been adapted to cater to the specific needs of schools and universities, and the company was founded by engineers and scientists who are passionate about improving mathematics and science education. MathU provides solutions to schools and universities looking to enhance their educational offerings and better support their students.

“In addition to enhancing student learning, ADvLEARN will also give teachers the ability to instantly allocate relevant student work and homework to student devices, immediately access student performance and achievement data, as well as easily view and identify concepts needing reteaching and review,” says Hugo.

“We are truly excited about taking education another step into the future in 2023, and look forward to seeing how this strategic partnership cements and accelerates STEM learning for our students.”

ITNEWS

Higher Education Minister Blade Nzimande condemns killing of TUT student, Ntokozo Xaba
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Higher Education Minister Blade Nzimande condemns killing of TUT student, Ntokozo Xaba

MINISTER of Higher Education, Dr Blade Nzimande, has condemned the gruesome killing of Ntokozo Xaba, a Tshwane University of Technology (TUT) third-year student.

The 21-year-old Xaba was a third-year TUT student doing a National Diploma in Integrated Communication programme.

On Monday, Blue Bulls rugby player Ngcebo Thusi, 23, appeared in the Pretoria Magistrate’s Court in connection with the murder of Xaba. 

The state asked for a postponement, saying Thusi still needs to be profiled and his addresses need to be confirmed.

The matter is postponed to the 13th of February for bail application.

According to the National Prosecuting Authority (NPA), Thusi is facing charges of murder and defeating the ends of justice.

Xaba was found stabbed to death at the university’s Ekhaya Junction residence in Pretoria on Thursday.

A police report shows that a group of friends were drinking on Wednesday night.

Xaba’s friends told the police that they left both Xaba and Thusi together. 

Nzimande is, however, pleased by the swift response of the law enforcement agencies for arresting Thusi in connection with Xaba’s untimely death.

Nzimande passed his condolences to the Xaba family, friends and the entire Tshwane University of Technology.

The Department of Higher Education together with the Tshwane University of Technology’s wellness team will provide the necessary phyco-social support to the family.

Ngcebo Thusi.
News24/ Alex Mitchley

Nzimande said that Gender-based violence (GBV), or violence against women and girls (VAWG), was a global pandemic that affects 1 in 3 women in their lifetime.

The minister said these numbers are staggering with global figures indicating that as many as 38% of murders of women are committed by an intimate partner, 35% of women worldwide experiencing physical and/or sexual intimate partner violence or non-partner sexual violence.

“This issue is not only devastating for survivors of violence and their families, but also entails significant social and economic costs and has dire implications to the post school education and training sector,” said Nzimande.

“As part of dealing with gender-based violence in our institutions, I will be launching the “Transforming MENtalities Initiative,” which will be a multistakeholder partnership within the PSET, with a particular focus on mobilising men in our sector to be part of championing a world free of gender biases, stereotypes, violence and discrimination,” said Nzimande.

“All our institutions working with HIGHER HEALTH must continue to work collectively in implementing programmes towards addressing the challenges of sexual and gender based violence within our PSET system. This includes ensuring the provision of safe workplaces, learning spaces and residences for all staff and students in our institutions,” said Nzimande.

Nzimande said that HIGHER HEALTH must also ensure that all institutions work collaboratively with the established multi sectoral PSET gender- based violence technical Task team chaired by Professor LenkaBula, to ensure the effective implementation of the DHET Gender Policy Framework.

Nzimande said he will soon be releasing the Ministerial Task Team (MTT) report on sexual harassment and gender-based violence in the university sector.

This MTT was chaired by Professor Sibongile Muthwa and its report has since been submitted to Nzimande for consideration.

On Monday, the Commission for Gender Equality (CGE) said it will reach out to the leadership of Tshwane University of Technology (TUT) following the brutal killing of Xaba.

”The CGE is saddened by this senseless killing, which adds to the list of gender-based violence (GBV) murders that have taken place within institutions of higher learning.  In the past three years, the CGE has conducted investigations to assess gender transformation and gender-based violence at public universities and Technical and Vocational
Education and Training (TVET) colleges, to ascertain the safety of women on campuses and residences,” spokesperson Javu Baloyi said. 

CGE said more than 15 Vice Chancellors appeared before the commission to help the commission understand gender related problems at their institutions.  

Baloyi said one of the numerous recommendations made was for the Department of Higher Education and Training (DHET) to institute policies and procedures to deal with the scourge of gender-based violence at institutions of higher learning.

INSIDE EDUCATION

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Combating crime through sport

A sports day focused on reducing crime was hosted by Sports Against Crime South Africa (Sacsa) in conjunction with the Secure Rite Security and local neighbourhood watches at Gordon High School, Western Cape, last weekend.

According to Sacsa president Vincent Daniels, the event focused on learners and giving them something to do that will inevitably draw them away from taking part in crime or become a statistic.

Doreen Finger, a resident of Lourencia Park, says many youths of the area are drawn into crime and drugs.

This is why the organisers decided to host a mini-run and six of the learners from the area who attended did a loop of the athletics field. Afterwards the young athletes each received a certificate for completing the run.

“This is why we try and organise events such as these because we try to fight crime with sports,” he said. “We have to thank the school’s principal Lizette Visser who availed the school grounds for us.”

Daniels reiterated the importance of an event like this, especially because crime has become so prevalent in schools.

Distrikspos

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DA urges Northern Cape education to intervene in the closure of the overcrowded Deben Primary School

PHUTI MOSOMANE

DEMOCRATIC Alliance (DA) councillor Boitumelo Sebego has called on the Provincial Education Department to urgently intervene in the closure of the overcrowded Deben Primary School in the Gamagara Municipality, Northern Cape.

The school has a capacity of 1400 learners but there are 1 885 learners enrolled at the school, and an additional 88 on the waiting list.

Despite efforts to report the overcrowding challenges by the school to the district, there appears to be no solution insight. Now, the school has been shut for four days due to overcrowding and the non-placement of learners who remain on the department’s waiting list for school placements.

Parents are angry and are keeping their children away from school, also making threats towards the school.

‘‘I conducted an oversight inspection of the school today [Wednesday], during which the school principal addressed teachers. He informed them that the school would remain closed because learners were not attending classes due to the department’s failure to address the current school crisis,’’ Sebego said.

To deal with overcrowding at the school, the principal ordered an additional mobile classroom through the department in August last year. It was meant to be delivered in December 2022 but has yet to arrive.

Although the school is scheduled to meet the education department on Thursday, the school community is growing increasingly agitated at the situation.

INSIDE EDUCATION