Monday, March 31, 2014

Fight for textbooks back in court, report

30 MAR 2014 17:25 SAPA

Several schools in the Limpopo Province are dragging the Department of Basic Education to court for failing to deliver textbooks.



Limpopo schools are taking the fight for textbooks back to court, City Press reported on Sunday.

The move was being spearheaded by 23 schools that say that between them they still need 18,000 books.

The case, initiated by lobby group Basic Education for All, through civil rights organisation Section27, is due to be heard in the High Court in Pretoria on Tuesday.

The parties want the court to rule that the basic education department must provide all outstanding books by April 7.

The department said it was aware of the court action and studying the documents, City Press reported. Last year, the department promised that by January, all public schools around the country would have textbooks for every pupil in every subject.

In 2012 the department failed to deliver books to Limpopo schools until June. –Sapa

Wednesday, March 26, 2014

Creecy reveals wrongs at high school

March 26 2014 at 07:57pm 
By NONTOBEKO MTSHALI


The Star

Gauteng Education MEC Barbara Creecy. Photo: Itumeleng English

Johannesburg -

Brakpan High School took centre stage at the Gauteng legislature on Tuesday when Education MEC Barbara Creecy answered to corruption and sexual harassment allegations against the school’s staff.

Creecy told the legislature that the school had been placed under administration.

She was responding to questions posed by Cope MPL Hermene Koorts about the findings of a forensic report into the school’s finances and complaints against the principal.

Creecy said the department had received complaints about financial mismanagement in December 2012.

The department ordered an independent probe, and it was finalised in August last year.

Creecy said the audit report recommended that the school governing body (SGB) be disbanded and that disciplinary action be taken against the principal and other members of the school’s management.

The recommendations were followed and a district director was now

monitoring the school.

Creecy said the department had offered training to the SGB, but only one member attended. The department had partnered with an audit firm that would offer mentoring and coaching on financial management to schools as part of the firm’s corporate social responsibility programme.

The MEC also responded to questions about a sexual harassment case against a teacher at the school who is still on the department’s payroll and continues to work with children.

Creecy said the teacher was charged, found guilty, given a three-month suspended sentence and fined an amount equivalent to three months’ salary.

The Star understands that the teacher made comments of a sexual nature to pupils. He was not criminally charged.

nontobeko.mtshali@inl.co.za

The Star

Wednesday, March 19, 2014

Call-up for graduates

Another Dictatorship Brought to you by The ANC Government


Olebogeng Molatlhwa | 18 March, 2014 00:01


They said graduates would spend a year gaining experience relevant to what they had studied. "This would not be in-service training," said Manana. File photo
Image by: Elmond Jiyane

All graduates - irrespective of whether their education was privately funded or paid for through the National Student Financial Aid Scheme - might soon be forced to undertake a year of community service.

This is according to the ANC national executive committee's sub-committee on education and health, which said yesterday that it would implement the proposal in the next five years.

Committee chairman Naledi Pandor, the home affairs minister, and committee member Mduduzi Manana, deputy minister of higher education and training, tried to allay graduates' fears that they would be forced to postpone their entry into the labour market to undertake compulsory menial work in the public service.

They said graduates would spend a year gaining experience relevant to what they had studied.

"This would not be in-service training," said Manana.

At the ANC's elective conference in Mangaung, Free State, in December 2012, delegates of the conference's education and health commission resolved that consideration "must be given to a graduate tax for all graduates from higher education institutions".

The tax was intended to bolster the coffers of the National Student Financial Aid Scheme, which was expected to play a bigger role in the state's plans for free education for all undergraduate s.

The tax proposal was scrapped after a huge outcry.

The ANC committee proposed that community service first be imposed on all graduate students who had received bursaries or loans from an aid scheme and later on all graduates.

The idea has drawn mixed reactions, with some commentators giving it the green light on condition it is properly implemented.

Professor Servaas van der Berg, of Stellenbosch University , dismissed the idea as "sub-optimal" and derided it as a waste of valuable time.

"It will not work. All it would do is postpone the period within which one would have entered the labour market by a year," said Van der Berg.

"People will be . put in jobs in which they will be under-utilised."

And the notion that there is a large number of unemployed graduates with degrees who need practical training to find a job had been exaggerated, Van der Berg said.

He noted that Stats SA's labour force survey showed that the number of degreed graduates in employment was about 55000.

However, it showed that about 340000 graduates, including holders of diplomas and certificates, were without a job in 2011.

Education specialist Graeme Bloch conditionally supported the idea.

For the whole thing to be workable there would have to be skills transference, he said.

There would be additional strain on the fiscus because graduates would get a stipend for their year in public service.

Bloch suggested that funds assigned to the Expanded Public Works Programme be redirected to the community service initiative.

Luzuko Buku, general secretary of the SA Students' Congress, said he did not know "where the money will emerge from".

"Whatever its make-up, there must be consultation [with graduates] and people should not be forced to work in unbearable conditions."

Bloch predicted that students would not like the idea but urged them to see the positive side.

"You have to use your degree to give back," Bloch said.