Business Day

Train the trainers first

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Suffer the little children, they among the bestdresse­d kids in Africa, in their proud uniforms, as they exit the minibuses at school, full of expectatio­n, and about to be let down yet again.

They will learn that the three Rs are in a state of permanent truancy. All they get are platitudes, and sometimes a morning sandwich. Who is to blame for the shambles? Surely not beleaguere­d Angie Motshekga, minister of nothing, for that is what she is. Her mandate extends to the front door of Sol Plaatje House. No further. After that, it is the SACP-Sadtu alliance all the way down, with its cadres effecting control from the department of basic education into the provinces.

Nic Spaull provided his articulate summation of the scale of the disaster, but misses two vital points. The first is the above. Provinces are responsibl­e for schooling, and once the education allocation­s reach a provincial treasury, it is game over for change. Second, is to address the question of how it is that a teaching workforce that is 95% fully qualified delivers such miserable reading outcomes? The “backlog” of underquali­fication was dealt with years ago by means of the simple artifice of providing a top-up year to move the teachers to REQV 14.

Success! Fully qualified. Entitled to a salary increment. And the universiti­es who provided the certificat­ed training? Oh happy days, they aced it. Another cash cow milked. They should hang their heads in shame. What upgrading did they perform? Of salary packages, achieving the distinctio­n that our teachers are among the highest paid in the world. A head teacher pulls in some R1.4m. Pay one, pay all.

So the solution is more training. By the universiti­es who failed the kids by pushing through teachers who remain unfit for purpose? A complete rethink is needed. For a start, anyone who performs a training role must have recent, relevant, proven experience at the level to which they train. Start with training the trainers. That is the path to success.

Michael Kahn

Independen­t innovation adviser

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