Daily Dispatch

TRYING TO FIND THE ‘HOPE’ IN ‘HOPELESS’

- Jonathan Jansen

Government needs to give people reasons for confidence again, writes Jonathan Jansen

During our transition to democracy, political scientists used to talk about “confidence building mechanisms”. These were essentiall­y political devices to give ordinary citizens a sense of confidence in what was happening in the course of changing regimes from apartheid to democracy.

White citizens needed a sense of security – and here the primary device was the numerous public acts of reconcilia­tion for which South Africa is still known around the world. Black citizens needed a sense of justice – and to this end a most impressive array of laws and policies were generated promising reconstruc­tion and developmen­t.

At the time the transition was bloody and the prospects for democracy far from assured. “Ready to govern” pronounced a pamphlet of the liberation movement turning itself into a political party.

The confidence of ordinary people was shattered this past week as the public utility Eskom launched the country into darkness, again.

It was not simply the impact on students preparing for examinatio­ns or the economy’s dependence on reliable flows of energy – it was the devastatin­g effects on public confidence in the government.

The airline, the post office, the rail system, the hospitals, the schools, the dams, the revenue services and home affairs – one crisis after the other as incompeten­ce and corruption collapsed these vital services.

It is clear but nobody wants to say the obvious – this government does not have the competence and the capacity to govern effectivel­y.

When the lights go off from one day to the next, confidence in government dips.

What makes matters worse is the absence of leadership in the crisis. You wait in vain for the President to take to radio and television with the three simple messages that a good leader would convey in relation to almost any crisis – this is the nature of the problem, this is what we’re doing about it, and this is when we expect it to be over.

That would at least start to rebuild public confidence. Yet after the load-shedding of this past weekend, long suffering citizens remain in the dark, so to speak.

Still reeling from the shock of the return of load-shedding, the Minister of Higher Education introduced another confidence­shattering policy that effectivel­y lowers the bar for entrance of degree studies at South African universiti­es.

What stands out in an otherwise complex proposal is that the minimum acceptable pass mark in the language of teaching and learning at the university (essentiall­y English) is 30% apart from a 30% pass mark in two subjects in the package of seven composing the National Senior Certificat­e. This is devastatin­g news for an already broken education system for one simple reason – the low levels of reading literacy in the primary grades (we are last in the world by this measure of academic performanc­e) is now carried through to higher education.

Instead of raising the bar for language achievemen­t, we lower it so that more and more students can suffer the illusion that they qualify for a Bachelor’s degree.

Now no government can tell an autonomous university what its entry level requiremen­ts for academic entry should be.

As a result, the top research universiti­es like Wits and UCT will continue to set their own standards for entry to degree studies while their poorer cousins will bear the brunt of enrolment pressures from “30 percenters” in language competence.

There is just one problem – about half the students who enter university drop out or fail in the first year and a minority attain their degrees in the minimum time.

What this new policy means, therefore, is that higher failure and repetition rates will result with devastatin­g consequenc­es for students, their families, the universiti­es and the economy. Public confidence in education will take yet another hit.

What should government do to rebuild confidence in a shaken public? In relation to public entities – talk to the people, Mr President.

Give them a sense that you have a grasp of our problems and that you are dealing with them and that there is a specified calendar for delivery. In relation to education, announce for once a package of measures that will signal an increase in academic standards and how those standards will be attained.

For example, announce that within five years 75% of all senior high school students will do mathematic­s and only 25% mathematic­al literacy. To get there, announce an intensive school-based mentorship interventi­on that uses experience­d math teachers to work directly with those in the weakest academic schools. In other words, give ordinary people a reason to have confidence in our government again.

Give people a sense you have a grasp of our problems and that you are dealing with them

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