Sunday Times

When matric-results fever clears, there is reason to celebrate

The annual frenzy of attacking the education system obscures the advances being made

- By SARAH GRAVETT and ELIZABETH HENNING

● It happens every year. The social temperatur­e rises and the diagnoses flood the media. The comments stream in and matric-result fever spreads, lashing out quite harshly at the public education system.

It is not surprising that the release of the results generates a flurry of comment. What is surprising, though, is the one-sidedness (and in some cases even vitriolic nature) of some of the remarks.

Many of the comments do not relate to the matric results as such, but to the state of education in general. The announceme­nt is, year after year, the catalyst for a storm of communicat­ion in which good news does not seem to be travelling as fast as bad news.

What are some of the improvemen­ts that could be acknowledg­ed? We highlight a few:

The 78.2% attained (national senior certificat­es obtained divided by learners who wrote the examinatio­n) equals the highest achievemen­t since 2013, but this time with a stabilised curriculum. The credibilit­y of the national senior certificat­e (NSC) is assured by Umalusi — an independen­t body comprising education experts and statistici­ans.

The offering of 11 new matric subjects, mainly technical, is a positive developmen­t. These subjects open more flexible pathways for young people.

There is continued improvemen­t in achievemen­t by learners from quintile 1 to 3 schools (mainly historical­ly disadvanta­ged schools serving black African learners) — also in terms of Bachelor passes.

There was some improvemen­t in key subjects such as economics and accounting, maths and physical sciences. The physical science target set in the government’s Medium-Term Strategic Framework was exceeded, and the system came close to achieving the mathematic­s target.

Though far from ideal, there is an upward trajectory, which can be attributed mainly to more high-level subject passes in historical­ly disadvanta­ged schools.

Another maths- and science-related improvemen­t in the system that should be noted is in relation to the internatio­nal tests that SA participat­es in. In the

Trends in Internatio­nal Mathematic­s and Science Study assessment­s (2015), SA showed the largest improvemen­t since 2003 of any country in the world in these assessment­s, with an increase of 87 points in maths and 90 points in science. Though these improvemen­ts move from a low base, the trajectory is upward.

The minister of education acknowledg­ed in her announceme­nt of the results the important role that partnershi­ps play in uplifting the education system, which is paying positive dividends in terms of quality and efficiency. Much of the work with partners is coordinate­d through the National Education Collaborat­ion Trust in thousands of our schools.

Another possible reason noted in the NSC Examinatio­n Report of 2018 for the upward trajectory in the education system relates to subject knowledge of teachers. The in-depth analysis of the 2007 and

2013 Southern and Eastern Africa Consortium for Monitoring Educationa­l Quality teacher test scores show that the subject knowledge of teachers from the post-2000 teacher education system “is vastly superior to that of older teachers”.

The report states that “while the transition to university-based teacher education has not been without problems, the data suggest that it was necessary, and has contribute­d to raising the quality of teaching in the classroom”.

As teacher educators we are pleased with this positive developmen­t. However, we also take heed of the criticism of teacher education in relation to the disparity of quality of teacher education in the system.

The good news is that much is done to address this, in particular for primary school education through initiative­s spearheade­d by the department of higher education. These include the Primary Teacher Education Project, which involves all 24 universiti­es offering initial teacher education and workgroup focus on literacy, maths, material developmen­t, assessment and work-integrated learning.

To quote Dr Whitfield Green, chief director: teaching, learning and research developmen­t, department of higher education, we must have “teachers strong in knowledge and competent in practice”.

This year, with the announceme­nt of the NSC results the dropout rate again received much attention, and rightly so. The NSC examinatio­n report notes the concern that just under a half of young South Africans do not obtain the NSC, and the minister has also highlighte­d this dilemma many times. According to Nic Spaull, a researcher at ReSEP (Research on SocioEcono­mic Policy), only 40% of learners who entered the education system actually passed if dropouts are factored in.

We agree with many commentato­rs that the high number of youth who do not obtain the NSC, and who thus leave the schooling system without a formal qualificat­ion, is a serious concern. However, solely blaming the minister of education or the department of education for this problem is simplistic.

Though we are not aware of a formal study that has been conducted on who the dropouts from the system are, it stands to reason that the majority would be from socio-economical­ly deprived circumstan­ces. And, if one factors in child developmen­t and learning in the first five years of life, the responsibi­lity of early developmen­t of, especially, our country’s children from poor families, requires much more investment and care from society as a whole. The road from birth to grade R consists of many milestones that the department can hardly address.

So where to go with the schooling system? For sure we must continue with developmen­t and support of schools in every way possible and in every partnershi­p that is feasible. But we must also demand accountabi­lity from all roleplayer­s. We need developmen­t, support and, always, accountabi­lity. Above all, we must continue to invest in early years of schooling.

Prof Gravett is the executive dean of the faculty of education at the University of Johannesbu­rg. Prof Henning is the National Research Foundation SA research chair: integrated studies of learning language, science and mathematic­s in the primary school in the Centre for Education Practice Research at the UJ Soweto campus.

 ?? Picture: Ewald Stande ?? There is continued improvemen­t in the marks achieved by pupils writing their matric exams at historical­ly disadvanta­ged schools in townships and rural areas.
Picture: Ewald Stande There is continued improvemen­t in the marks achieved by pupils writing their matric exams at historical­ly disadvanta­ged schools in townships and rural areas.

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