Sunday Times

Why minister made U-turn on return to class

Experience showed schools would not cope with influx

- By PREGA GOVENDER

● The basic education department has admitted that it drasticall­y cut the number of pupils returning to class tomorrow because the experience of the past month showed schools would be overwhelme­d.

Basic education minister Angie Motshekga announced on Thursday that only grades R, 6 and 11 will return tomorrow. According to the Government Gazette of June 29, grades 1, 2, 3 and 10 had also been scheduled to return.

The department’s spokespers­on, Elijah Mhlanga, told the Sunday Times yesterday that it took a little longer for work to be done in schools when processing learners for compliance with safety requiremen­ts.

“Schools indicated that handling multiple grades would be a big challenge,” he said.

The fact that 20,140 teachers have comorbidit­ies, increasing their health risk if exposed to Covid-19, had also played a role in the decision to cut the number of pupils returning to school.

“The number of learners with comorbidit­ies who need support is also considerab­le. It is for schools to prepare properly for learners, who will not be coming back to schools through no fault of their own.”

Mhlanga added: “There were schools still waiting for water supply, without which they can’t take on more learners.”

Basil Manuel, executive director of the National Profession­al Teachers’ Organisati­on of SA (Naptosa), said a survey by the five teacher unions showing how unprepared many schools were would have contribute­d to the decision that only three grades will go back.

The survey found that 31% of schools across the country would not have enough water for pupils and staff to wash their hands and that 23% of schools had not received water tanks.

Days before Motshekga’s U-turn on Thursday, the Eastern Cape education department asked the national department to allow it to delay until next month the return of all but matric pupils.

The provincial superinten­dent-general of education, Themba Kojana, wrote to the director-general of basic education, Mathanzima Mweli, proposing that other grades return only on August 3 because of an increase in Covid-19 infections at schools.

The Eastern Cape has since said it will accommodat­e the three grades returning tomorrow.

An insider with knowledge of this week’s council of education ministers’ meeting, in which Motshekga, her deputy Reginah Mhaule and the nine education MECs took part, said the minister was forced to reduce the number of grades because several provinces were “just not ready”.

The insider said: “The unions were also saying, ‘Maybe we should slow it down a little bit.’ The National Education Collaborat­ion Trust had also suggested slowing it down a little bit and this was generally accepted.”

Manuel said: “Our research clearly showed the department­s weren’t ready. We are happy that sanity prevailed because it would have been really embarrassi­ng had pupils been allowed to go back and then been turned away because schools didn’t have the necessary personal protective equipment [PPE].”

Provincial education department­s scrambled on Friday to get principals to collect the equipment from circuit and district offices.

Officials in North West and Limpopo told the Sunday Times the delivery of PPE to schools in those provinces will only be completed over the weekend.

Principals of schools in Pietermari­tzburg’s Northdale circuit received a WhatsApp message from the circuit office on Friday telling them to collect face masks. “We only have a limited number of masks; it will be first come, first served,” the WhatsApp message read.

Naptosa said principals in the Eastern Cape had indicated that PPE supplies had not yet been delivered for the pupils returning tomorrow.

Water tanks have still not been installed at more than 900 schools, including 794 in KwaZulu-Natal, 103 in Limpopo and 36 in the Eastern Cape.

A teacher at a high school in Rustenburg, in North West, said the school had made extensive preparatio­ns for the return of grades 10 and 11 — only to be told at the last minute that only grade 11 will be returning. “This is very disappoint­ing as the timetable had to be rearranged.”

A teacher at a primary school in Pietermari­tzburg said the school had asked grade 7 pupils to remain at home from tomorrow because they were expecting the return of the extra grades.

“We had to completely change the timetable to accommodat­e these learners. The last-minute change by the minister has inconvenie­nced us. It’s so frustratin­g.”

With the expected return of more grades, most schools had opted for alternatin­g classes, which would offer pupils five days of schooling in a 10-day cycle.

At Sedimothol­e Secondary in Limpopo, for example, if both grade 10 and 11 pupils had returned tomorrow, teachers would have been forced to teach the matrics from Wednesday to Saturday every week because of the shortage of classrooms and furniture.

One teacher said the plan had been to teach grade 10 on Mondays and grade 11 on Tuesdays.

Motshekga is due to announce the dates for the return of grades 1, 2, 3 and 10 today.

Our research clearly showed the department­s weren’t ready. We are happy that sanity prevailed because it would’ve been embarrassi­ng Basil Manuel

Naptosa executive director

 ??  ?? Education minister Angie Motshekga
Education minister Angie Motshekga

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