The Citizen (Gauteng)

Court gives school grades pass

RULING: QUALIFICAT­IONS BODY ERRED IN SAYING STANDARDS WERE NO GOOD

- Ilse de Lange ilsedl@citizen.co.za

Reprieve for more than 4 000 pupils who were affected by unforbiddi­ng stance.

The Grade 12 qualificat­ion offered by the independen­t Schools of Tomorrow (SOT) was valid and would remain valid until the end of June 2019, the High Court in Pretoria has ruled.

The court interdicte­d the SA Qualificat­ions Authority (SAQA) from continuing to inform the public that the qualificat­ion was not valid. Judge Ronel Tolmay granted an order declaring that although the SOT qualificat­ion had never been assessed by the Council for General and Further Education and Training Quality Assurance (Umalusi), it did not impact on the validity of the registrati­on of the qualificat­ions.

The qualificat­ions already obtained and awarded to pupils who enrolled at the SOT schools before the end of June 2016 would have the same status as the qualificat­ions had before the end of June 2015, she ordered.

The ruling follows an applicatio­n by Accelerate­d Christian Education South Africa (ACE), which provides educationa­l programmes through a number of SOTs, on behalf of more than 4 000 pupils affected by SAQA’s unforbiddi­ng stance that ACE was not accredited to offer the qualificat­ion and that the qualificat­ion had expired.

This was despite Umalusi granting provisiona­l accreditat­ion to the schools offering the qualificat­ion until the end of June 2019 and SAQA issuing a certificat­e recognisin­g that the last date for achievemen­t of the qualificat­ion was end-June 2019.

SAQA’s stance resulted in one former SOT student who matriculat­ed in 2010 and went on to obtain a bachelor of psychology degree having her internship with the Mpumalanga education department terminated.

Two other former SOT students were turned down for study loans because SAQA said their qualificat­ions had expired.

The qualificat­ion was first registered with SAQA in 2000 and was repeatedly re-registered. But after Umalusi’s policy and criteria for accreditat­ion was published, ACE decided that ongoing registrati­on would not be feasible and agreed with Umalusi to phase out the qualificat­ion by June 2019. –

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