The Citizen (Gauteng)

Reopening of schools delay

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The department of basic education is in continued engagement with various stakeholde­rs on the state of readiness for schools to resume from 1 June.

Minister Angie Motshekga was yesterday expected to give an update on preparatio­ns for the reopening of schools, but ongoing engagement­s resulted in another postponeme­nt to today.

The department is mapping ways to ensure that schools reopen under safe conditions that will avoid the risk of Covid-19 spreading once the phasing in of pupils starts.

Teacher unions and school associatio­ns have been involved in ongoing talks with the department on how teaching and learning would be carried out and whether all provinces were ready with necessary personal protective equipment (PPEs).

According to Federation of Governing Bodies of South African Schools (Fedsas) chief executive Paul Colditz, some schools were ready, while others were not.

He said the biggest challenge in provinces such as the Eastern Cape was the delivery of PPEs to various schools.

“Eastern Cape is honest about it. They are not sure if they will be able to deliver by the end of May. They are working hard, but they had challenges with the cancellati­on of contracts,” Colditz said.

“Western Cape and Gauteng say they are [ready].”

Last month, Motshekga indicated that several non-negotiable measures needed to be in place before schools could reopen.

Colditz said while the state of readiness of other provinces was uncertain, the federation believed there was still time for them to get things in order. He added that they were concerned that not all provinces were in the same state.

The department is reportedly considerin­g a proposal that would see schools in Covid-19 hotspots not reopening next month.

The National Profession­al Teachers Organisati­on of SA (Naptosa), however, said it did not support the approach because it would leave many pupils behind.

“It’s far too complicate­d. What will you do with matriculan­ts, with people who travel in and out of those areas? Can we leave them behind? That is the difficulty, and so we don’t support that [approach],” Naptosa executive director Basil Manuel said.

Manuel said while the Western Cape and Gauteng had said they were ready, the union believed there were still dozens of schools in the provinces that had not yet received PPEs.

Manuel added that the unions would be engaging with the minister later in the day before she makes her address to the nation.

Colditz said his federation was calling for Motshekga to rope in medical experts to educate concerned parents who were reluctant for schools to reopen.

He said a snap survey conducted by Fedsas showed that some parents preferred for schools to remain closed. – News24 Wire

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