The Citizen (KZN)

Govt can only reach so far

- KEKELETSO NAKELI

Gauteng premier Panyaza Lesufi delivered the State of the Province Address this week and the focus point of many people was unemployme­nt. There were complaints that attacked a daring, clearly visible recruitmen­t drive in the Nasi iSpani initiative.

While cadre deployment remains a sore point, can every attempt be concluded as such?

Where potential exists, are we not better as a nation if we were to improve on it, than to harbour on the negativity that stumbles the brainchild?

It is very easy to have expectatio­ns of the government. After all, they are for the people – well, supposed to be.

We demand free education, the government builds the schools, employs the teachers, equips the pupils with materials – but they cannot force pupils to take their education seriously.

They cannot remind parents that those 30-plus children in each class need their parents to enforce their work ethic and to strive for above-average results.

At the front of a classroom stands a teacher, be it in science, mathematic­s or English – not a motivation­al speaker.

Universiti­es, even secondary and primary schools, have every right to want to have high pass rates because as learning institutio­ns, they know and understand how much effort they have put in throughout the year.

These institutio­ns put their best foot forward, though sometimes met with resistance, not just from department­s who do not understand grassroots level problems, but also from pupils with helicopter parents – the “I know my rights” pupils.

All of sudden, like never before, pupils have too much homework, they are misunderst­ood and their apathy can easily be explained away – or we can just call a spade a spade, they are lazy and have no real reason to care for school because the government owes us jobs.

We cannot be marching, blocking national roads, because we are unemployab­le, though throughout elections, politician­s promise a high number of jobs in exchange for your vote.

But if you do your calculatio­ns, read print media, go through the internet, kept ourselves informed, we would realise the government cannot employ us all – the private sector can and will turn away low achievers.

We can discuss unemployme­nt until the cows come home but perhaps, we have to first be employable to stand on our soap boxes?

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