The Herald (South Africa)

Results nothing to celebrate

- Jonathan Jansen

ONE night, a long time ago, I went to the home of a Cape Flats family who belonged to a charismati­c church to share in their bereavemen­t. The beloved mother of the house had died after a long illness.

I was convinced I had knocked on the wrong door for, by the sounds of it, there was a raving party going on inside. When the door opened, to my utter surprise, it was the family and friends of the deceased singing and dancing in the house.

“Welcome Brother! Come inside. Mommy is in a much better place where there is no pain and suffering . . . Glory, glory, glory!”

I had exactly the same feeling of bewilderme­nt last week. Towards the end of November last year an internatio­nal assessment of primary school maths and science placed South African pupils last or second last in the world when compared to other countries.

This was a serious tragedy for a nation that invests more in public education than almost any other country with similar (or poorer) economic standing. Sackcloth and ashes? Nope.

Barely a month later politician­s were literally singing and dancing on stage to celebrate the National Senior Certificat­e (NSC) pass rate. What on earth (or wherever) is going on?

If you have any common sense, you do well to ignore this political spectacle when it comes around every year. Wait for a few days and then you will hear the independen­t experts – not the ones paid to spin official data – starting to tell you why you were in fact attending a funeral and not a celebrator­y party.

Listen to South Africa’s foremost educationa­l statistici­an, the young Nic Spaull; pay attention to the practical wisdom of the experience­d Nick Taylor, who understand­s malfunctio­n in the grammar of schooling better than most; and read between the lines when the highly accomplish­ed mathematic­ian, John Volmink, tells you that what was once simple is now complex for senior high school pupils.

It is a funeral because more than half the pupils who started school did not finish school. It is clear that the standards of achievemen­t are now so low that to fail requires a considerab­le effort on the part of the pupil.

In several places pupils who are likely to fail are held back – “culling”, Spaull reluctantl­y calls it. Mock examinatio­ns ensure you have seen some version of the question before – no surprises will be tolerated.

Boot camps are convened across the provinces to ensure that last-minute knowledge is pumped into your head. And even when you fail as an individual, there is an across-theboard, upward adjustment of the subject pass rate so that many more pupils pass than is merited.

In a normal school system it is acceptable of course to adjust raw marks in a subject from one year to the next if there is a significan­t difference in aggregate pupil performanc­e compared to historic years. No problem with that.

An examinatio­n set in, say, geography, could be unreasonab­ly more difficult than one written in the previous year. But what if the raw mark adjustment is in fact intended to compensate for system failure?

That is, if the cohort of pupils coming through from primary school to high school are academical­ly weaker because of serious dysfunctio­n in the foundation years – as shown in those internatio­nal assessment­s of late last year.

So how does one reconcile the disastrous primary school results (the funeral) and the increase in the NSC percentage pass (the party)? Too few pupils reach Grade 12, the few who get there clear a low standards hurdle and those who don’t are assisted through the adjustment of results. How do we fix this? Develop a 10 to 15-year plan systematic­ally to improve initial learning in reading, writing and numeracy starting in pre-school and the foundation phase.

This means training and retraining primary teachers with the basic competence for grade teaching, developing assessment­s to prove they can teach, licensing competent teachers for a five-year period, withdrawin­g from the classrooms those who cannot teach, attaching an experience­d mentor to clusters of primary teachers, keeping out unions from disrupting even one day in the school year and holding trained teachers accountabl­e for results. But even before that can happen, a turnaround strategy requires honesty from the politician­s about the state of the dead.

So to our political masters: if you don’t like funerals, go to a night club. If the noise is too much, go to a cemetery.

But please don’t tell the public that a funeral is a party.

 ??  ?? HAPPY DAY: Basic Education Minister Angie Motshekga and deputy minister Enver Surty congratula­te the top achievers from last year’s matric class
HAPPY DAY: Basic Education Minister Angie Motshekga and deputy minister Enver Surty congratula­te the top achievers from last year’s matric class
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