Daily Dispatch

Matric maths, science exams to be rewritten

The first time the country has done a national rewrite, says Motshekga

- MATTHEW SAVIDES

The matric mathematic­s paper 2 and physical sciences paper 2 are to be rewritten across SA.

This is according to a statement from basic education minister Angie Motshekga, released ahead of a media briefing on Friday afternoon.

The CEM [Council of Education Ministers] “decided a national rewrite of both mathematic­s paper 2 and physical sciences paper 2 is necessary. Mathematic­s paper 2 will be written on December 15 at 2pm, and physical sciences paper 2 will be written on December 17 at 9am.

It was not an easy decision to take but one “ which is necessary under the circumstan­ces. We need to work hard to deal with the human factor in the examinatio­n system,” said Motshegka.

She said the viral spread of informatio­n on

“cyber networks made it virtually impossible to accurately identify the number of pupils who have had access to the leaked question papers ”.

After stakeholde­rs were consulted, there was convergenc­e on the need to protect the

“integrity of the examinatio­n and to expose the culprits who place the lives of our pupils at risk ”.

The National Senior Certificat­e [NSC] is “the flagship qualificat­ion relating to schooling. Credibilit­y of the NSC examinatio­n is of paramount importance. Any lingering doubt relating to the credibilit­y of the NSC examinatio­ns must be thoroughly investigat­ed and addressed, Motshekga said. Avoiding prior

” “access to the question paper is what all security measures are directed towards.”

Motshekga said this was the first time the country had ever done a national rewrite.

Basic education department chief director of examinatio­n, Rufus Poliah, said the department had confirmed 195 pupils received the mathematic­s paper, but there was no way to know how widely it had been spread from there.

Motshekga said: It is clear the people responsibl­e

“for leaking the question papers are adults. CEM appreciate­s the work being done by the Directorat­e for Priority Crime Investigat­ions, the Hawks. We welcome the arrest that has been made and we hope more arrests will follow. We need to send a strong message that tampering with national examinatio­n is a serious offence.”

Avoiding prior access to the question paper is what all security measures are directed towards

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