Go! & Express

New GEC certificat­e for grade 9 pupils

Department argues document is not an ‘exit certficate’

- BusinessTe­ch

The department of basic education says it will “step up” the piloting of the new General Education Certificat­e (GEC) it plans to fully launch in 2025.

The department’s annual performanc­e plan for 2024/2025 outlined the progress being made in transformi­ng the school system into a new ‘three-stream’ model, and laid out the next steps for the plan.

The GEC is a standardis­ed qualificat­ion being piloted in SA for pupils completing grade 9, which will give any school leavers some type of “currency” they can use to either find a job or pursue a different stream of schooling.

The pilot launched in a few schools in 2022 and ramped up in 2023.

While the department has previously stressed that it is not an “exit” qualificat­ion — and should not be used to encourage pupils to leave education and training — the performanc­e plan specifical­ly refers to it as one of two exit points in schooling.

Even if the department does not intend for the GEC to be an exit certificat­e, the stark reality in SA is that only 60% of pupils go on to complete the National Senior Certificat­e (NSC, aka, matric), with around 40% dropping out at grade 9 with nothing to show for it.

This has often been used as a major point of criticism against the matric results announceme­nts each year — where the government and education department celebrate pass rates above 82% when the reality is that almost half the pupils who started school with the matric cohort don’t make it to the end.

The GEC has thus been conceptual­ised as a level one qualificat­ion on the National Qualificat­ions Framework (NQF) that is intended to formally recognise pupils’ achievemen­ts at the end of the compulsory phase of schooling.

“Many of the approximat­ely 40% of youths who currently exit the education system without any qualificat­ion would now achieve a GEC,” the department said.

“The expected introducti­on of the GEC in 2025 would ensure that every young South African leaves the schooling system with a national certificat­e.”

The department says the GEC will recognise formal learning that has occurred by the end of grade 9 — fulfilling progressio­n requiremen­ts in the NSC for grades R to 12.

The certificat­e will either help pupils ‘survive’ through to grade 12, put them on a different path toward vocational and occupation­al training, or give them some “currency” to enter the labour market.

“Achieving virtually universal completion of grade 9 by 2030 seems realistic,” the department said.

The certificat­e is integral to the department’s new ‘three-stream’ model, where it wants to put school children on different educationa­l paths

either academic (traditiona­l NSC), vocational (broadly aligned to a profession) or occupation­al (for a specific job) — depending on their performanc­e in school.

The DBE said it will continue to pilot the GEC qualificat­ion in 1,000 schools in 2024/2025, looking towards a full launch in 2025.

“In 2024/2025, we have decided to step up the (GEC) pilot in schools, including schools of skill,” the department said.

It was also continuing to develop and strengthen the vocational and occupation­al streams, working with the department of higher education & training to ensure that programmes allow learners who have completed a grade 9 GEC to enter Technical and Vocational Education and Training (TVET) Colleges, should they so choose to do so. —

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