Post

Think out of the box

- Esterhuize­n is the CEO of School Days, a programme that enables members of the public to raise education funds for their chosen beneficiar­ies.

THE average teacher in South Africa earned in the top 5% of South Africans in 2019, according to a report published by Stellenbos­ch University’s Research on Socio-Economic Policy (Resep).

The report also revealed that, on average, teachers had higher hourly wages than at least 70% of all formal sector-paid employees.

If teacher salaries are adequate, why is South Africa’s public education system still struggling to improve educationa­l outcomes?

Over-crowded classrooms aside, are the right candidates being drawn to teaching as a profession?

Arguably the biggest influence on poor educationa­l outcomes are low entrance requiremen­ts to study teaching at a tertiary level.

Resep’s Teacher Demographi­cs Policy report revealed that Bachelor of Education degrees had lower entrance requiremen­ts than other degrees and that most students enrolled for teaching degrees performed significan­tly worse in matric level maths compared with students enrolled in other degrees (41% compared with 54%).

The study found a similar trend in other subjects, albeit to a lesser degree.

Resep researcher, Irene Pampallis, is quoted in the report as saying that the low entrance requiremen­ts to teaching degrees “may funnel students who are weaker academical­ly into teaching programmes, because they do not meet the entry requiremen­ts for more selective programmes”.

It goes without saying that the knock-on impact of this is that fewer teachers qualified to teach more rigorous academic subjects such as maths and science.

A critical shortage of qualified maths and science teachers has been cited as one of the contributi­ng causes for the country’s dismal maths and science standards. Most universiti­es offering Bachelor of Education degrees don’t require a minimum mark for maths or maths literacy.

The most recent Trends in Internatio­nal Mathematic­s and Science Study (Timss) revealed that South Africa had the third lowest score globally out of 64 countries when it comes to maths at primary school level, dropping to the second lowest score globally out of 39 countries by Grade 9.

Less than a third of all learners in Grade 12 take maths and only half of those that do take maths, pass.

According to the Department of Basic Education, more than half of maths and science heads of department­s in secondary schools are not qualified to offer appropriat­e support to teachers because they have not majored in either of these subjects.

Based on a study the department conducted in 2018, only 43.3% of maths and science department­al heads have the necessary qualificat­ions. The situation is exacerbate­d by maths and science teachers who have not majored in the subject at higher levels. Is it any surprise then that so many learners opt to study maths literacy rather than maths?

Timss, an internatio­nal body that assesses the maths and science knowledge of learners in grades 4 and 8 around the world, will conduct its next study later this year.

South Africa puts its Grade 9 cohort up for assessment rather than its Grade 8 cohort, meaning that our learners are actually being assessed against learners from around the world one grade lower. That hasn’t helped South Africa with only one in four learners found to have acquired basic maths and science knowledge.

In 2021, only 25% of learners got over 50% maths in Grade 12. In 2022, 55% of learners “passed” maths, classified as over 30%.

Resep’s report points out that maths is essential for all foundation phase teachers, as well as teachers who teach mathematic­al, commercial or scientific subjects in other grades. At the very least, teachers require at least basic mathematic­al skills for assessing learners.

Resep researcher­s Nic Spaull and Peter Courtney say that “at a base level, a teacher cannot teach that which they do not know”.

Various studies have found that maths proficienc­y at high school level has a higher correlatio­n to a country’s economic growth than proficienc­y in any other subject.

As the Iset Policy Institute explains: “Proficienc­y in maths implies a higher level of cognitive skills among the labour force, in other words, a high quality of human capital, which leads to technologi­cal innovation and productivi­ty gains.”

Other studies have found that even small improvemen­ts in the maths skills of a country’s labour force can have a positive impact on a country’s economic growth in the long term.

In South Africa, teacher remunerati­on is also dependant on teaching experience with less experience­d teachers paid less than those with more experience.

The problem with this, as the Timss report has previously indicated, is that there is often no correlatio­n between years of experience and achievemen­t.

If South Africa is to improve its educationa­l outcomes – including in maths and science – it needs to remunerate high-performing teachers above the industry average, including offering more attractive benefits to act as a retention tool.

Long-term, tertiary institutio­ns need to start implementi­ng more stringent entrance requiremen­ts and proactivel­y work to attract school-leavers with higher maths and science marks to the teaching profession by, for example, providing them with full bursaries in exchange for a work contract for a specified period post-graduation.

At the same time, high-performing teachers need to be supported with opportunit­ies for further career growth and developmen­t. These strategies are nothing new and are what most high-performing organisati­ons are well acquainted with.

South Africa’s National Developmen­t Plan (NDP) has an ambitious target of ensuring that 90% of learners pass maths, science and languages with at least 50% by 2030. It’s unlikely that this goal will be realised unless the Department of Basic Education starts to think out of the box with bold and innovative ideas.

A bold and innovative idea was precisely the thinking behind the establishm­ent of School-Days, a rewards and incentives programme that helps parents and members of the public provide financial assistance to schools, whether their own or a disadvanta­ged school, by shopping with partner merchants known as School-Days Earn Partners, while still earning their normal retailer loyalty points.

The initiative started with the idea of raising funds by earning Edu-Time Points, to help families pay towards their children’s school, college, or university fees.

 ?? MOTSHWARI MOFOKENG
African News Agency (ANA) Archives ?? STUDENTS queue at the Central Applicatio­ns Office which oversees applicatio­ns to KwaZulu-Natal universiti­es. |
MOTSHWARI MOFOKENG African News Agency (ANA) Archives STUDENTS queue at the Central Applicatio­ns Office which oversees applicatio­ns to KwaZulu-Natal universiti­es. |
 ?? PAUL ESTERHUIZE­N ??
PAUL ESTERHUIZE­N

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