Saturday Star

Criminals are teaching our kids

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IT TAKES a village to raise a child, it takes a very special person to teach a class of them. The problem is that teaching in South Africa is neither the calling nor the profession it once was.

On one side of the spectrum, our poorest schools are held to ransom by a very powerful union which resists any attempt by the government to regulate or in any other way hold its members to account.

On the other end, education is monetised by guaranteei­ng the best results possible.

Either way education suffers. Our children are poorer for it.

Not every teacher is lazy or only interested in teaching the best, by weeding out the rest. There are many teachers who go above and beyond every day in schools across the country.

But there are also those who are criminals. Literally.

Schools are legally required to conduct background checks on prospectiv­e teachers and any other staff, including coaches, administra­tors and ground keepers to ensure they aren’t on the National Register of Sexual Offenders.

Despite this, a third-party data agency has establishe­d that 3.6% of teachers have a criminal record yet are employed in schools. More alarmingly, more than two-thirds of teachers who have criminal records do not disclose this. Forty percent of them are young teachers. A quarter have conviction­s for theft, 15% have sentences for assault, 4.6% for fraud and 3.9% for drugs. 2.63% have conviction­s for sexual offences.

There shouldn’t ever be a criminal in the classroom, but we have plenty.

It is easy to hold the government accountabl­e, but in this case, the government, in the form of the police and the NPA, has done its job. The question is why haven’t the schools?

If a credit bureau can find this out, why can’t a school governing body?

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