Sunday Tribune

Kids rule at school

New legislatio­n and emerging research are firm reminders that schools are for children, writes family editor Omeshnie Naidoo. She urges parents to familiaris­e themselves with the definitive guide to the 2019 classroom

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THE case of the Pinetown pupil, who wasn’t allowed to write his exams because his parents were about R4 000 behind on school fees, should be the last of its kind.

A Durban high court ruled it was unlawful for private schools to exclude pupils from writing exams, if their school fees had not been paid, without following proper procedure.

Judge Mokgere Masipa said the best practice would be to engage in collection methods that were in the child’s best interests, and in a manner which did not victimise or humiliate the child.

While the Constituti­onal Court prohibited corporal punishment in schools in 2000, another triumph came in October last year when a South Gauteng High Court judge ruled that physical discipline or “chastiseme­nt”, even by parents, violated children’s rights.

Last year, Kwazulu-natal was rocked by a video of a Phoenix mother beating her four-year-old, known as Baby G. The clip went viral.

What this means for schools is that they must have a code of conduct for pupils. The code must provide alternativ­e ways of maintainin­g discipline such as positive reinforcem­ent, the withdrawal of privileges and daily reports.

Racial discrimina­tion, too, is being vetted at educationa­l institutio­ns globally.

In London, Chikayzea Flanders, 12, who was put in isolation on his first day at Fulham Boys’ School because his dreadlocks did not comply with the rules, is one of the children featured in a research paper.

The paper was compiled by Dr Remi Joseph-salisbury, a presidenti­al fellow in ethnicity and inequaliti­es at Manchester University, and Dr Laura Connelly, a lecturer in criminolog­y at Salford University.

The academic work suggests schools that ban dreadlocks and braids, essentiall­y policing black hair, are using slave-era techniques to “maintain white supremacy”, the Daily Mail reported.

It added: “White social control of black hair has deep roots in enslavemen­t and colonialis­m, and notions of black hair as messy and antithetic­al to school discipline (and therefore success) are both naturalise­d and widespread.”

Whatever the issue, in short, knowledge and awareness are up to parents, who are ultimately responsibl­e for their children, said Vee Gani, of the Parents’ Associatio­n of Kwazulu-natal.

“A number of parents think school is a day care role and loath homework, but homework is necessary in subjects that have to be practised to be mastered, such as maths.”

You can find the rights and responsibi­lities of parents, pupils and public schools in the Public School Policy Guide published by the Department of Education online.

If you read it, you will know for instance that without consultati­on parents cannot be forced to buy different summer and winter uniforms, a pregnant female pupil cannot be forced to leave school and a school may take legal action against you for not paying school fees.

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