Sunday World (South Africa)

Kagiso Trust pivotal in uplifting education in Free State

The province leads the country with the highest number of bachelor passes

- By Kabelo Khumalo

The performanc­e of township and rural schools in the Free State has been partly credited to Kagiso Trust’s Beyers Naude Schools Developmen­t Programme (BNSDP).

In 2004, Kagiso Trust implemente­d its pilot of the BNSDP in the Vhembe district in Limpopo. In 2007, the programme was extended to schools in the Free State’s Thabo Mofutsanya­na district in partnershi­p with the Free State department of education.

By 2011, the programme had grown from 10 schools to 166 in 2016. The BNSDP has since been extended to Fezile Dabi and Motheo districts in the Free State, which again took the number one spot in the 2020 matric results.

In the 2020 National Senior Certificat­e results, the Fezile Dabi, Thabo Mofutsanya­na and Motheo districts in the Free State made the national top 10 list. Fezile Dabi and Motheo have been in the top 10 for two consecutiv­e years.

Kagiso Trust CEO Mankodi Moitse said the trust is aiming for similar results with its interventi­ons in rural and township schools in the Sekhukhune East district of Limpopo.

“Education in our country has its challenges, and the Covid-19 pandemic threatened to destroy the hopes and dreams of many matriculan­ts. To be able to prevail despite the closure of schools and the challenges that came with being unable to access the traditiona­l and necessary schooling is a feat that shows the determinat­ion and resilience of the learners,” Moitse said.

“We must also pay tribute to the work of educators, parents, communitie­s and the trust’s teams of experts on the ground around the country, particular­ly in Limpopo and the Free State. Their collaborat­ion and dedication have been vital in getting the 2020 matrics throughout this year.”

MEC for education in the Free State Tate Makgoe has expressed his gratitude to Kagiso Trust and other partners for helping the government.

“Working together with Kagiso Trust, we encourage schools to achieve educationa­l success by raising the bar, closing the gap and supporting learners in all grades,” said Makgoe.

By 2011, the developmen­t programme grew from 10 schools to 166 in 2016

For many of the 152 000 pupils who sat for the National Senior Certificat­e, the final year of schooling was characteri­sed by the anxiety of having to write matric in the midst of the Covid-19 pandemic and the added stress and uncertaint­y it brought.

The added stress for the Class of 2020 included prolonged school closures; shortened holidays; after-hours and weekend classes; and limited educationa­l and extra-curricular opportunit­ies for some pupils. However, the myriad challenges that faced this dedicated group of pupils did little to deter them from achieving amazing results. To say that I am proud of them would be an understate­ment.

The Class of 2020 achieved a pass rate 83.8% – a 3.5% decline compared to the 2019 achievemen­t of 87.2%. This was no easy feat and the Class of 2020, the first to sit for exams under the disruption­s brought about by the Covid-19 pandemic, deserve all the kudos and congratula­tions they are receiving.

Despite a difficult environmen­t arising from a rapidly growing system and tough economic conditions, the Gauteng department of education registered significan­t achievemen­ts in the delivery of quality basic education through its programmes and interventi­ons in the 2020 academic year. Faced with severe budget pressures, we have, once more, delivered on our core mandate.

Gauteng is still the leading performing province by virtue of the size of the provincial system. We are the second-largest provincial education system with 110 184 matriculan­ts that wrote the National Senior Certificat­e examinatio­ns compared to 97 717 matriculan­ts in 2019.

What is more important than the 83.8% pass rate for 2020 are the detailed indicators showing the increasing quality of

teaching and learning in the province. It is the details of the 2020 results, which show that the positive trends of the last seven years continue.

Gauteng achieved another first with regards to bachelor passes. At 45.09%, Gauteng achieved the highest percentage of bachelor (matric exemptions) passes since 1994. We achieved the highest number of candidates qualifying for bachelor studies in the country with 49 679 pupils. This is up from the 43 494 bachelors passes in 2019.

Over 30 675 pupils passed with a diploma pass. We are encouraged by the fact that more pupils who passed the exams in 2020 (72.9%) passed with a bachelor or diploma pass qualifying them to go into higher education.

Several Gauteng township schools have also performed well, with four schools achieving a 100% pass rate and a bachelor rate of above 60%. Those schools include Diepsloot Secondary No 2 (76,9% bachelor passes); Rusoord Secondary School (73.9% bachelor passes); Marlboro Gardens Secondary School (69.2% bachelor passes) and Denver Secondary School (66.1% bachelor passes). I want to congratula­te these schools for a job well done.

It must be noted that just over 91.7% of Gauteng schools performed above the

nationally defined benchmark for school under-performanc­e of 65%. We have also made significan­t strides in closing the gap between schools serving poor communitie­s, specifical­ly township schools, and those with a strong middle-class component, as shown by the narrowing gap in the performanc­e of these schools.

In 2009, township schools achieved an average pass rate of 60.1%, with non-township schools achieving 84.2%, making for a gap of 24.1 percentage points. In 2020, the gap has been increased to 11.8% compared to 2.78% in 2019 and 4.6% in 2018.

The success of township schools can largely be attributed to the efforts of the secondary school improvemen­t programme (SSIP).

These were designated priority schools because, for historical and other reasons, they have not achieved the outcomes pupils, parents, and the department expected. The Ssipprovid­es extra classes by expert teachers on Saturdays and during school holidays, and final matric revision camps in October.

Last year, the SSIP targeted over 65 734 grade 12 pupils in over 436 priority schools from January. More than 78.7% of SSIP pupils passed compared to 78.5% in 2019.

A total of 79 SSIP schools achieved above 90% pass rate. Four SSIP schools achieved 100%. So, it is particular­ly pleasing to note that the SSIP has again proven its full value of improving results and showing that more township children than ever before are benefittin­g from the efforts of all involved in the SSIP.

I am also proud that all of Gauteng’s15 districts performed above the national average of 76.2%. The top five districts in Gauteng featured as the national top five districts, with six Gauteng districts in the top 10. The Tshwane South district achieved a 89.6% pass rate as the top performing district.

The province also achieved a total of 41 459 distinctio­ns, compared to 37 422 in 2019 and 36 113 in 2018, across all subjects. We have contribute­d 23.4% of all distinctio­ns nationally. The maths passes at 65.4% this year remain commendabl­e.

While there was a decrease from 2019, this performanc­e is still above the national target of 60% pass rate for mathematic­s. The successful achievers in mathematic­s deserve our congratula­tions because the 2020 exam year was very tough.

The pass rate for physical science is 72.6%, a slight increase from 2019. Gauteng’s performanc­e in the life sciences was 76.5%. The continued performanc­e remains above the national target of 60% for science subjects.

More girls (10 973 more) wrote the matric exam than boys. A total of 87.7% boys passed compared to 86.9% of girls. Girls who achieved a bachelor pass totalled 45.5% compared to 41.2% of boys.

The pass rate for boys is higher than that of girls when it comes to maths and science. We will review our interventi­ons in 2021 to deal with these disparitie­s.

We are conscious of the fact that the remarkable performanc­e that we saw from our matriculan­ts could not have happened without parents, guardians, teachers and principals, and for that we remain eternally grateful. Once again, congratula­tions to the Class of 2020!

 ?? /GCIS ?? Gauteng education MEC Panyaza Lesufi and premier David Makhura congratula­te the top pupils in the Class of 2020.
/GCIS Gauteng education MEC Panyaza Lesufi and premier David Makhura congratula­te the top pupils in the Class of 2020.
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