The Citizen (Gauteng)

IEB matric results out today

The Independen­t Examinatio­ns Board announces overall improvemen­t.

- Citizen team news@citizen.co.za

All candidates who passed achieved a pass good enough to do tertiary study.

The Independen­t Examinatio­ns Board (IEB) has announced an overall improvemen­t in last year’s National Senior Certificat­e (NSC) matric examinatio­ns, with results released today to 11 464 full-time and 666 part-time candidates across southern Africa.

The 2017 pass rate is 98.76%, compared to last year’s pass rate of 98.67%. All candidates who passed achieved a pass good enough to enter tertiary study at one of the three levels:

88.50% (compared to 87.61% in 2016) of the cohort achieved entry to degree study.

8.96% (compared to 9.83% in 2016) qualified for entry to diploma study.

1.30% (compared to 1.23% in 2016) achieved entry for study at Higher Certificat­e level.

The candidates wrote the exams at 212 examinatio­n centres across southern Africa in October and November 2017. There was an increase in numbers writing from 2016, when there were 11 022 full-time candidates and 703 parttime candidates.

The IEB said the education standards authority, Umalusi, had monitored all aspects of the 2017 examinatio­n process and declared the results to be fair and valid.

Anne Oberholzer, CEO of the IEB, said: “The 2017 NSC candidates have done very well and have once again shown that with a commitment to hard work over their 12 years of schooling, and supported by a dedicated cohort of teachers and parents, they have passed with flying colours. They are ready for the next step in their journey of life-long learning.”

Looking at the results from a broader perspectiv­e, she added: “As the world changes, it is inevitable that traditiona­l educationa­l pathways will be challenged and demands placed on the mass education system to respond appropriat­ely. Globalisat­ion and the integratio­n of societies across traditiona­l boundaries demand that citizens develop appropriat­e social and emotional skills to manage a variety of non-traditiona­l relationsh­ips effectivel­y.

“The age of the IT profession­al has turned the traditiona­l notion of success upside down. Mark Zuckerberg, Bill Gates and Steve Jobs all dropped out of university, but have contribute­d enormously to the world.

“SA’s Mark Shuttlewor­th founded his digital certificat­e company, Thawte, while still a student. The key to their success

was a keen interest in a field that demanded a change in attitude from the traditiona­l ways of acquiring knowledge to an explorator­y, entreprene­urial spirit of discovery.

“The world of performing arts

and entertainm­ent has many examples of people who found the traditiona­l academic educationa­l pathway was not for them, including Oprah Winfrey, Tom Hanks, Brad Pitt, and Charlize Theron.”

Oberholzer added: “It is not

useful for everyone to be focused solely on a university education, possibly neglecting their real strengths in the false belief that a degree is the only vehicle to a secure and successful life.” –

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa