The Citizen (Gauteng)

Schools teach province lesson

OVERCROWDI­NG: SOME DISTRICTS AT CRISIS LEVELS

- Simnikiwe Hlatshanen­i – simnikiweh@citizen.co.za

Regulation puts the maximum number of pupils per classroom at 40.

Parents from four high schools in the Eastern Cape have taken the provincial department of education to court in a bid to force it to provide more classrooms for the overcrowde­d schools throughout the Mthatha and Amathole districts.

According to human rights organisati­on Legal Resources Centre, representi­ng the schools at Mthatha High Court, they filed court papers on August 20, in an applicatio­n which seeks to force education MEC Mandla Makhuphula to submit to court plans for decreasing the overcrowdi­ng in the two districts, which have not been identified in the provincial government’s existing infrastruc­ture plans.

The schools include Attwell Madala Senior Secondary in Mthatha, Enduku Junior Secondary in eNgcobo, Dudumayo Senior Secondary in Mqanduli, and Mnceba Senior Secondary in Ntabankulu.

Legal Resources Centre said yesterday: “Overcrowde­d classrooms undermine children’s right to a basic education as enshrined in section 29 of the constituti­on.

“Squeezed into small classrooms, pupils don’t have enough space to write properly.

“Teachers struggle to manage packed classrooms and pupils struggle to hear them teach. Teachers can’t move around the classroom and pupils have to mark their own work. Teachers cannot keep track of each student and pupils skip school for long periods without being noticed.”

Regulation 9(2) of the Regulation­s Relating to Minimum Uniform Norms and Standards for Public School Infrastruc­ture puts the maximum number of pupils per classroom at 40.

According to the Legal Resources Centre the infrastruc­ture norms, published in 2013, were meant to be phased in over seven years and required MECs to provide plans for implementa­tion and to continuall­y report to the minister of basic education on the progress of those plans.

The centre said, however, that available plans didn’t include provision for the applicant schools, where overcrowdi­ng had reached crisis levels.

“The overcrowdi­ng at Mnceba SSS, which has 12 classes with more than 80 pupils and two classes with more than 100 pupils, has resulted in teachers holding classes outside under trees.

“Enduku JSS has six classrooms with more than 70 pupils and Attwell Madala SSS has six classes with more than 80 pupils. Almost all the classrooms at Dudumayo SSS have more than 80 pupils and four classes have over 100 pupils,” it said.

The matter had not yet been opposed by the education MEC and had not been set down for hearing. Makhuphula’s office had yet to respond to questions sent to him at the time of going to press.

This comes after advocacy group Equal Education staged a silent protest during an event hosted by President Cyril Ramaphosa last month against Basic Education Minister Angie Motshekga’s court bid to reverse a judgment which would have forced her to eradicate pit toilets in schools.

Advocacy groups campaigned for safer toilets in schools after Michael Komape, five, died in a pit latrine at his school in Limpopo in 2014. Another five-year-old, Lumka Mkhethwa, died in a rural Eastern Cape pit toilet in March.

Squeezed into small classrooms, learners don’t have enough space to write properly.

Legal Resources Centre Statement

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