Type | Working Paper |
Title | Children's schooling in South Africa: Transitions and tensions in households and communities |
Author(s) | |
Publication (Day/Month/Year) | 2000 |
URL | http://dev.opendocs.ids.ac.uk/opendocs/bitstream/handle/123456789/1876/CSDS Working Paper30.pdf?sequence=1 |
Abstract | New educational policies in South Africa have been designed to address the inequities of the former system and to 'provide an education of progressively high quality for all learners and in so doing lay a strong foundation for the development of all our people's talents and capabilities, advance the democratic transformation of society, ... [and] contribute to the eradication of poverty and the economic well-being of society ...' (Preamble, South African Schools Act, 1996, Government Gazette vol 377, 15 November, p.2). Specific policies and programmes to address this ambitions directive necessarily have focused on the reorganisation of schools, instructional standards and curricula. Providing schooling for children, however, involves more than just the learning environment of the classroom, but also the home. Recent research in other parts of sub-Saharan Africa suggests that household resources are not necessarily evenly distributed across members, and that families who are especially economically or socially vulnerable are likely to face difficult decisions over which children should receive how much education (Lloyd and Blanc, 1996; Makinwa-Adebusoye, 1991). These decisions are often linked to particular household structures, which include the number and ages of children, and the support of adults in the household, both socially and economically. The fiscal shortages feeing local and national government further contribute to the centrality of household viability and structure to children's schooling (Lloyd, 1994). Educating successively larger cohorts of children has placed tremendous burden on governments. Governments in turn have increasingly shifted these costs to families, exacerbating the strain on the household economy. The allocation of resources within the family may prove to be a crucial locus of policy evaluation and reform in the education sector: policies and programmes designed to benefit children do so largely through the mediation of parents or other adults in the household. However, as parents decide how many children to have and how well to educate them, the local and national constraints on that decision also must be considered. How does the larger policy and infrastructural context mediate parents' decisions about the number of children they have and the allocation of household resources among them? |
» | South Africa - Project for Statistics on Living Standards and Development 1993 |