Type | Working Paper |
Title | The Open Door of Learning-Access Restricted: School effectiveness and efficiency across the South African education system |
Author(s) | |
Publication (Day/Month/Year) | 2016 |
URL | http://dare.ubvu.vu.nl/bitstream/handle/1871/54186/complete_dissertation.pdf?sequence=1 |
Abstract | More than two decades into democracy, South Africa remains a society divided. Despite its final dismantlement in 1994, the enduring remnants of apartheid are inescapably evident within the education system, where fault lines that are drawn by race, socio-economic class and geographical location continue to contribute to inequities in school quality and consequently, educational performance and attainment. Under the apartheid regime, the government allowed for separate and racially defined education departments,1 each providing quite divergent types and qualities of education. Besides tangible deficits in resources,2 schooling under the Bantu education system3 also sought to indoctrinate conformity, rote learning and authoritarian management styles. Despite concerted efforts to equalize expenditures per learner within the public education sector since 1994, the highly divided and unequal schooling system that was inherited from the apartheid regime has meant that many of the former black African schools that were entirely dysfunctional under apartheid remain dysfunctional today (Spaull, 2013). This is evidenced by high rates of dropout and grade repetition, underperformance and gross levels of teacher absenteeism amongst the poorer parts of the South African schooling system (Taylor, Muller & Vinjevold, 2003). |
» | South Africa - Southern Africa Consortium for Monitoring Educational Quality 2007 |