DA questions validity of Annual National Assessment results (ANAs)
Note to editors: The following statement was distributed earlier today at a press conference held by Dr Wilmot James MP, DA Shadow Minister of Basic Education.
Yesterday, 28 June, Basic Education Minister Angie Motshekga released the results of the Annual National Assessments (ANA). The only credible figures to emerge from these results, however, are the so-called verification ANA results. Administered by the Human Sciences Research Council (HSRC), the verification process was an objectivity check based on a representative sample of schools nationwide involving the use of an independent assessment methodology.
The HSRC's verification ANA tells us what the current levels of literacy and numeracy are for a limited selection of schools. They do not, however tell us which schools in the country are struggling. Information about which schools are doing well and which poorly can only be revealed by the overall ANA results, which comprise a count of every learner who was in Grade 3 and Grade 6 in 2010 (the tests were done on Grades 4 and 7 learners at the beginning of the year). There are good reasons to treat the overall ANA results with great caution.
At the release of the ANA results Minister Motshekga said that nearly 6 million learners took the tests (5,842,622, to be exact). We ask the Minister to confirm how many of the learners tested were actually included in the final results. It has come to our attention that not all the schools tested were actually included in the final results.
We know that all special and independent schools (except those in the Western Cape) were excluded from the testing. We are aware of some major problems in the reliability of collection and reporting for schools in the North West, Northern Cape, Limpopo and Mpumalanga provinces, and a complete meltdown in the Eastern Cape.