For once the NYDA is tackling the issue of education. I certainly do agree with its Andile Lungisa, Chairperson of the National Youth Development Agency (NYDA) on the issue of making education an essential service. However the irony of it all is that we declare something an essential service but are unwilling to pay top dollar for that service. Granted the government is currently spending a fortune on the education sector (R189billion) but if we are to truly transform this economy we cannot put a cost to the benefits of a prosperous South Africa.
SADTU is also quite correct in pointing out that the problems in our education sector are systemic and we have to change the structure of the sector for us to achieve meaningful results. There are numerous intelligent suggestions out there on how we should deal with this sector. In other words everyone understands the problems with the education sector in South Africa. What continues to confuse me is that the cabinet continues to have these private lekogtlas to analyses problems we already know. What we need is action, decisive public and private sector action.
Blaming and penalising teachers, principals parents will not result in the improvement of the quality of education in this country. For me the crux of the problem is the issue of quality and process.
Firstly I do not think that the education sector should be headed by one minister or one individual. The problems of social change are just too complex to be fathomed by an individual. What we need is a think tank that manages the education sector. In my opinion the politicians involved in education despite their knowledge and qualifications cannot be expected to deal with the ever-changing variables of change. If I were the president, I would appoint a think tank made up of those with change management experience and those with academic experience who have worked elsewhere where education systems work to run the education department for the next five years or so and have a mandate to deliver a system that will meet the demands of a fast changing world.
According to MIT and Fudan University professor Yasheng Huang, in his analysis of whether democracy hinders or promotes economic growth, he finds that the competitive advantage of nations such as China is not infrastructure but how countries manage their human capital and the work ethic. With all the growth objectives, the job creation initiatives, the large spend on infrastructure , the South African economy will go nowhere until we make our priority the development, preservation and recognition of our human capital. Education is there a key success factor and cannot be treated lightly as we are doing now.
The education sector cannot be left to unions to determine policy nor can it be left to this government alone. It is a national crisis that all South Africans must now address. This of course includes the private sector. It is evident that it is not about financial resources but about management of the process of education.