THE RIGHT TO EDUCATION, SCHOOL GOVERNING BODIES AND OFFICIAL LANGUAGES: WHAT IS IN THE BEST INTERESTS OF OUR CHILDREN?
Two matters currently serving before our Courts will be pivotal for South African education, school governing bodies (SGB's) as well as public single-medium schools. Both matters rest upon the question of who has the final say in determining language and admissions policy in South Africa's public schools: schools and their SGB's or provincial departments of education?
The first case is that of Rivonia Primary School, an English-medium former model-C school in Johannesburg. The current situation is that last year the Supreme Court of Appeal overturned an earlier High Court judgment by ruling that the SGB was within its rights to refuse admission to a Grade 1 pupil on the grounds that the school was full to capacity.
The judgment is of core importance to former model-C schools, since their ability to continue to provide excellent non-racial education may depend directly on their power to determine whether their schools are full. On the other hand, the MEC for education in Gauteng contends that such decisions should not rest with SGB's because provincial education authorities must ensure that all children enjoy their right to education. The MEC has been given leave to appeal against the SCA judgment in the Constitutional Court.
The second case is that of Fochville high school, an Afrikaans-medium high school in Gauteng, where the school was ordered to accept 37 black, English-speaking pupils by the department. After being forced to accept the pupils, the school applied for an urgent interdict against the department, arguing that its SGB had lawfully determined both its language policy - Afrikaans - and the school's capacity, and on those grounds could not accept the pupils. The department is arguing that the school is trying to preserve "racial privilege" despite the fact that the school would have been happy to accept the 37 pupils had they accepted that their tuition would be in Afrikaans.
The legal point of departure is section 29(2) of the Constitution, which states that everyone has the right to receive education in the official language of their choice in public educational institutions, where that education is reasonably practicable. Section 29(2) also makes provision - expressly - for single-medium education institutions, but taking into account equity, practicability and the need to redress the past.