EDITORIAL
On 23rd August 2019 Anneke Smit was teaching Grade 11 biology class at a Hoërskool in Pretoria North. She had long had problems with certain pupils in her class - to the extent that the headmaster had had to send in other staff members in to restore order - and they were once again being disruptive. Some pupils were talking and another, Thandi*, was walking around the class and had laughed off Ms Smit's instructions to return to her seat.
Seeing the principal walk by Ms Smit had asked whether someone could not go and fetch him, commenting that she needed a polisiemannejtie (the Afrikaans diminutive for policeman) in class to keep order. She was immediately accused by Thandi of calling her a “police monkey”. Desiree, a pupil sitting in the front of the class, and then Ms Smit herself, had clarified that she had said “polisiemannejtie” not “police monkey”.
On 4th September 2019 a further incident occurred. Another of the difficult pupils, Abongile, had arrived late for the Life Sciences class. About ten minutes before the class ended, while Ms Smit was explaining some point important to the upcoming examinations, Abongile asked permission to go to the toilet. Ms Smit then asked whether this was “really necessary?” But after it was explained that Abongile’s period had started, she had allowed her to go.
A complaint was then laid with the Gauteng Department of Education against Ms Smit. On the 2nd October she received a letter from the acting District Director of Tshwane North accusing her of “improper, disgraceful or unacceptable” conduct for calling the one pupil a “police monkey” and refusing the other “permission to go to the toilet even though she told you that her menstruation periods started unexpectedly.”
A disciplinary hearing was then held on the 21st and 22nd October 2020 and on 3rd February 2021. In April 2021 Ms Smit was told by the head of the department that she had been found guilty on both charges and was dismissed from her position. Ms Smit had then appealed against the verdict and sentence to Education MEC Panyaza Lesufi, but he had dismissed her appeal in September 2021.