Time to fix our schools
3 February 2021
I asked a Soweto mother how she managed the home schooling of her children, aged 16 and 10. She said they had no home schooling because they had no school textbooks. Their schools have no programme and no requirements about home schooling. Her children sleep late in the morning, eat and then watch TV all day until it is time to eat again, watch more TV and then go to bed.
She said Soweto is full of children without masks running wild in the streets, not observing social distancing and in her words, "smoking and getting pregnant." That may be an exaggeration, but there are certainly many children who get up to mischief when they are not at school.
Talking to the parents of a boy and girl who attend well known private schools, opening on Monday, their home schooling experience is quite different. They have stringent requirements and comprehensive programmes; parents have to spend the whole morning until one o'clock supervising the children. The burden of balancing home schooling and work has become incredibly onerous but their children are benefiting.
State schools are, of course, closed until 15 February. This means another two weeks of idleness for children who are not fortunate enough to be home schooled. Why is it that many state schools seem unwilling or unable to provide for home schooling?