The new Social Inclusion policy framework for Post school education seek to eliminate discrimination of all forms.
On the 21st of August 2014, the Minister of Higher Education and Training, Dr Blade Nzimande gazetted an important draft policy framework on Social inclusion in our post-school higher education and training landscape. This policy framework is gazetted for public comments so that inputs and contributions can be considered and consolidated before it goes to Cabinet for approval towards being a law.
But what does this Social inclusion policy framework seek to achieve?
This policy framework bestows a valued recognition to individuals and groups, affirming them as equals amongst equals in Higher education from their status as disabled, as women, as blacks, as HIV/Aids sufferers and any other form with which people get discriminated against. We want to foster the full potential of any student, a worker and an academic in all public Post-school education and training institutions.
Institutions of higher learning have an unavoidable mandate to give practical content on our progressive democratic laws within themselves and to society as a whole. They must be catalysts in deepening and advancing human rights values such as promoting non-racialism, gender parity in their own hierarchy so that they disgorge the same to student population, they must create all mechanism and a conducive environment for the disabled students and professional staff. For the disabled, it means having special pathways for those in wheel-chairs, having reading and writing instruments for the blind.
The Department of Higher Education and Training, since its establishment as a stand-alone Department in 2009, building from the advances made since 1994, has prioritized transformation of the Post-school education and training (PSET) system. The green and white paper on PSET articulates this in details. We want to redress all these vexing questions such as race, gender ,class and disability as they find articulation in all facets within the education and training terrain. In his budget vote in July 2014, the Minister of Higher Education asserted that: