IFP: 9 229 OUT OF KZN'S 34 968 SCIENCE TEACHERS ARE UNQUALIFIED
Almost one third of all science teachers employed by the KwaZulu-Natal Department of Education are unqualified while the department's measures to rectify this situation are insufficient, a response to a parliamentary question has revealed.
"As many as 9 229 out of the province's 34 968 science teachers currently lack formal qualifications to teach science subjects," said IFP MPL Roman Liptak who posed the question to the MEC for Education Senzo Mchunu in the KwaZulu-Natal Legislature.
The formal qualifications that are considered a prerequisite for teaching science in both GET and FET bands by the department are either a four-year Bachelor of Education degree or a relevant three-year Bachelor's degree followed by a Postgraduate Certificate in Education.
The reply to the IFP's question further revealed that out of the 9 229 unqualified science teachers 1 130 teachers only have matric without any further training, 925 teachers have matric with one or two years of further training, and 7 174 have a Bachelor's degree without the required Postgraduate Certificate in Education.
"These numbers are disconcerting considering the province's dismal matric pass rate for science subjects while there is a broad correlation between the distribution of unqualified and underqualified science teachers and underperforming geographical areas," said Liptak.