Equal Education demands an end to prejudicial school codes of conduct!
30 August 2016
Equal Education (EE) is outraged at current media reports of discrimination at several schools, including Lawson Brown High in Port Elizabeth, and Pretoria High School for Girls (PHGS) in Gauteng, where black learners are prohibited from wearing their hair in afros, because this is apparently untidy and unkept. Unfortunately we are not unsurprised that many school governing bodies (SGBs) continue to enforce rules that are discriminatory and unconstitutional.
In many schools across the country, we have discovered deep-seated racism, sexism and all sorts of other prejudices to be present in schools’ codes of conduct, in admissions and fee exemptions policies, and in management practices and institutional culture.
We have in the past intervened to assist Rastafarian, foreign, and pregnant learners, all of whom were either unlawfully barred from enrolling in school, or staying in school, due to discriminatory practices. The root cause is institutional prejudice –schools are either ignorant of the law or prepared to disregard it. In too many instances, there is a lack of oversight from provincial departments of education. SGBs are able to make arbitrary rules with impunity as the education bureaucracy does not scrutinise schools’ codes of conduct as mandated.
We are unfortunately able to cite a litany of such cases, including: