Dear friends and fellow South Africans,
We have all been shocked by the results of the Annual National Assessment Tests for literacy and numeracy in our schools. Literacy in Grade 3 stands at 35%, creeping up by only 3% by Grade 6. Numeracy is even lower, at only 28% in Grade 3.
But many commentators have asked why we are surprised and indeed even the Minister of Basic Education announced that the results merely confirm what we already know.
For years the IFP warned that the Outcomes Based Education system would fail our children. By now, an entire generation has been educated under a system that failed to equip them for a competitive labour market. In essence, we removed the first few rungs of a ladder that all must, and few can, climb.
Measured against the Revised National Curriculum Statement of 2002, our education system is not really failing. It's all about how the standard is set. Our education system seeks to create "a lifelong learner who is confident and independent, literate, numerate and multi-skilled, compassionate, with a respect for the environment and the ability to participate in society as a critical and active citizen."
Ensuring that learners can "read, write, count and think" is but one among 16 strategies for creating the kind of learners we want. It is on par with strategies like, "Infusing the classroom with a culture of human rights", "Nurturing the new patriotism" and "Freeing the potential of girls as well as boys".