SADTU response to the NEEDU Report: Top heavy on evaluation, light on development
Teachers and teacher unions have nothing to fear from the NEEDU (National Education Evaluation and Development Unit) Report. The proposals provide for an evaluation unit, whose main purpose is to undertake research and make recommendations to the Minister, and which would operate as a massive parastatal consultancy with little direct responsibility for practical implementation of anything.
Teachers and educationalists should however be concerned by the following:
- The proposed Unit adds yet another layer of bureaucracy for teachers and schools to cope with. Increased monitoring and inspections - if not linked to a positive programme of teacher development - will lead to further demoralisation of the profession;
- It represents a massive diversion of scarce educational resources - proposing an annual budget of close to half a billion rand and a high-calibre professional workforce approaching 1,000.
- The proposals take us back to the old forms of duplication, with multiple agencies evaluating the same things for different purposes.
- We also have to ask the question: Do the recommendations measure up to the task set by Polokwane Resolution number 32 - which called for: "The establishment of a national education evaluation and development unit for purposes of monitoring, evaluation and support." We would contend that there is little in the recommendations to take forward the quest for teacher development and support.
The report and proposal does not begin to address the underlying socio-economic conditions which fuel poor performance. The Report is concerned with measuring outputs, rather than improving inputs into the teaching and learning system. Our fear is that teachers will be cast as scapegoats once again.
Background
Clearly the main concern of the Report is with monitoring and evaluation to hold the teachers to account. Development must take place elsewhere. Not surprisingly, the NEEDU Committee is unable to fully comprehend the view from the side of the teachers, and the deep frustration felt by the failure to deliver teacher development in tandem with evaluation. This has a long history.