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A slow shift to accept men in female-dominated early education

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GROWING up without a father, Eastern Cape education expert Obakeng Kagola recognised the importance of male role models in early childhood and has dedicated his career to creating equitable space for them in the Early Childhood Development (ECD) sector.

Kagola, a lecturer in early childhood education (ECD) in Nelson Mandela Universityโ€™s education faculty, aims to disrupt the impression that the sector is predominantly for women educators, but is still battling that stereotype after a decade working in it.

When he first started studying, says Kagola, he had to continually justify why he could teach young children, despite being male. 

โ€œThe (question) of my gender always popped up. (When) I was a lecturer at a TVET college in Mafikeng, one module covered nutrition from birth to six years. I was told that I couldnโ€™t teach that, as I was male.โ€

Kagola convinced his peers otherwise, and then his classrooms. โ€œI taught a class of 35 students โ€“ mostly rural women in their thirties โ€“ who were rigid in their thinking about ECD being womenโ€™s work.โ€

Doggedly determined to specialise in the field, he became a member of the national marking team which taught ECD practitioners, or Educare.

Kagola understands the importance of a role model. His grandmother nurtured him, as well as eight other children, in their modest dwelling in Wolmaranstad in the North-West. Early education, he says, can help fill the gap when a role model is missing at home. 

He wants society to rethink the positioning of men (by creating) alternative realities of what it is to be a man. His aim is to make a contribution: โ€œI can be a role model. Many children grow up without a father. So did I.โ€

In a 2012 academic paper, Kagola and co-author Mathabo Khau showed how visual representations could be used to change perceptions of male teachers in the Foundation Phase in the Nelson Mandela metropole.

The study, โ€˜Using Collages to Change School Governing Body Perceptions of Male Foundation Phase Teachersโ€™, recommended that participatory visual methodologies be used in โ€œcourageous conversationsโ€ with communities, exploring the construction of โ€œcaring masculinitiesโ€ and involvement of men in care professions.

โ€œThe effort to recruit and retain male Foundation Phase teachers is a global phenomenon,โ€ Kagola says. In Ireland, Australia and New Zealand, strategies include bursaries and awareness campaigns to bring more male teachers into early childhood education. 

Despite initiatives to recruit men to teach Foundation Phase, there has been no significant improvement in South Africa, he says. The sector is still female dominated, with only 22.7 per cent being male, according to a 2015 survey. 

For Kagola, the privilege of watching a child grow in education is profound. 

โ€œIn January, a child could not hold a pen or read a sentence, but by the end of the semester, they could take care of themselves.โ€

He also applies a holistic approach to teaching. For example, he points out, slower learners may have been negatively affected by family dynamics so, rather than labelling them, more care should be taken to define the root of the problem.

True teachers, regardless of gender, are vital in the early stages of education, he believes. โ€œSociety needs to rethink the concept of work. There are male Foundation Phase teachers in the system who are thriving โ€“ and they are not planning on leaving.โ€

Nelson Mandela University: Supplied

Gibelaโ€™s IT, computer science bursary applications open

TRAIN manufacturerย Gibela Rail Consortiumย is offering 150 bursaries to students looking to further their studies in engineering, computer science, and logistics, among others.

In a statement, Gibela says applications are available for both universities and technical and vocational educationand training (TVET) institutions.

The Gibela 2023 bursaries include full tuition, a book allowance, accommodation and meals, states the company, adding that they are granted for one year and are renewable on an annual basis based on academic performance.

To qualify, bursary applicants must be South African citizens with a South African barcoded ID, enrolled or intending to enrol at a local TVET institution, enrolled or intending to enrol at a South African university or university of technology, demonstrate potential for academic success, as well as in need of financial assistance.

According to the statement, bursaries for study at a university or university of technology are available in electrical, electronic, mechanical, metallurgical, and industrial engineering; computer science and information technology; accounting; and supply chain and logistics management.

The prerequisites for a university or university of technology Gibela bursary includes a matric with level six for mathematics, physical science and accounting, and level five for English.

Additionally, written proof of acceptance for admission to a South African university or university of technology, and proof of income from a parent or guardian.

To study at a TVET institution, bursaries are available in professions such as boilermakers, electricians, mechanics, welders, millwrights, pattern-makers, vehicle-builders, plumbers, control and instrumentation technicians, and fitters and turners.

The prerequisites for a Gibela bursary at a TVET institution includes a matric with mathematics and science, and English at level four, written proof of acceptance for admission to a South African TVET institution, and proof of income from a parent or guardian.

Candidates can apply by sending a short CV, a certified copy of their academic records and a certified copy of their South African ID to gibelabursaries@communityrail.co.za or fax the application to 086 246 2666.

The bursary applications close on 15 February 2023.

Staff Reporter

Sri Lanka crisis: Parents forced to pick which child can go to school

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Ten-year-old Malki is too excited to stay in bed.

She’s up an hour before her two sisters and two brothers so that she can scrape some bright red gloss off her fingernails.

Today is her first day back at school and she wants to be spotless.

But her siblings must stay at home – her family can only afford to send her.

Six months ago, Sri Lanka was in the eye of the storm for its worst economic crisis since independence.

While calm has largely returned to the island nation, the full impact of mass unemployment and dramatic price rises is now visible among many families.

Every parent’s nightmare

Malki’s mother Priyanthika has had to pause her children’s schooling so they can earn money by selling fireworks.

Food prices in Sri Lanka reached record levels when inflation hit an all-time high of almost 95%.

Some days, no-one in Malki’s family eats.

While school is free in Sri Lanka, meals are not provided. When you add in the cost of uniforms and transport, education is a luxury Priyanthika can no longer afford.

She says she needs about 400 rupees per day ($1.09, 90p) for each child if they are to return to school.

Sitting in her one-bedroom home on the bed everyone shares, she wipes the tears from her face.

“All these kids used to go to school every day. I don’t have the money to send them now,” she says.

Malki can go to school because her shoes and uniform still fit.

But her younger sister Dulanjalee lies in bed crying, upset that today is not her turn.

“My darling, don’t cry,” says Priyanthika. “I’ll try and take you tomorrow.”

A shattered education

As the sun rises, children who are going to class hurry along dirt roads in white cotton uniforms, jumping on the back of motorcycles or piling into tuk-tuks.

Across town, Prakrama Weerasinghe sighs wearily.

He is the principal of Colombo’s Kotahena Central Secondary College and sees the economic distress every day.

“When the school day begins, when we have the morning assembly, children tend to faint from hunger,” he says.

The government says they have started distributing rice to schools but several schools contacted by the BBC say they have received no help.

Mr Weerasinghe says student attendance fell as low as 40% before he was forced to ask teachers to bring in extra food to keep students returning to class.

Joseph Stalin is General Secretary of the Ceylon Teachers Union.

He believes the government is wilfully unaware of the increasing numbers of families giving up on education because of the cost.

“Our teachers are the ones who see the empty lunch boxes,” he says. “The real victims of this economic crisis are the children.”

“[The government] are not looking for an answer to this issue. It’s been seen and identified by UNICEF and others, rather than the Sri Lankan government.”

UNICEF say it will get harder for people to feed themselves in the months ahead, with inflation in the cost of basic goods like rice continuing to cripple families.

It’s expected more children across the country will be forced to stop attending class.

The last hope?

With the government seemingly unable to manage the situation, charities have had to step in.

Samata Sarana is a Christian charity which has been helping Colombo’s poorest for three decades.

Today, its food hall is packed with hungry students from schools across the capital.

While the charity can help around 200 children daily, it is clear it’s struggling to meet demand.

“They give us food, buses to go home, they give us everything so now we can study,” says five-year-old Manoj as he waits in line for lunch with a group of friends.

When Malki returns home from her first day back at school, she tells her mother how much she enjoyed seeing her friends again.

But she also tells her mother she needs a new workbook and says her teachers are asking for extra money to buy materials for a school project.

Money that the family does not have.

“If we manage to find today’s meal, we go on to worry about how to find something to eat tomorrow,” says Priyanthika.

“That has become our life.”

BBC

Study Finds Teen Suicides Declined With Online Learning

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ONLINE schooling may have reduced suicide rates in LGBTQ+ teenagers in Dane County during the height of the COVID-19 pandemic, according to a study from UW-Madison’s School of Education, possibly because the school environment for some teens was harmful.

But suicide rates for LGBTQ+ teens are still two to three times higher than their cisgender and straight peers.

“I don’t want any other parent to ever, ever, ever feel like this,” said Dia Caulkins, whose child Graciella-Sawyer Caulkins-Feltz died by suicide in November.

Graciella-Sawyer, who was non-binary, was only 14 when they died. They loved the colors pink and yellow, and unicorns. They had just picked up photography, snapping photos of flowers, sunsets and ice cream. They cared about animals and had just started piano lessons.

They were also extremely kind and compassionate, almost to a fault, Caulkins said.

“They didn’t do this to hurt us, they did this because they couldn’t see a way out,” she said. “And we have to be doing more so that they have a place where they fit, where they’re accepted.”

World events such as the war in Ukraine and George Floyd’s death deeply affected Graciella-Sawyer. They stopped to talk with people experiencing homelessness, volunteered in the community and checked in on their siblings often. They were nice to everyone, even to those who were unkind to them.

“Their capacity for love, except for themselves, was amazing,” Caulkins said.

“I think we need to be doing more,” she said.

UW doctoral student Erin Gill and assistant professor Mollie McQuillan, who authored the study, said finding solutions is particularly important as anti-LGBTQ+ rhetoric increases, especially surrounding youth and schools โ€” from lawsuits over school districts’ gender identity policies and discourse in the 2022 gubernatorial race to efforts to repeal sex education curriculum and challenges to children’s Pride displays in libraries.

“Our study highlights that we need additional organizational supports and reforms for queer and trans kids who are getting pushed out of school and aren’t safe in school,” McQuillan said.

At the start of the pandemic , there were “two stories” about how LGBTQ+ youth were fairing, Gill said.

“We were hearing that some kids were really thriving not being in school anymore because they were out of harmful school environments,” she said. “But we’d also been hearing this other story where youth were really struggling at home, whether they were in a harmful home environment or they lacked the supports they had in school.”

THE STUDY

Those divergent experiences are borne out in the UW study, in which McQuillan and Gill compared results from the Dane County Youth Assessment from 2018 and 2021.

The assessment is a survey given to students every three years, asking them about different behaviors and risk factors, such as drug use and bullying.

Gill and McQuillan’s study found that LGBTQ+ youth reported “significantly fewer” attempts of suicide in 2021 than in 2018, but greater anxiety.

Specifically, in 2021, nearly 39 percent of gay or lesbian high schoolers reported seriously contemplating or having attempted suicide, compared with nearly 42 percent in 2018.

That rate was nearly 47 percent for bisexual students in 2021, compared with nearly 51 percent in 2018.

And for students questioning their sexual identity, the rate was just more than 35 percent in 2021 and just above 38 percent in 2018.

Corresponding rates for straight students, however, were much lower: 14 percent of them in 2021 and 17 percent in 2018.

Meanwhile, anxiety in high schoolers rose from nearly 30 percent in 2018 to more than 32 percent in 2021.

McQuillan said environmental factors may help explain why anxiety increased in students while suicidal thoughts may have decreased.

Anxiety is thought to be linked to a home environment and additional pandemic-related stressors families were facing, while other supports in school and the community were cut off, McQuillan said.

But suicide is thought to be linked more to peer victimization, or bullying.

“So, victimization doesn’t explain all of this increase in suicidality among queer and trans kids, but it explains some of it. And when kids were out of school and experiencing potentially less victimization, we saw that link of suicidality and not anxiety,” McQuillan said.

Caulkins wonders if students whose mental health improved during online schooling already had friends and peer support. “If you don’t have any friends, that’s a very lonely place to be at 12 and 13.”

For Graciella-Sawyer, “the pandemic was terrible,” their mom said.

“It wasn’t like life was easy for them before that, but it was like they were treading water okay,” Caulkins said. “And as the pandemic went on, they got lonelier and sadder.”

Once in-person learning returned, Graciella-Sawyer tried to make friends by joining clubs and staying involved. But some kids bullied them verbally, and some even took photos of them and threatened to post them online.

“We as adults, we as the grown-ups, have to teach kids that their words matter and they stick with kids who are lonely and sad and isolated,” Caulkins said. “As parents, we have a responsibility to make sure that our kids know they are not OK.”

What she hopes to see: More community building in schools, to expose students to different backgrounds and identities, and better mental health services.

The process to get counseling for Graciella-Sawyer was slow, and now as Caulkins is trying to find counseling for her other children as they grieve, the waitlist is months long.

Gill said the study reinforces the importance of bolstering and multiplying ways to support LGBTQ+ youth. And McQuillan said there should be more support to “disrupt” bullying that’s likely happening again now that kids are back in schools.

“I’m really inspired by LGBTQ youth who have been standing up to this political pressure,” Gill added. She said that while students may be struggling because of the increased rhetoric, there is also an increase in peers and LGBTQ+ youth “championing” one another.

McQuillan and Gill hope to expand their study next by looking at statewide data.

As for Graciella-Sawyer, they were giving to the last: Their organs were donated.

“And all moms love their kids, of course, but really, Sawyer really wanted to make the world a better place, and they should have been here to do that as an adult,” Caulkins said. “They would have devoted their life to making it better.”

govtech.com

Teacher crisis in South Africa โ€“ government responds

THE Department of Basic Education (DBE) says there should be no concerns over a predicted teacher shortage in the coming years.

Recent research from Stellenbosch Universityโ€™s Research on Socioeconomic Policy Unit (RESEP) shows that close to half (49%) of teachers employed by the DBE are 50 years or older and will be forced to retire in the coming decade.

According to Paul Esterhuizen, chief executive of education NGOย School-Days,ย the department is not hiring an adequate number of teachers to replace those expected to be leaving the workforce, and school budgets are constrained, so they donโ€™t have the capacity to hire new teachers.

The government also needs to make teaching more attractive for young people, with more livable salaries, Esterhuizen said.

RESEPโ€™s research found that the average government teacher earnedย R42,688 per monthย in salary and benefits over the course of 2019.

According to Irene Pampall, a researcher at RESEP, many teachers believe they earn less than R42,000; however, they overlook added benefits.

Salaries are determined by level of qualification and experience. Pampall said that a teacher with a matric and four years of university education could expect to earn roughly R23,686 every month

A shortage of skilled teachers can lead to a number of problems, including overcrowded classrooms and a lack of individual attention for students โ€“ exacerbating fractures within an already stumbling education system.

Spokesperson for the department, Elijah Mhlanga, toldย SABC Newsย that the research from Stellenbosch is not accurate and that there is actually an oversupply of new teachers.

He added that new teachers are emerging en masse, and it is a trend that is set to continue.

Mhlanga said, in contrast to these findings, that based on the profiles of the people that are employed by the government, measures have been put in place since 2007 to mitigate the ageing workforce.

He conceded that the department requires more funding to expand schools further and reduce class sizes, however.

โ€œWe donโ€™t need more teachers, we need more funding,โ€ he said.

However, RESEPโ€™s research is not the only source sounding alarms over teachers in South Africa.

In July 2022, Julian Hewitt, the CEO of educator bursary programme, the Jake Gerwell Fellowship, said the department of educationโ€™s payroll shows that the country isย expected to run out of skilled teachers,ย calling itย โ€œa looming crisisโ€.

The industry also faces the issue of a poor uptake in teaching, with it not being a career of choice, he said.

Statistics relating to higher education, put forward by the education facility Mancosa, also found that the supply of teachers is not meeting demand.

โ€œMore teachers are leaving than entering the profession. Currently, the countryโ€™s initial teacher institutions graduate 15,000 new teachers per year. This is below the 25,000 mark required to maintain an effective teacher-pupil ratio,โ€ said professor Magnate Ntombela, principal of Mancosa.

Business Tech

From STEM to STEAM: Education responding to the need of the times

Dr CS Shivanandaย 

There is a huge difference between what the world needed 20 years ago and what it requires today. For instance, 20 years ago, we had a more environmentally balanced planet, so the demand for climate professionals was not high in the market.ย 

But the scene has now changed with the rise of environmental pollution, thus opening up new avenues to be explored. It means that the world now needs professionals with expertise related to climate and oceanography. 

Similarly, there have been drastic changes in many other sectors, creating opportunities for a varied range of professionals and posing a necessity for the education system to correspond to this necessity accordingly. 

The process of imparting education should always be an evolving one, not static. The world is changing with every passing day and so, educators will have to rethink the ways they perceive the process of teaching and rejig the curriculum in accordance with the market demands and trends.

By doing so, graduates and learners with adequate knowledge about the world, changing scenarios, market trends, and necessary skills can be produced. In this connection, curriculum and educational approach have vital roles to play. 

Even some years ago, educators and employers were putting emphasis on STEM education. With the rise of the demand for other kinds of professionals like innovators and thinkers along with engineers and those from science backgrounds, STEAM education is gathering steam in the mainstream education system.  

To simplify, STEAM stands for Science, Technology, Engineering, the Arts and Mathematics. This is an educational approach that underscores the necessity of considering science, technology, engineering, the arts and mathematics as access points for pulling off the multi-faceted task of imparting knowledge and inspiring the habit of inquiry, dialogue, and critical thinking among learners.

Owing to the diversity, this approach offers the scope of developing multifaceted skills. More and more educational institutions are adopting it to ensure a sound and well-equipped development for students. 

Inquiry, collaboration, and process-based learning are the core things that differentiate STEAM approach from other ones. We are going through a time when learning within textbooks, memorising lessons and copying them on exam sheets will not work.  

Rather, the world as well as the educational scenario is changing, making it all the more essential for schools and educators to resort to innovative approaches to learning and inculcating skills into students. 

STEAM serves this purpose as it inspires learners to explore beyond their textbooks and focus more on collaborative learning based on the instinctive human tendency of curious pursuits. 

The outcome is that the students following STEAM approach feel encouraged and motivated to engage in experiential learning and easily find their feet while solving any problem through creative process and thinking. 

This bunch of students will go on to become innovators with out-of-the-box thought processes, educators with a third-eye view and problem-solvers who can think on their feet. 

Owing to these kinds of benefits, the STEAM approach is making its way into the curriculum. As the modern world and job market require not only graduates with high grades, but also individuals and leaders who are ready to take on the responsibility and deal with any problem with confidence, and possess a good number of soft skills necessary to thrive in a competitive world, it has become pertinent for schools to incorporate elements of STEAM education into their curriculum. 

Many schools like the DPS STS School Dhaka are well into it. Taking into account the growing importance of this approach, they recently organised a STEAM carnival at the school’s senior campus to inspire inquisitiveness among students and create an opportunity for them to exhibit their knowledge and innovation in the fields of science, technology, engineering, arts, and mathematics. 

Educators feel that this kind of arrangement comes very handy in preparing the students for future challenges and providing them an outlet to express their creativity and innovative ideas. 

Meanwhile, DPS STS School Dhaka’s Robotics and AI Club has also recently collaborated with STEMROBO Technologies Pvt Ltd for inspiring innovation, creativity and learning among its students. 

Most importantly, this approach helps the schools to focus more on four Cs (creativity, critical thinking, communication, collaboration), which are now prerequisite qualities for students if they want to make their names in their respective fields of interest. 

These are skills that keep an individual ahead of others in this ever-evolving world where the focus has shifted to additional skills and someone’s ability of critical thinking along with her/his knowledge and acuity.  

In short, this is an approach that empowers students, inculcates leadership qualities in them and makes them all the more prepared for the future world that will be heavily reliant on digital transformation. 

It is time that schools also recognise this fact and start equipping their students accordingly. Putting a concentrated focus on STEAM education could be the first step in this regard.ย 

Dr Shivananda CSย is the principal of DPS STS School Dhaka

SA condemns scheduled executions of students in Myanmar

THE South African Government is deeply concerned about the scheduled executions of seven students at Dagon University by the military in Myanmar.ย 

In a statement on Wednesday, the South African Government urged the Myanmar military authorities to uphold their international obligations to promote and protect human rights, including the protection of the right to life. 

โ€œWe call for the release of all those detained in relation to the exercise of their rights to freedom of expression, association and peaceful assembly.

โ€œThe scheduled executions continue to threaten the already remote possibility of a sustainable political dialogue agreed to in 2021 in the Five-Point Consensus between ASEAN and the military,โ€ DIRCO said in a statement.

The seven students were sentenced by a military court for their alleged involvement in a shooting in April that killed a former military officer.

They are among more than 130 people put on death row since the military seized power in a coup last year, according to the United Nations.

South Africa further calls on the military and all parties involved to negotiate a peaceful resolution of their differences and bring about reconciliation in Myanmar.

โ€œSouth Africa will continue supporting the United Nations and its respective agencies, as well as regional mechanisms such as ASEAN in their mediation efforts, to sustain the democratic transition of Myanmar which can ensure equality, dignity, human rights, and the full inclusion of all in its national development towards lasting peace and stability and sustained development to the benefit of the people of Myanmar,โ€ the statement read.

SA News

Taliban minister defends ban on womenโ€™s university studies

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THE minister of higher education in the Taliban government on Thursday defended his decision to ban women from universities โ€” a decree that had triggered a global backlash.

Discussing the matter for the first time in public, Nida Mohammad Nadim said the ban issued earlier this week was necessary to prevent the mixing of genders in universities and because he believes some subjects being taught violated the principles of Islam. He said the ban was in place until further notice.

In an interview with Afghan television, Nadim pushed back against the widespread international condemnation, including from Muslim-majority countries such as Saudi Arabia, Turkey and Qatar. Nadim said that foreigners should stop interfering in Afghanistanโ€™s internal affairs.

Earlier on Thursday, the foreign ministers of the G-7 group of states urged the Taliban to rescind the ban, warning that โ€œgender persecution may amount to a crime against humanity.โ€ The ministers warned after a virtual meeting that โ€œTaliban policies designed to erase women from public life will have consequences for how our countries engage with the Taliban.โ€ The G-7 group includes Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, the United Kingdom, the United States and the European Union.

A former provincial governor, police chief and military commander, Nadim was appointed minister in October by the supreme Taliban leader and previously pledged to stamp out secular schooling. Nadim opposes female education, saying it is against Islamic and Afghan values.

Other reasons he gave for the university ban were womenโ€™s failure to observe a dress code and the study of certain subjects and courses.

โ€œWe told girls to have proper hijab but they didnโ€™t and they wore dresses like they are going to a wedding ceremony,โ€ he said. โ€œGirls were studying agriculture and engineering, but this didnโ€™t match Afghan culture. Girls should learn, but not in areas that go against Islam and Afghan honor.โ€

He added that work was underway to fix these issues and universities would reopen for women once they were resolved. The Taliban made similar promises about high school access for girls, saying classes would resume for them once โ€œtechnical issuesโ€ around uniforms and transport were sorted out, but girls remain shut out of classrooms.

The Taliban tried to fix what he claimed were problems they inherited from the previous administration since their takeover last year. He alleged that people were not following rules and that this justified the university ban.

In Afghanistan, there has been some domestic opposition to the university ban, including from several cricket players. Cricket is a hugely popular sport in the country, and players have hundreds of thousands of followers on social media.

Another show of support for female university students came at Nangarhar Medical University. Local media reported that male students walked out in solidarity and refused to sit for exams until womenโ€™s university access was reinstated.

Despite initially promising a more moderate rule respecting rights for women and minorities, the Taliban have widely implemented their interpretation of Islamic law, or Sharia, since they seized power in August 2021.

They have banned girls from middle school and high school, barred women from most fields of employment and ordered them to wear head-to-toe clothing in public. Women are also banned from parks and gyms. At the same time Afghan society, while largely traditional, has increasingly embraced the education of girls and women over the past two decades.

U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken, speaking to reporters in Washington on Thursday, echoed international opposition to the Taliban decision to ban women from university studies. He said the Taliban will not obtain much- needed improved relations with the world if they โ€œcontinue on this course.โ€

โ€œWhat theyโ€™ve done is to try to sentence Afghan women and girls to a dark future without opportunity,โ€ he said. โ€œAnd the bottom line is that no country is going to be able to succeed, much less thrive, if it denies half its population the opportunity to contribute. And to be clear, and weโ€™re engaged with other countries on this right now. There is going to be a cost.โ€

Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu said Thursday that the ban was โ€œneither Islamic nor humane.โ€ Speaking at a joint news conference with his Yemeni counterpart, he called on the Taliban to reverse their decision.

โ€œWhat harm is there in womenโ€™s education? What harm does it do to Afghanistan?โ€ Cavusoglu said. โ€œIs there an Islamic explanation? On the contrary, our religion, Islam, is not against education, on the contrary, it encourages education and science.โ€

Saudi Arabia, which until 2019 enforced sweeping restrictions on womenโ€™s travel, employment and other crucial aspects of their daily lives, including driving, also urged the Taliban to change course.

The Saudi foreign ministry expressed โ€œastonishment and regretโ€ at Afghan women being denied a university education. In a statement late Wednesday, the ministry said the decision was โ€œastonishing in all Islamic countries.โ€

Previously, Qatar, which has engaged with the Taliban authorities, also condemned the decision.

In the capital of Kabul, about two dozen women marched in the streets Thursday, chanting in Dari for freedom and equality. โ€œAll or none. Donโ€™t be afraid. We are together,โ€ they chanted.

In video obtained by The Associated Press, one woman said Taliban security forces used violence to disperse the group.

โ€œThe girls were beaten and whipped,โ€ she said. โ€œThey also brought military women with them, whipping the girls. We ran away, some girls were arrested. I donโ€™t know what will happen.โ€

Girls have been banned from school beyond the sixth grade since the Talibanโ€™s return.

In northeastern Takhar province, teenage girls said the Taliban on Thursday forced them out of a private education training center and told them they no longer had the right to study. One student, 15-year-old Zuhal, said the girls were beaten.

Another, 19-year-old Maryam, said while crying: โ€œThis training center was our hope. What can these girls do? They were full of hope and coming here to learn. It is really a pity. (The Taliban) have taken all our hopes. They closed schools, universities, and the training center, which was very small.โ€

AP

Big changes for schools in South Africa โ€“ these are the laws being accepted and rejected

THE portfolio committee on basic education has summarised the feedback processed so far in relation to proposed changes to South Africaโ€™s school laws.

In a presentation this week (6 December), the committee summarised the main points of approval and objection related to the Basic Education Laws Amendment Bill (BELA), which aims to make a host of changes to schools in South Africa.

Broadly, the laws propose big changes to the compulsory starting age for children in South Africa while clarifying and formalising aspects of home education and financial administration of schools in the country.

The bill also contains highly controversial proposals, such as giving the government the final say over language policies at schools, as well as allowing schools to sell alcohol at after-hours, non-school related activities.

According to the portfolio committee, of the 18,000 written submissions made on the bill, only 7,700 have been processed so far, with the reading and verification of submissions still ongoing.

Tellingly, from a sample of 500 submissions made, the overwhelming majority โ€“ 76% โ€“ were against the bill. The committee noted, however, that this is a โ€œmoving targetโ€ and a clearer picture will emerge once all the submissions have been processed.

Meanwhile, the committee held public hearings between 8 and 29 November, where 31 presentations from stakeholders in the education sector made their views known.

Coverage of these presentations revealed a mixed bag of responses, with most groups and institutions expressing disapproval of the changes overall โ€“ though support was shown for some specifics.

According to the committee, from the feedback garnered so far, the proposed laws can be split into three categories: supported, objected and partially accepted.

The main views on the laws are summarised below:


Supported

  • Compulsory Grade-R: Comments generally supported the change in law to make Grade R compulsory in South Africa, with school attendance starting at age 6. However, concerns were raised about schoolsโ€™ capacity โ€“ in terms of infrastructure and educators โ€“ to admit these learners, noting backlogs already impeding the plan.
  • Abolishing corporal punishment: Most views supported positive discipline instead of corporal punishment.
  • Merging schools: Comments supported merging schools where conditions are met for such to take place โ€“ but public participation must be part of the process and parents and learners must be consulted.
  • Blocking educators from doing business with the state: This change is generally supported.

Objected

  • Giving heads of department final say on admissions: Comments objected to giving heads of department the final say in learner admissions, saying it is in conflict with the South African Schools Act and the spirit of the Constitution.
  • Giving heads of department control over critical decisions: Stakeholders believe the government is trying to take control and organisational powers away from school governing bodies โ€“ although they admit there are instances where schools need government intervention.
  • Giving heads of department control over language policy: This was overwhelmingly rejected, with comments saying this should remain within control of the school governing body.
  • Alcohol sales at schools: Stakeholders rejected having alcohol sales in a child-friendly environment, and the laws cannot guarantee that the ills associated with alcohol use โ€“ violence, conflict and drunk driving โ€“ would be managed effectively.
  • Disclosure of financial interests: Having School Governing Bodies and their families disclose their financial interests is an unreasonable invasion of privacy, commentators said.
  • Home education changes: Parents rejected the proposal to register and formalise home education, preferring to run independently. The main argument against the laws is that provincial departments lack the capacity to administrate the process. More research needs to be done.
  • Extended jail time for parents whose children are not in school: Stakeholders argued that sending parents to jail would exacerbate, rather than solve the problem.

Partial

  • Changes for independent schools: Independent schools welcome regulation but felt that quarterly reporting would be too much.
  • Financial records for public schools: There is a need to address the funding model of public schools, but the view is that the department should rather focus on schools that are struggling instead of burdening all 24,000 schools in the country with more admin.
  • Undocumented learners: Stakeholders said that learners should not be discriminated against because they lack documentation, but the solution to the problem lies outside the education department.

Along with the specific changes, feedback from stakeholders showed that more needs to be done with the laws and policy proposals, including redrafting the South African School Act to become a true Education Act, inserting online learning into the bill, and including rural education in the amendments.

โ€œA vast majority of the submissions were against the proposed bill in its entirety,โ€ the committee said. โ€œMost of the submitters have indicated that the proposed amendments have taken away the rights of parents to choose the manner in which their children should be educated.โ€

The committee noted that there were also comments that highlighted a distinct lack of trust in the government.

Public participation in the bill will continue in 2023, with provincial hearings scheduled through to April 2023.

Business Tech

NSFAS opens student accommodation registrations

THE National Student Financial Aid Scheme (NSFAS) has officially openedย a portalย for accommodation providers to register their properties for NSFAS beneficiaries.

Once signed in, accommodation providers will be able to list their properties on the NSFAS database. They simply have to provide names, locations and images.

NSFAS will then contact these providers and send out a โ€œpanel of expertsโ€ to accredit and grade the properties to make sure they are suitable for student living.

Both students and interested accommodation providers can register on this portal. Both parties are required to choose an educational institution, like the University of Johannesburg or the University of Pretoria.

After the accreditation process is completed, the registered accommodation will become available for students who are beneficiaries.

If youโ€™re looking to provide a residence for students, now is the time to register with NSFAS. By the fact that you have to choose an educational institution, no doubt proximity to the university or college will be a factor that is graded.

According toย some usersย on Twitter, the portal seems to not be working past the second page as of the time of writing, seemingly minutes after the portal was launched.

The opening of the portal coincides with the conclusion of the 2022 matric exams. Hundreds of thousands of matriculants will be looking to embark on their journeys into tertiary education, with many seekingย bursary opportunities, including NSFAS.

Prospective studentsย could applyย for educational financial aid through the scheme from September 2022, but like many other bursary options, there are stringent criteria in place.

These include:

  • โ€œYou are SASSA grant recipients or
  • Your combined household income is not more than R350 000 per year or
  • If you are a person living with a disability, your combined household income should not be more than R600 000 per year or
  • If you are a student who began their university studies before 2018 and their household income is not more than R122 000 per year.โ€

NSFAS has also made students aware that scammers are actively pretending to be the aid scheme in order to steal financial information and money.

AGENCY