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PRESENTATION TO THE SELECT COMMITTEE ON EDUCATION & RECREATION INTERVENTION IN THE EASTERN CAPE EDUCATION DEPARTMENT (ECED) IN TERMS OF SECTION 100(1)(b)

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Presentation on theme: "PRESENTATION TO THE SELECT COMMITTEE ON EDUCATION & RECREATION INTERVENTION IN THE EASTERN CAPE EDUCATION DEPARTMENT (ECED) IN TERMS OF SECTION 100(1)(b)"— Presentation transcript:

1 PRESENTATION TO THE SELECT COMMITTEE ON EDUCATION & RECREATION INTERVENTION IN THE EASTERN CAPE EDUCATION DEPARTMENT (ECED) IN TERMS OF SECTION 100(1)(b) OF THE CONSTITUTION OF THE REPUBLIC OF SOUTH AFRICA, 1996 15 FEBRUARY 2011, AT 10:00 – 13:00 1

2 PURPOSE To provide the Select Committee on Education and Recreation with a report on the implementation of the intervention in the Eastern Cape Education Department (ECED) in terms of section 100(1)(b) of the Constitution of the Republic of South Africa, 1996. 2

3 INTRODUCTION During the first quarter of the 2011 academic year, the ECED experienced a collapse of service delivery in critical areas such as the National School Nutrition Programme (NSNP); the allocation and appointment of teachers; the supply of stationery and textbooks, especially to non-section 21 schools; the provision of learner transport; and infrastructure development, especially the eradication of mud, inappropriate, and unsafe school structures. The problems facing the ECED were extremely serious and had to be urgently arrested and remediated. There were clear signs of dysfunctionality or a crisis in the system, resulting from what appeared to be a deep-rooted discord between policy intentions and policy implementation. It was also established that all efforts aimed at bringing about a sustainable turnaround of the ECED, had to effectively address all of the critical underlying challenges and ensure the creation of an enabling environment, conducive to the efficient and effective delivery of educational services in the Eastern Cape. On 02 March 2011, Cabinet – 3

4 INTRODUCTION (cont.)  was provided with a detailed problem statement on the state of basic education in the Eastern Cape;  noted that the Audit Opinions from the Auditor-General in two consecutive financial years (2008/09 and 2009/10) amplified the urgency with which the risk areas had to be addressed;  also noted that there had been previous interventions that were implemented in the ECED which yielded varying levels of success;  agreed that the previous interventions had been unsustainable, hence the problems facing the ECED were found to be extremely serious and needed to be urgently arrested and remediated; and  resolved to apply section 100(1)(b) of the Constitution of the Republic of South Africa, 1996 on the Eastern Cape Education Department. In terms of the Cabinet decision taken on 02 March 2011, the section 100(1)(b) intervention in the ECED focused on the following areas and scope to the extent necessary – 4

5 AREAS OF THE SECTION 100(1)(b) INTERVENTION IN THE ECED the personnel and provisioning budget; the procurement and distribution of textbooks and stationery to schools, especially non-section 21 schools in the province; the effective management and provisioning of subsidised scholar transport programme across the province to reduce hardship among learners and absenteeism from school; the effective management and implementation of the national school nutrition programme (NSNP) to comply with the national policies regarding school feeding schemes, and the right of children to basic nutrition in terms of section 28(1)(c) of the Constitution; the school infrastructure development programme to address the failure to eradicate the high number of mud, unsafe and inappropriate school structures, and the consequent return of funding earmarked for school infrastructure to the National Treasury; the systems and operations relating to strategic management and planning; governance and accountability; budgeting and financial management; supply chain management; and human resource management to ensure effectiveness and sustainability; and all other auxiliary services necessary for the provisioning and delivery of quality education. 5

6 IMPLEMENTATION OF THE SECTION 100(1)(b) INTERVENTION IN THE ECED The necessary steps and procedures were followed to give legal effect to the intervention, including due and proper notice to the NCOP. On 31 May 2011 a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) was signed by the Minister of Basic Education (as mandated by Cabinet, and the MEC for Education in the Eastern Cape, (as mandated through a Premier). The MoU provides a framework for the section 100(1)(b) intervention in the ECED, as there is an absence of a legal framework to deal with interventions invoked in terms of section 100(1)(b) of the Constitution. On 01 June 2011 the Minister, Deputy Minister and the Director- General of Basic Education, together with MEC for Education in the Eastern Cape announced at a Press Conference held at the Stirling Education Leadership Institute in East London that – 6

7 IMPLEMENTATION OF THE SECTION 100(1)(b) INTERVENTION IN THE ECED (cont.) the first phase of the section 100(1)(b) intervention, consisting of the following areas, has been implemented –  complying with the Bhisho High Court order, the ECED has reappointed more than 4 000 temporary teachers; although there are still schools and classes that do not have teachers in front of them,  the National School Nutrition Programme (NSNP) has been reinstated, and has been decentralised to deserving schools,  the scholar transport programme has been transferred to the Eastern Cape Department of Transport, as per the decision of the Eastern Cape Provincial Executive Council, and  some textbooks and stationery have been procured and delivered to schools. the second phase of the intervention would prioritise, to the extent necessary, the following systemic and operational areas – 7

8 IMPLEMENTATION OF THE SECTION 100(1)(b) INTERVENTION IN THE ECED (cont.)  the development and implementation of systems and operations relating to strategic planning, governance and accountability, budgeting and financial management, supply chain management, and human resource management to ensure effectiveness and sustainability;  ensuring effective human resource provisioning across the system;  ensuring effective delivery of a school infrastructure programme to deal with the high number of mud, unsafe and inappropriate school structures; and  improving and providing delivery of quality education for the Eastern Cape learners. The National Intervention Team (led by Mr Mathanzima Mweli and comprising of senior officials from the Departments of Basic Education as well as Public Service and Administration, and National Treasury) with the cooperation of senior managers from the ECED –  embarked on a critical scoping exercise; and  developed the Implementation Plan with specific Operational Plans for each of the critical areas of the intervention. 8

9 IMPLEMENTATION OF THE SECTION 100(1)(b) INTERVENTION IN THE ECED (cont.) The strategic diagnostic analysis and scoping exercise focused on the following areas –  Poor learning outcomes in national and international assessments, including the –  National Senior Certificate Examinations,  Annual National Assessments (ANA for literacy and numeracy in Grades 3 and 6),  Systemic and Whole School Evaluation,  Southern and Eastern African Consortium for Monitoring Education Quality (SACMEQ),  Trends in International Mathematics and Science Studies (TIMMS), and  Progress in International Reading Literacy Study (PIRLS ); 9

10 STRATEGIC DIAGNOSTIC OVERVIEW OF THE CHALLENGES & THE SCOPING OF THE IDENTIFIED CHALLENGES  Teachers in addition;  Displaced teachers;  Teachers who are on prolonged sick leave;  Inflated learner numbers;  Suspended employees;  Early Childhood Development (ECD);  Expenses related to litigation;  Irregular salary increases;  Small schools that are not educationally and economically viable;  Categories of schooling institutions;  Budget performance of the ECED over the years;  Strategic leadership vacuum;  Organisational culture;  Audit profile of the Department; and  Organisational structure. 10

11 Figure 1: Grade 3 ANA mean scores (2008) – Systemic Evaluation 11

12 12 Figure 2: Grade 6 ANA mean scores (2008) – Systemic Evaluation

13 GRADE 3GRADE 6 LITERACYNUMERACYLANGUAGESMATHEMATICS EC393529 FS37262328 GP35303537 KN39312932 LP30202125 MP27192025 NC28212728 NW30212226 WC43364041 SA3528 30 Table 1:Average percentage scores after re-marking – ANA Report, 2011 13

14 14 Table 2: Overall performance of candidates in the 2011 NSC Province2011 Total WroteTotal Achieved% Achieved Eastern Cape 65 35937 99758.1 Free State 25 93219 61875.7 Gauteng 85 36769 21681.1 KwaZulu-Natal 122 12683 20468.1 Limpopo 73 73147 09163.9 Mpumalanga 48 13531 18764.8 North West 25 36419 73777.8 Northern Cape 10 1166 95768.8 Western Cape 39 96033 11082.9 National 496 090348 11770.2

15 15 Figure 3: Percentage of Bachelors passes by provinces, 2008 - 2011

16 16 Table 4: Summary of District Performance 2011 ProvinceTotal number of Districts Districts performing below 49% Districts performing between 50% and 59% Districts performing at 60% and above Eastern Cape 23 5612 Free State 5 005 Gauteng 14 00 KwaZulu-Natal 12 0111 Limpopo 6 015 Mpumalanga 4 013 North West 4 004 Northern Cape 5 014 Western Cape 8 008 Total 8151066


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