This column from the Windhoek paper, The Namibian, was seen on
AllAfrica.com at http://allafrica.com/stories/200701190128.html . In
discussing larger issues of the education system, the author hints at
a problem with English-only teaching, without expanding on it...  DZO


Namibia: Nothing Short of Radical Reform Will Solve the Education Problem
The Namibian (Windhoek)
http://www.namibian.com.na/
COLUMN
January 19, 2007
Posted to the web January 19, 2007

Andrew Clegg
Windhoek

HERE we are again at exam results time.

And once again we see a mass wringing of hands deploring the state of
the education system generally and the performance of the teachers in
particular.

Of course there are some bad teachers (there are actually some
dreadful ones but nobody ever sacks them - you can be dismissed for a
lot of things as a teacher but not being able to teach is not one of
them).

But there are also a whole lot of very good hard-working ones out
there and they should be congratulated on doing a difficult job
conscientiously.

Their main problem is that what they are forced to teach is often
utterly unrelated to the needs of their pupils.

Governments have always used the curriculum as a means of social control.

The British, in colonial times, were particularly good at this.

They needed an educational filtration system; only the finest should
be able to get through their colonial schools to help them run 'their'
colonies.

So they set up a series of annual hurdles - standards, remember the
name? - designed to trip up all but the best.

The great majority fell, as intended, unwanted by the wayside.

Apartheid South Africa took this over and raised it to an art form.

Through its complex system of standards and administrations receiving
widely differing resources, it was able to design a system that
admirably suited its rigidly stratified society.

The system was tailor-made to create failure for the under-resourced
majority and success for the privileged minority.

In 1988, I recall, no student in the Administration for the Caprivians
could get standard 10 science (the pathway to success) because there
were no standard 10 science teachers.

Why? Because no Caprivian could get standard 10 science.

So perfect and so simple.

(It wasn't quite perfect of course, a few whites failed the maths but
in any system you have to put up with a bit of collateral damage).

So what happened to the apartheid curriculum at Independence? Well,
nothing very much.

The old system, tailor-made to generate failure, was adopted lock,
stock and almost barrel.

Except that 11 administrations were reduced to one.

In fact, in the interests of 'quality' some of the standard hurdles, I
recall, were actually raised a bit.

But, importantly, to create an impression of reform, the names were
changed - 'standards' became 'grades', to give the whole thing a
modern transatlantic flavour.

So why do we now throw up our hands in horror when 17 000 children are
on the streets after grade 10.

The system is performing exactly to specification.

The 17 000 statistic, however, hides something much more sinister.

Many, very probably the great majority, of the 17 000 have dropped out
not because the subjects are too difficult for them, but because they
cannot read or write in English or do simple sums.

There is no concrete evidence for this because the Ministry has no
testing processes, but ask the teachers and they talk many at grade 8
unable to read and write well enough to make progress with their learning.

And they will tell you that this is particularly bad in places where
English has been the teaching language from grade 1.

The reason for this is simple to understand.

Reading, writing and arithmetic are the basic skills that children
have to pick up in the first three years.

If they have not mastered them by then they get no further opportunity
in the curriculum.

In the past they would not have been allowed to proceed beyond the
first three years unless they had mastered these skills but that is no
longer the case; they can now only repeat only one of the years.

And so probably as many as 40 per cent, so we hear, reach the end of
grade 7 effectively illiterate and innumerate.

We have the worst of all possible worlds.

So what is to be done? Clearly the old 1930s colonial curriculum has
to go.

It is no good just giving it a lick of paint as in the latest reform.

It has to be replaced by one that is fundamentally redesigned for
success rather than failure.

There are lots of examples around of many different kinds.

In fact all countries with a more advanced economy than Namibia have
done something like this; it is an essential pre-requisite for
development.

They all have curricula which operate simultaneously at different
levels in a particular grade; if a grade 7 child still needs help with
basic reading skills then that should happen - in grade 7.

If a grade 7 child is turned on by simultaneous equations, then that
too should happen.

And it will save a lot of money.

Failing children costs the country over N$200 million a year.

On average a grade 10 child takes 11 and a bit years to get to the end
of grade 10.

One in five of all grade 8 seats is occupied by someone who is
repeating - the sole reason for all the admission problems we see year
after year.

All children could be admitted up to grade 12 at almost no extra cost.

This would not, as many fear, lead to a drop in standards (can they
drop further?).

It would probably not lead to an immediate rise in the top standards
at grade 12 though it will in the longer run.

But it would mean that vastly more children would learn to read and
write and, above all, there would not be the annual 17 000 carrying
into the world the stigma of failure.

So forget the ETSIP reforms.

Nothing will really work until the foundation is right.

* Andrew Clegg has lived in Namibia since 1991 when he came to train
science teachers for the Ministry of Education.

He is now a consultant and trainer working mainly in Africa and the
Middle East.


Copyright © 2007 The Namibian 
P.O. Box 20783, Windhoek, Namibia
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