South Africa: Access before qualit, and what should we do now?

Auteurs

  • Luis Crouch Research VicePresident, RTI, North Carolina, USA
  • Penny Vinjevold Deputy Director General, Department of Education, Pretoria, South Africa.

Mots-clés :

South Africa, massification, access and quality, secondary education.

Résumé

This paper will argue that, even if this tradeoff between mass access and average quality exists as a potential, or as a tendency, the evidence seems to indicate that most countries actually deal with the tradeoff reasonably successfully. The reconciliation of access (or equity) and quality is a matter of purposive policy, and is something that has been achieved when countries take policy courses where debate and experimentation result in improvements in both access and quality. But some countries (in fact, one particular set of countries) are an interesting and important exception—they show an important imbalance between access and quality. This imbalance illustrates the fact that the tension is between access and quality is real, and can only be overcome with conscious and hard-fought policy changes and implementation efforts. The region in question is Southern Africa. Within that region, South Africa seems paradigmatic. The paper will explore the typically Southern African (and South African specifically) imbalance between access and quality, will suggest that this imbalance may be a cautionary tale for other countries embarking on the massification of secondary education, and will explain what South Africa is doing at present to consciously attempt to redress the imbalance between access and quality.

Bibliographies de l'auteur

Luis Crouch, Research VicePresident, RTI, North Carolina, USA

Senior Economist and Research Vice President who has been with RTI (Research Trigangle Institute) for over 20 years, and has recently returned to RTI after two years at the World Bank. Dr. Crouch's areas of expertise include education sector finance, education data, policy reform, and political economy. His current sectoral focus is on the education sector, although he has experience in the areas of demographic and agricultural policy analysis. He has worked on all aspects of policy analysis research and implementation, ranging from field surveys to quantitative and qualitative analyses to policy dialogue presentations at Cabinet level. He was a key advisor to the government of South Africa on education finance and other issues during the transition from apartheid. He has experience in more than 25 countries in all areas of the developing world, focusing on Latin America, South Africa, and Southeast Asia

Penny Vinjevold, Deputy Director General, Department of Education, Pretoria, South Africa.

Teacher, teacher educator and government official. She taught for sixteen years at schools in Johannesburg, Mafeking and Soweto. Thereafter, she became the General Manager of Evaluations and Research at the Joint Education Trust. In 2005 Ms Vinjevold joined the national Department of Education as Deputy Director-General: Further Education and Training. This portfolio is concerned with curriculum matters in high schools including teacher training and textbooks; school leaving examinations; vocational education at Colleges, maths and science and e-Learning.

Références

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Carnoy, Martin (2005). La búsqueda de la igualdad a través de las políticas educativas: alcances y límites. REICE - Revista Electrónica Iberoamericana sobre Calidad, Eficacia y Cambio en Educación, 3(2). Available at: http://www.rinace.net/arts/vol3num2/art1.htm

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Publiée

2006-04-01