Cape Argus

11TH-HOUR APPLICANTS

‘Nothing to do with us,’ says Dept of Basic Education

- Michael Mpofu POLITICAL BUREAU

THE OVERWHELMI­NG number of late applicatio­ns for university admissions by recently matriculan­ts has “nothing to do with us”, says the Department of Basic Education.

Department spokesman Panyaza Lesufi was responding to a statement by DA MP Annelie Lotriet, who said the rush of last-minute applicatio­ns was a result of poor career guidance in schools.

To reduce applicatio­ns for late admissions, “the lack of proper career guidance in our school system needs to be addressed”, Lotriet said in a statement yesterday.

Late applicatio­ns were “beyond our control”, Lesufi told Independen­t Newspapers. He said schools provided career guidance from as early as Grade 1 to Grade 12, which meant that pupils received sufficient advice. He said late applicatio­ns for university admission were influenced by various factors, such as availabili­ty of funds and the quality of results, among other things.

Tswhane University of Technology shut its doors on applicants yesterday after the campus was flooded with pupils waiting in queues for their late applicatio­ns to be received.

Lesufi added that in some cases it was unreasonab­le for universiti­es to request students to apply online, as not everyone had access to the internet, especially in rural areas.

‘THE QUEUES WILL NOT BE ELIMINATED OVERNIGHT… PERHAPS IN THE NEXT TWO TO THREE YEARS’

In her statement, Lotriet also referred to the central applicatio­n system aimed at alleviatin­g pressure on universiti­es during the applicatio­n period. She said it was clear the new system, introduced by Higher Education and Training Minister Blade Nzimande, was not “adequately addressing the issue”.

But Higher Education spokeswoma­n Vuyelwa Qinga said the system was not yet fully operationa­l. She said phase one of the central applicatio­ns service – the Central Applicatio­ns Clearing House (CACH) – had been launched, to manage “walk-ins” by people who wanted to submit late applicatio­ns.

“The queues will not be totally eliminated overnight. An ongoing campaign and the setting up of a single closing date for applicatio­ns with the same applicatio­n fee will get us to a point of totally eliminatin­g queues in the next two to three years,” Qinga said.

Meanwhile, the South African Students Congress (Sasco) has warned applicants against “bogus colleges” that take advantage of students who fail to obtain places in universiti­es.

Sasco said the problem was compounded by what it called the “solid unholy alliance” between the Higher Education and Training Department and universiti­es “in their intransige­nt resolve to cap enrolments and criminalis­e walk-ins”.

“We call upon prospectiv­e students to be very vigilant in choosing institutio­ns of higher learning to pursue their studies,” Sasco said.

 ?? PICTURE: ADRIAN
DE ?? MAD DASH Thousands of young people queue outside the University of Johannesbu­rg’s Bunting Road campus in Auckland Park this morning. Many camped outside
PICTURE: ADRIAN DE MAD DASH Thousands of young people queue outside the University of Johannesbu­rg’s Bunting Road campus in Auckland Park this morning. Many camped outside

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