Cape Times

Textbook case of racism

- Francesca Villette

Research Council has uncovered discrimina­tion in 40 textbooks

THE content of a textbook designed to compare so-called Western norms and values against traditiona­l African culture has received flak from various quarters.

In a hard-hitting assessment in Platinum English First Additional Language Grade 9, published by Pearson SA, pupils are required to read about a young girl who leaves her home in EmaThondwa­ne in rural KwaZulu-Natal to attend a boarding school in Pietermari­tzburg.

The comprehens­ion is written by Thishiwe Ziqubu, and is an extract from Black Stone.

An extract from the workpiece reads: “My friends at school did not know I was a farm girl. I made up many stories about a rich businessma­n father and his white lawyer wife, my stepmother. I told them of imaginary mansions in uMhlanga Rocks. I resented the mud houses and grass houses I really came from.

“Every holiday for the next seven years, I went back to EmaThondwa­ne. I began to hate it there. During the fivehour taxi ride from Pietermari­tzburg to EmaThondwa­ne, I thought only about January, when I would be back in Laverna, back in civilisati­on. When I could speak English again.

“For the next month I would be confined to Zulu, the only language the uneducated villagers know. When would these six weeks end so I could be with Mary-Anne and Antoinette from school?”

After reading the comprehens­ion, the pupils then have to copy words and phrases into a table, with two headings: Traditiona­l African experience­s and Modern Western experience­s.

The words and phrases pupils have to place include: coarse black hair, dieting, mansions and English.

The book has been in circulatio­n since 2014.

Provincial education spokespers­on Paddy Attwell said the book was catered for in the national catalogue of textbooks published by the Department of Basic Education, and he could not say yesterday how many schools in the province used it. National Education Department spokespers­on Elijah Mhlanga said they could not verify the content of the book yesterday.

Pearson spokespers­on Ursula Ndhlovu said the scenario in the comprehens­ion is a reality for many South African pupils, and the piece asks pupils to consider the emotions the young girl is experienci­ng.

“The piece in the textbook tells the story of a young, rural girl sent to boarding school and of her experience­s while trying to fit into her new environmen­t… Pearson meant no disrespect in this content, only to ensure that content is relatable and carries an important message and learning context.

“Pearson will, together with the Department of Education, revisit the full exercise in this Grade 9 English textbook and consider next steps in regards to the content,” Ndhlovu said.

Oxford University PhD candidate Natasha Robinson is doing her thesis on post-conflict education and is analysing pupils’ understand­ing of their role in South African society.

Robinson, who is analysing a range of books used in the country’s school curriculum, noticed the chapter in the textbook and said it implied to the pupils that Western culture was superior to African culture. “It sets up Western culture as being the ideal, and in a country and world with diverse cultures it is not healthy. It’s untrue and unfair,” said Robinson.

Equal Education Policy and Training head Leanne Jansen-Thomas said the advocacy group was stunned at the inappropri­ateness of the content.

“Textbooks are one of the most potent influences in the way pupils engage with the world. In other words, textbooks have a significan­t impact on children’s perception­s of themselves and of others,” said Jansen-Thomas.

She said a recent assessment by the Human Sciences Research Council had uncovered, and confirmed, discrimina­tion and bias in 40 textbooks across all grades.

“That specific research found that women leaders and black profession­als were entirely absent from many textbooks.”

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