Daily Dispatch

Education department prepared for 2019 intake

- ARETHA LINDEN EDUCATION REPORTER arethal@dispatch.co.za

Newly-appointed education MEC Mlungisi Mvoko says the department is ready for the 2019 academic year, except for 26 schools in the OR Tambo district which were destroyed by a tornado and about 100 out of 5,400 schools that are yet to receive textbooks and stationery.

Speaking at the department’s last media briefing of the year on Thursday, Mvoko said the department was still busy assessing the extent of the damage at the schools.

“Whether the schools will be fixed in time when schools reopen in January will depend on the extent of the damage.”

The tornado which ripped through the district last Saturday, opened roofs and flattened walls at schools in Lusikisiki, Libode, Mthatha and Tsolo.

The affected schools include Mgezwa High, Bodweni Senior Secondary, Nyosana Junior Secondary, Bushula Senior Secondary and Phambili High.

Mvoko said stationery and textbooks had been delivered to 98% of the schools in the province.

“We are finalising deliveries with all our circuit and districts, monitoring delivery schedules and conducting spot-checks at schools,” he said.

The department has also taken a different approach to transporti­ng pupils. This approach, according to the MEC involves going to each school and identifyin­g each pupil rather than just getting a figure of pupils needing transport.

“We want to identify these learners not just by numbers but by names; we need to know who they are and where they are transporte­d to and from.”

Based on allocated budget for 2019, the department could afford to transport 80,000 pupils.

The department of transport will still be responsibl­e for scholar transport.

More than 1.6 million pupils from all quintile 1 to 3 (no fee schools) and special needs schools will benefit from the national nutrition feeding scheme in 2019.

Mvoko said final appointmen­t letters of teacher were issued to all districts and all schools by October 20.

In terms of school infrastruc­ture, the MEC admitted this was the department’s biggest challenge. Currently the infrastruc­ture backlog stands at R70bn and with an allocation from the National Treasury of R1.4bn, is meeting the backlog virtually impossible.

The education head, Themba Kojana said they were prepared to deal with displaced pupils.

“We will have a helpdesk and a call-centre to deal with the issue.”

Schools open on January 9.

We need to know who they are and where they are transporte­d to and from

Mlungisi Mvoko

Education MEC

 ?? Picture: ARETHA LINDEN ?? ON TOP OF THINGS: The newly appointed education MEC Mlungisi Mvoko, right, and the head of the department, Themba Kojana, brief the media on the department's state of readiness for the 2019 academic year.
Picture: ARETHA LINDEN ON TOP OF THINGS: The newly appointed education MEC Mlungisi Mvoko, right, and the head of the department, Themba Kojana, brief the media on the department's state of readiness for the 2019 academic year.

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