Abstract

School education in South Africa has seen much progressive change in the last 20 years. Yet educational outcomes are poor and many argue that a dual education system exists. Those with financial and socio-cultural capital access resourced schools, while poor South Africans are relegated to schools still suffering from apartheid resource neglect. This empirical study of high schools in Alexandra township, a poor black African residential area, demonstrates both the extent of the resource backlog and the consequences thereof. Secondary schools in Alexandra have an inadequate number, and standard, of toilets, libraries, computer facilities and science laboratories. They also have relatively high learner to teacher ratios and poor matriculation success rates. Enrolment in such schools means learners achieve a poor quality matriculation certificate or none at all, thus, trapping these learners into significant disadvantage. Meagre financial resources preclude Alexandra parents from selecting better resourced schools. Thus, for these learners, neither their legal rights with respect to school choice nor their geographical proximity to resourced schools has ensured redress from the apartheid past. The result is that intergenerational class mobility is limited. Thus, the dual nature of South Africa’s education system is creating a vicious cycle of intergenerational poverty where young people cannot improve their living standards despite enrolment in secondary schooling.

Highlights

  • It is often argued that South Africa is one of the most unequal nations on earth (Leibbrandt et al, 2010)

  • This case study demonstrates that inequality in South Africa extends to education

  • This study reveals the challenges associated with the local level education policies pertaining to quintile ranking, which whilst progressive in intent, may not be so in implementation

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Summary

Introduction

It is often argued that South Africa is one of the most unequal nations on earth (Leibbrandt et al, 2010). The human cost of this inequality is borne most heavily by poor black Africana people, who, due to apartheid era spatial discrimination, live in geographically marginalised communities. These individuals often eek out a living in the informal sector or survive on social welfare transfers. For those who are formally employed, they are often working-but-poor, partly because they lack the skills and qualifications to access well-paid positions (Crankshaw, 2008). Enrolment in a resourced school is assumed to provide an individual with the skills and knowledge required to access the world of formal work, to enable a person to demand higher wages and enable access to tertiary education (Bhorat 2004)

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