Why haven't 500 Limpopo schools received textbooks? Education department wants answers

24 May 2017 - 14:25 By Zoe Mahopo
subscribe Just R20 for the first month. Support independent journalism by subscribing to our digital news package.
Subscribe now

The department of education in Limpopo is expected to meet with service providers amid reports that more than 500 schools in the province are experiencing textbook shortages.

Spokesman for the provincial department Naledzani Rasila said they would meet with two service providers to find out what had led to schools not receiving certain study materials.

This is after the provincial department made a presentation to the portfolio committee confirming that 531 schools did not have the Siyavula mathematics textbooks for Grade 10 and 11‚ while others did not have Tsonga textbooks for Grade 12.

  • Government designing fortress schools to combat crimeHigh-security perimeter fences, CCTV cameras, panic buttons, reinforced windows and concrete ceilings: these may sound like the specs for a prison, but they are among the safety features proposed for all new government schools in South Africa. 

“It is a concern. This is why we are having that meeting to get clarity from service providers‚” Rasila said.

Matakanye Matakanya‚ chairman of the National Association of School Governing Bodies (NASGB)‚ said affected schools were under a lot of pressure because mid-year examinations were set to start soon.

“It is very disheartening for us as parents‚ particularly for the poorest of the poor. We want to condemn the behaviour of the department of education in Limpopo‚” Matakanya said.

He said pupils from affected schools would have nothing to help them prepare for the looming mid-year exams.

  • Mayor acts after classrooms torched during service delivery protestDurban mayor Zandile Gumede has delegated a team to meet with residents from an informal settlement who set fire to a school and blockaded roads. 

“What will they write without something to refer to?” Matakanya said.

The DA in the province released a statement calling on education MEC Ishmael Kgetjepe and Premier Stan Mathabatha to be held accountable for the textbook problems in the province.

The province has in recent years experienced textbook shortages‚ resulting in legal action being taken against the department.

- TMG Digital/SowetanLIVE

subscribe Just R20 for the first month. Support independent journalism by subscribing to our digital news package.
Subscribe now