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Social & Moral Issues |
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EDUCATION
ISSUE UPDATE - STATEMENT BY THE PESTALOZZI TRUST
From:
Leendert van Oostrum Statement by the Pestalozzi Trust 1 November 2002 During 2002, the final building blocks of the new system for education and training were put place. The Pestalozzi Trust has completed initial assessments of the system as it is now being phased in. The system seems to rest primarily on the following: a) At school level, one national curriculum statement that determines education for state and private schools as well as home education. The National Curriculum Statement promulgated in the Government Gazette on 31st May 2002 is explicitly aimed at transforming South African society by instilling in children an approved set of knowledge, skills, values and attitudes. Throughout the curriculum almost all creative expressions of science and culture must, in true Stalinist fashion, pay homage to the ideologically selected set of prescribed values. The approved curriculum is scheduled to be phased in from 2004. It imposes among other qualities interfaith, which is the notion that religion is merely a useful way of dealing with adversity and uncertainty and that, therefore, all religions are valid ways to god. To study religion from the perspective of any religion other than interfaith itself is expressly forbidden. The curriculum also imposes multiculturalism, which is explicitly aimed at fusing all cultures into one common culture. Critical thinking forms an important aspect of the curriculum. Indications are that this teaches children, not to search for truth, but to consistently challenge all relationships of authority, except that between state and subject. It is, therefore, aimed against all civic relationships (relationships of power), including relationships in the family, faith communities and cultural groups.
It also includes the new General Education and Training Certificate (GETC), which comprises a national assessment at Grade 9 level. Persons who fail to obtain the GETC will not be allowed to receive further education and training. The system is backed up by the new whole school evaluation system where schools are audited by teams of specialist inspectors.
Clearly, no person who is not registered on the NLRD will be able to obtain skilled work, further education, or training. The National Curriculum Statement demonstrates that the government will deny registration on the NLRD to persons who refuse to internalise, confess and live out the state approved value system. (Also, for those already qualified, a compulsory continued education system is being introduced, which already operates in the medical and some other professions. Continued education may also need to be recorded on the NLRD to ensure that professionals remain current. Potentially, values-based continued education can be used to keep the entire work force ideologically committed in the same way as the school curriculum already does.) The authorities responsible for the NLRD claim that no other country in the world operates such a comprehensive system of social surveillance. The National Qualifications Framework, manifested in the NLRD and informed by the National Curriculum Statements, forms a comprehensive, watertight system. The National Curriculum Statement of 31st May 2002 demonstrates conclusively that the present government intends to use the NQF as a weapon of ideological coercion.
In accordance with legal advice, the Trust can no longer recommend the registration of home learners with education authorities as provided for by legislation and expects unregistered learners to increase. Enquiries: Leendert van Oostrum (012) 330 1337 _______________________________________________ Pleased read our disclaimer |
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