The textbook saga and corruption in education
OUTPUT TYPE: Journal Article
PUBLICATION YEAR: 2013
TITLE AUTHOR(S): L.Chisholm
KEYWORDS: CORRUPTION, EDUCATION, LIMPOPO PROVINCE, TEXTBOOKS
DEPARTMENT: Equitable Education and Economies (IED)
Print: HSRC Library: shelf number 7828
HANDLE: 20.500.11910/2880
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11910/2880
If you would like to obtain a copy of this Research Output, please contact Hanlie Baudin at researchoutputs@hsrc.ac.za.
Abstract
In mid-2012 a textbook war erupted in South Africa focused on provision in Limpopo province. Considerable international literature has highlighted the importance and complexity of textbook provision, quality and use in developing countries. This article focuses on the system of textbook provision that came into being in South Africa in the post-apartheid era and provides a closer examination of the Limpopo textbook crisis of 2012. It uses insights from the development literature combined with newer approaches to the state and corruption to provide a deeper understanding of the specific saga in Limpopo. The article argues that the system that came into being after 1994 was a market-based, decentralised amalgam or bricolage of previously-existing systems. Corruption, endemic in the apartheid era, quickly became embedded in new processes. New directions were undertaken in 2009/2010, but provoked misgivings and resistance. The context of the textbook saga was both political and economic. A fiscal crisis in Limpopo resulted in initial non-procurement and delivery. Over-priced contracts, inaccurate school data and poor communication systems worsened the situation. A new system was brought into being in Limpopo in the process, but serious systemic challenges remain. The article draws on evidence from secondary documentation, government reports and key informant interviews.-
Related Research Outputs:
- Understanding the Limpopo textbook saga
- Redressing educational inequalities: a classroom perspective
- Grade 6 Systemic Evaluation: Limpopo province
- School principals' experiences of redeployment of educators in the Limpopo province of South Africa
- Turning 'learning to read' into 'reading to learn': conclusions from a Limpopo literacy study
- Challenges in implementing a participatory evaluation approach: a case study of the Limpopo Literacy Teaching Evaluation Project
- National Assessment of Learner Achievement (NALA): the 2009 grade 9 systemic evaluation: report for Limpopo
- The role of language and literacy in preparing South African learners for educational success: lessons learnt from a classroom study in Limpopo province
- Hope for rebuilding language foundations: HSRC evaluation report
- Lessons in language and literacy: a classroom study in Limpopo
- An inter-province study of language and literacy paradigms and practices in foundation phase classrooms in Limpopo and Gauteng
- Exemplary schools in South Africa: schools serving poor communities but achieving success against all odds
- Workbook and textbook availability: adding learners' voices
- The construction and representation of sexual and gender diversity in Namibian school textbooks: global discourses or Southern African realities?
- Globalisation, enterprise and knowledge: education, training and development in Africa
- Challenges in the provision of private schools in South Africa
- Survey of industry standard courses in information and communication technology
- Book review: Harber, C. (2000) State of transition: post-apartheid educational reform in South Africa (Monographs in international education) Walligford, Oxford: Symposium Books. ISBN 1 873927 19 3
- Understanding the size of the problem: the national skills development strategy and enterprise training in South Africa
- Non governmental organisations and education in South Africa