By Heideli Loubser on Thursday, 27 July 2023
Category: Blog

Overview of BELA Bill provincial hearings 2023

And how you can help with what happens next.

The provincial hearings regarding the BELA Bill this year have been a hotly debated rollercoaster-ride all around, with many interesting developments and opinions from various political parties, the PCBE, home educating parents, alumni, and even home educated children. This article will provide a summary of the main highlights, covering various groups’ reasons for protesting or supporting different aspects of the Bill, and explain next steps from here.

How will the BELA Bill affect parents of school-going children?

The presentations given during the hearings can be grouped into three broad categories, namely BELA support, Student Governing Body (SGB)

powers and home educators. This is why it is also important to mention that the BELA Bill will not only affect parents of home educated children, but also parents of school-going children because it includes clauses regarding

Who supported the BELA Bill and why?

Presentations in support of the BELA Bill typically support the Bill in its entirety but lacked substance in content and often seemed scripted and repetitive.

The DBE attempted to compensate for its neglect of informing the public about the Bill before tabling it at parliament by hijacking some of the hearings to do this.

Adv. Misser also put her foot in it, claiming that clause 37 is not intended to be curriculum-prescriptive, but this statement is nowhere in the Memorandum explaining the Bill or in the related SEIA. The clause requires compulsory assessments by external assessors, which is not enforceable across multiple curriculums based on varying content and skills. Worse, parents who use a curriculum that cannot be assessed for lack of informed assessors on that curriculum to compare their competence against the national curriculum, may be prosecuted.

Political parties:

Overall, supporters tend to believe that centralisation can solve most problems, while opposers believe the opposite. However, it is evident that just the opposite is in fact true – centralised services such as power, trains, and roads are failing in SA while decentralised services such as shops and taxis work better.

It is ironic that most supporters of the Bill don’t believe that it will resolve the concrete, obvious issues in education such as overcrowding, infrastructure, teacher absenteeism, crime, etc. A DA member articulated this bonanza of irrationality as “Chicken voting for Nandos.”

Who rejected the BELA Bill (in part or entirely) and why?

SGB groups in the provinces partially supported the Bill or rejected it, mainly rejecting the clauses that remove their power to decide on admission and language policies. Their arguments were complex, supporting some clauses and rejecting others, basing them on legal and constitutional grounds, and lacked concrete examples of how the Bill would affect real people.

The homeschool community rejected clause 37 of the Bill with persuasive yet simple arguments, requesting the removal of this specific clause because it infringes on rights of parents to customise education for their children, and it is not based on research or collaboration. It is a doable request coming from parents who would be severely affected by it. Presentations by home educated learners served to further drive home the point.

One home educating mother presented the perspective that the Bill will limit learners with special needs even more than schools already do, which implies that the Bill discriminates against home educators.

An education consultant proposed that the Bill should make provision for home education and cottage schools and even be subsidised. This was echoed by a teacher in Johannesburg.

Political parties:

The Bill is also in conflict with international law and Biblical principles. The focus is often more on the education system than the best interests of the children whom it’s supposed to serve. It is interesting that at the same time, home educators are saving state funds, reducing the burden on limited and overcrowded public schools.

It is discrimination to require home educators to be externally assessed from foundation phase while school learners are only externally assessed in matric. Even some schoolteachers and principals agree that assessment is unnecessary and irrelevant to home education.
Home education introduces more languages and curriculums which is a positive, not a negative, potentially enabling communities to decide on curriculum.

Other concerns aired in both the support and rejection of the Bill include:

Home education — the increasingly obvious solution to SA’s education problem

The minister of education is stuck between a rock and a hard place, having been forced to admit that clause 37 has no basis in research, which is akin to a doctor prescribing treatment without a diagnosis. Additionally, the SEIA done for the Bill also does not include consideration of the impact of clause 37.

During the oral hearings in parliament, evidence was presented to the PCBE that clause 37 was drafted with malicious intent, making it even clearer that there is not only a lack of clarity but also an ulterior agenda at work.

The PCBE did not take well to criticism as arguments presented increasingly highlighted the problems with the Bill, and the arrogance of those attempting to steer it onward. At many of the hearings, they would mute cheering or cut speakers short, some would fall asleep, leave the hall early, fiddle on their mobile phones and make limited eye contact. There is a lack of taking responsibility for the Bill. Most often, it was only the ACDP and DA who engaged meaningfully in the hearings.

The mobilization of more DBE and NCED employees and union members to oppose the Bill with blatant lies and unfounded accusations of racism did not deter the homeschool community from making their presence heard and felt at almost every hearing, and they will not be easily silenced!

The fact is that the current education system was designed 200 years ago to produce compliant factory workers for the first industrial revolution. It is no longer relevant nor constructive, leaving in its wake broken communities, struggling, bullied and raped children who are ill-equipped for a vastly different digital working world.

Home education is well positioned as education that happens in a safe environment without requiring special infrastructure, no discipline problems on a large scale, manageable transport, and procurement.

Counter arguments to the home education narrative were intriguing, ironically proving that home education has genuine potential to close the gap between the broken mainstream educational infrastructure, lack of resources, struggling families, and students’ ability to succeed at university.

Religion, culture, and the BELA Bill

A growing number of speakers also objected to the Bill (and clause 41) on religious grounds, pointing out that the responsibility for education is given by God, making it irrational to require parents to ask for permission because the authority of God is higher than that of government. It is irrational that parents must ask permission from a lower authority to execute a responsibility demanded by a higher authority.

Home educators pointed out that home education is helping other learners by reducing the burden on the public school system that is overcrowded and unable to place thousands of learners annually.

Cultural opposition to the Bill is about the Bill entrenching a Eurocentric and globalist form of education.

It is intriguing that those in support of the Bill claim that home education creates inequality while the opposite is true — it provides more children in a variety of circumstances to access education and curriculum best suited to them, equalising access!

On the one hand, they want uniformity while also claiming to support diversity. That is impossible, especially when you consider the striking diversity of the home educators who presented at these hearings — people from different races, single mothers, professors, therapists, pastors, religious leaders, teachers, doctors, alumni, home educated learners as young as six, etc. This diversity makes the opposition’s desperately inflammatory racist rants look even more preposterous.

More details and videos on presentations given at these hearings can be viewed HERE

Questions about the powers of the state versus God in education

One young home educated learner articulated it this way:
“Through this Bill, government wants to replace my parents and their right to educate me in terms of our shared family values. Government wants to cut the legs out from under my parents and yet in my everyday life it is my parents who are there for me, not government. I do not give the minister of basic education the right to replace my parents’ authority in my life. Ministers come and go, but my parents are irreplaceable. The minister seeks this power over me today, but the minister does not even know my name. But my parents are my custodians. They've been there before my beginning. They're still here for me. Where's the minister? Where will the minister or the schoolteachers be in the middle of the night if I or my peers have an adverse reaction to medical procedures received at school without our parents’ knowledge? Will the minister or any teacher be there when we need to be rushed to hospital and can we cry to the minister when we are in trouble? And will the minister help us better than our parents can? This Bill wants to instigate us children to undermine our parents.”

What is next in the fight against the BELA Bill?

The government allowed for home education in the SA Schools Act in 1996 because they probably hoped that it would remain a fringe phenomenon. The census of 2012 made it apparent that it is becoming mainstream. The minutes of the Council of Education Ministers reveal that the government wants to use policy and law to deter home education and the Bill is an attempt to regulate it out of existence.

The homeschool community is making its voice heard with more conviction and more powerful, persuasive arguments at every opportunity, clearly fortified with proof, experience, research, and most poignantly, the voices of the families who have achieved great success in academics and their careers.

Mahatma Gandi said, “First they ignore you, then they laugh at you, then they fight you, then you win.” The battle is still on and a long way from over. The oral and written submissions given at these provincial hearings will be summarized and scrutinized. Then, hopefully, they will amend the clauses with due diligence and consideration before submitting the Bill to the National Assembly for another round of public comment.

We will mobilize again to make our voices heard for the best interests of both home educators and all learners in general.

You can help by:

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