Mitchells Plain has 47 primary schools and only 18 high schools

More high schools are needed to accommodate the growing number of learners. File Picture

More high schools are needed to accommodate the growing number of learners. File Picture

Published Feb 12, 2022

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Cape Town - The lack of high schools in the Mitchells Plain area has again come to the fore as learning returned to normal.

Mitchells Plain has 47 Primary Schools and 18 High Schools, a prime example of overcrowding in the area. Neighbouring Strandfontein has two primary schools and one high school. Pupils are travelling to Pelican Park and Mitchells Plain to add to the already cramped schools.

Parent Yvonne Neil said new schools are needed, not just in Mitchells Plain but the whole province.

“We lose a lot of money because our local schools are full, and we have to place them outside Mitchells Plain. Our kids are deprived of education. Forty to 50 learners in the classroom is no joke.”

Neil said overcrowding can be linked to drop outs.

“When a class is overcrowded, teachers cannot give learners individual attention. Some learners need that. When they do not get it, they drop out.”

Bonteheuwel has 12 primary schools and only three high schools, while Ocean View has one high school and three primary schools.

Atlantis has the same problem, with four high schools serving 10 or so primary schools.

“Then you have a suburb like Boston, Bellville, with three primary schools and two high schools,” said another parent Lucia Booys. “Placement is truly an issue. Overcrowding is ridiculous. How do we expect the learners, let alone teachers, cope with 45/50+ learners in a class?”

ANC spokesperson for education Khalid Sayed said they have been raising this particular challenge since the start of the province’s sixth administration.

“It is not in Mitchells Plein only. You see this pattern across many other communities. This is why it is always a challenge to place Grade 8 learners. There is a serious shortage of high schools in the province. Where must all these learners go after completing Grade 7? It's a recipe for disaster and contributes immensely to the crisis of unplaced learners and the high dropout rate.”

WCED spokesperson Bronagh Hammond said it is not uncommon for areas to have fewer high schools than primary schools.

“Firstly, primary schools usually house less learners than high schools – i.e. one high school can cater for the learners of two or possibly even three primary schools, depending on their sizes. The other reason is that learners sometimes enrol in FET colleges when they are in high school or drop out, as they are beyond the compulsory school-going age.”

“Therefore, numbers also decrease at the high school phase.”

She added that WCED is, however, year-on-year, improving the retention rate of learners in high school due to improved education outcomes and a focus on retaining learners so that they have the opportunity to write and complete their NSC.

“This improvement in retention means greater high school learner numbers and decreased dropout rates. Two high schools are planned for 2023 for the Tafelsig and Weltevreden Areas.”

Weekend Argus