Inequalities in the Cape Flats: Principals’ perspectives on children’s schooling

South African Journal of Childhood Education

 
 
Field Value
 
Title Inequalities in the Cape Flats: Principals’ perspectives on children’s schooling
 
Creator Christian, Desire’ Stambach, Amy E.
 
Subject Education; Anthropology children; race; white supremacy; white nationalism; colonial legacies; gang violence.
Description Background: A separate, apartheid system of schooling in South Africa entrenched European racialised ideologies of white supremacy that left a legacy of social, economic, and educational inequalities. The 1995 White Paper for Education, the 1996 South African Schools Act, and the Revised National Curriculum Statement outlined steps for equalising education. However, inequalities within the schooling system remain.Aim: The study aimed to understand how principals experience the lasting effects of apartheid-era segregationist policies in primary schools and to document principals’ solutions.Setting: A meeting of principals who work at primary schools in the Western Cape province.Methods: Researchers purposively sampled four principals from the primary schools represented at the meeting, conducted semi-structured interviews with the principals chosen, and adopted an interpretive approach to analyse findings.Results: This study finds from principals’ perspectives that neighbourhood gang violence, and highly unequal funding for schools in different neighbourhoods adversely impact primary school children’s education and principals’ abilities to lead as a result of context, overcrowding and inequality. Principals note that when parent-led programmes such as the Walking Bus produce a positive effect, the government tends to undercut parents’ efforts to work with principals to secure and equalise young children’s schooling.Conclusion: Giving greater governance power to parents and principals may help to equalise the extremes of inequalities in primary schools remaining from Nationalist Party policies of the pre-1994 apartheid era.Contribution: This study contributes to primary school principals’ ideas for improving primary schoolchildren’s education.
 
Publisher AOSIS
 
Contributor Desire' Christian, Cape Peninsula University of Technology Amy E. Stambach, University of Wisconsin-Madison
Date 2024-05-29
 
Type info:eu-repo/semantics/article info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion — Qualitative Ethnographic
Format text/html application/epub+zip text/xml application/pdf
Identifier 10.4102/sajce.v14i1.1527
 
Source South African Journal of Childhood Education; Vol 14, No 1 (2024); 9 pages 2223-7682 2223-7674
 
Language eng
 
Relation
The following web links (URLs) may trigger a file download or direct you to an alternative webpage to gain access to a publication file format of the published article:

https://sajce.co.za/index.php/sajce/article/view/1527/2890 https://sajce.co.za/index.php/sajce/article/view/1527/2891 https://sajce.co.za/index.php/sajce/article/view/1527/2892 https://sajce.co.za/index.php/sajce/article/view/1527/2893
 
Coverage South Africa; Western Cape neo-colonial; post-apartheid —
Rights Copyright (c) 2024 Desire’ Christian, Amy E. Stambach https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0
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