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Nansindlela School : ウィキペディア英語版
Nansindlela School
Nansindlela School is a public school in the Lebombo Mountains, near the town of Ingwavuma, KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa.
Founded in 1993, the school has 450 students from preschool to grade 12 (matric), with a teaching staff of twenty. The school offers English-medium instruction to the local community, which is predominantly Zulu.
The name ''Nansindlela'' means "This is the way" in Zulu.
The school has won a number of awards for its permaculture projects. Classroom blocks funded by the Embassy of Japan, the DG Murray Trust and from other private funding were opened in 2001 by Minister of Education Kader Asmal and Japanese Ambassador Yasukuni Enoki.

2013 strike report

Ingwavuma is a peri-rural
backwater of KwaZulu-Natal
below SA’s borders with
Swaziland and Mozambique.
There, a school began
organically for very young
children in a house 20 years
ago. As children progressed
through the grades, it became
known as Nansindlela (“This is
the way” in Zulu), run by local
parents and teachers who left
formal state employ.
With discipline and devoted
teachers, the nascent school
flourished, attracting donated
equipment from Christian
groups abroad, British “gap
year” students helping to
teach, buildings funded by
Nedbank, Anglo American and
other corporates, Eskom
providing electricity, and
“fields” provided by the local
roads department.
Self-run but absorbed into the
public system, government
paid half the multi-racial
teaching cohort, the others
hired through R100 monthly
school fees. In 2004,
Nansindlela, graduated its first
matric cohort while boasting
the top provincial choir, along
with sports such as cricket,
athletics, netball and soccer.
This ground-up school would
become the top performing of
its district for eight straight
years, hitting a regular pass
rate of up to 98%.
Enter Sadtu in the form of a
Sowetan Level 1 teacher,
Linda Skhonyana, posted to
Nansindlela in 2002, where he
is alleged to have begun a
“thatha zonke” campaign to rid
the school of white teachers.
It was no easy ride, with
internal school hearings
finding him guilty of various
misconducts including theft
and unauthorised absences to
attend Sadtu gatherings. But
with the school governing
board (SGB) failing to get
departmental back-up,
Skhonyana remained.
More than that, he managed a
coup – packing an SGB
election with friends and being
elected principal. Discipline
faltered, corporate support
dried up, white teachers left,
and truly bad luck fell upon
Skhonyana. Just this year, he
forgot, three times, to place
school fees collected into the
school strong room. Three
times they were stolen. Three
times no break-in signs could
be found.
Part-time teachers went
unpaid or saw their salaries
fall from R5 000 a month to
R1 000. Discord in the teacher
corps followed and last year’s
matric results showed a 12
percentage point fall. Now the
matric class of 2013 have
rebelled, locking their
principal out and demanding
his replacement.
Backed by a community
parent committee, they want
new SGB elections, new
investigations into missing
funds, the axing of non-
teachers they claim are on
payroll, and the like. Says
student spokesman Rolihlahla
Mzimela, “The principal is
mostly away from school,
attending union and political
meetings for up to a week at a
time, yet leaving no proper
delegation of duty at the
school”.
A provincial departmental
investigation, due to last a
week, is now taking two, as 19
student and parent grievances
are pored over. Skhonyana,
who has declined to comment
for this article, is on leave for
the duration, and pupils are
back in class after their
peaceful action.
Whatever transpires, it may be
that from faraway Ingwavuma
the message of a road ahead
without politicised teaching is
being shown. It isn’t good
news for Sadtu.
==External links==

*(Nansindlela School home page )


抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Nansindlela School」の詳細全文を読む



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