Share

Teen losing hope after waiting two years for a high school placement

accreditation
0:00
play article
Subscribers can listen to this article
"Simthandile Sikeyi (left) with her grandmother Beauty and younger sister Lelethu. Simthandile has not been placed at a high school for nearly two years and says she’s losing hope of ever starting Grade 8." Photo: Nombulelo Damba-Hendrik/Groundup.
"Simthandile Sikeyi (left) with her grandmother Beauty and younger sister Lelethu. Simthandile has not been placed at a high school for nearly two years and says she’s losing hope of ever starting Grade 8." Photo: Nombulelo Damba-Hendrik/Groundup.
  • Simthandi Sikeyi is among about a dozen learners that GroundUp knows of who have not been placed at schools in Cape Town this year.
  • The teenager's grandmother says she's been to the Western Cape Department of Education's office in Mitchells Plain 10 times without any luck.
  • Equal Education Law Centre and Equal Education says the department is downplaying an admission crisis.
  • The organisations noted the department's funding shortfalls but said this did not absolve it from the obligation to place learners.


For the last two years, 17-year-old Simthandi Sikeyi from Tafelsig on the Cape Flats has watched her peers go to school every day and progress while she sat at home.

Her grandmother has been trying to find her a place at a school nearby since 2021 through the Western Cape Department of Education (WCED) office in Lentegeur, Mitchells Plain.

Simthandi told GroundUp that she had lost hope of starting high school this year. When she passed Grade 7 at Cascade Primary School in 2020, her grandmother Beauty Sikeyi applied to two schools close to where they live but was unsuccessful.

Sikeyi said she then went to the department for assistance. She was told that schools were full for 2021, and she should register for 2022. "That hurt me, but I had no choice but to do it," she said.

Read: High School 2023: Everything you need to know to apply now

In May 2021, Sikeyi said, she again applied for high school placement for Simthandile and her 14-year-old sister, Lelethu. But neither sister had been placed at the start of the school year.

Her grandmother said she went to the department's offices in Lentegeur more than ten times, begging them to place the children at a school.

Lelethu has now found a place at Tafelsig High School, but her older sister has not, though she has been on the waiting list since 2021.

"This is very traumatising and frustrating. When other children go to school, I sleep to avoid going outside because I have been asked by people why I'm not at school. I know it is my basic right to be at school," said Simthandile.

Her grandmother hopes she will be placed next year, or she could lose interest in ever returning to school.

GroundUp sent a list of 12 unplaced learners to the WCED: seven Grade 8 learners, two Grade 7 learners, and three Grade 10 learners, all from the Eastern Cape.

Two of these learners have since been placed at schools. Equal Education Law Centre's executive director Tshegofatso Phala and Equal Education Researcher Stacey Jacobs believes the department is downplaying its admission crisis.

Must read: Here's how to increase your child's chances of getting into a great high school

In a joint statement, Phala and Jacobs said that in many instances, the parents and caregivers of unplaced learners had been told by the WCED that there are no spaces at schools.

Many have been exposed to simply applying for 2023 with minimal regard to the best interests of these learners, they said.

"Learners - many of whom are of compulsory school-going age- will sit at home this year. The WCED has failed to fulfil its constitutional and legislative obligations to provide classroom space for all learners."

Phala and Jacobs said in March 2021, they sent a joint letter to the MEC for Education Debbie Schafer, asking for the admission applications deadline for 2022 to be extended. The WCED subsequently extended the deadline for applications by four days.

They said that in a briefing to the Standing Committee on Education in May 2021, the WCED noted the implications of an increase in learners for school infrastructure, the number of teachers, resources, transport and feeding schemes.

"However, lack of funding does not mean the department can bypass its obligation to place learners," they said.

On Tuesday, WCED spokesperson Bronagh Hammond said the department's legal team wanted to address the matter with its legal counsel before they could respond.

This article is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.

Read the original on GroundUp here.

Chatback:

Share your stories and questions with us via email at chatback@parent24.com. Anonymous contributions are welcome.

Don't miss a story!

For a weekly wrap of our latest parenting news and advice sign up to our free Friday Parent24 newsletter.

Follow us, and chat, on Facebook and Twitter.

We live in a world where facts and fiction get blurred
Who we choose to trust can have a profound impact on our lives. Join thousands of devoted South Africans who look to News24 to bring them news they can trust every day. As we celebrate 25 years, become a News24 subscriber as we strive to keep you informed, inspired and empowered.
Join News24 today
heading
description
username
Show Comments ()
Editorial feedback and complaints

Contact the public editor with feedback for our journalists, complaints, queries or suggestions about articles on News24.

LEARN MORE