‘We don’t have a 30% pass mark’: Angie Motshekga responds to outcry
The minister said 30% is a minimum requirement for a single subject and not an aggregate pass mark for all grade 12 subjects.
Basic education minister Angie Motshekga has responded to the ongoing public debate on the matric pass mark, dismissing claims it is 30%.
The minister said the debate and claims made about the pass mark demonstrated a lack of understanding about the NSC pass requirements.
The requirements are split into three categories which qualify pupils either for bachelor’s degree or diploma studies and the higher certificate pass.
- To obtain a bachelor pass, explained the minister, pupils are required to get a minimum of 40% for their home language, 50% in four other subjects and at least 30% for the language of learning.
- For a diploma pass, pupils must obtain 40% for their home language, at least 40% in three other subjects and a minimum of 30% in the language of learning.
- For a higher certificate pass, the home language pass mark remains 40%, at least 30% in the language of learning and at least 40% in two subjects and a minimum of 30% in other subjects
All pupils are required to pass six of the seven subjects regardless of whether they obtain a bachelor, diploma or a higher certificate pass.
The minister reiterated that 30% is a minimum requirement for a single subject and not an aggregate pass mark for all grade 12 subjects.
“It is not an accurate representation to say ‘you can go to university with 30%’. You can’t go with 30% to university,” said the minister.
Motshekga took a swipe at the critics who matriculated under the previous curriculum, saying they must look at their own certificates and see if there isn’t a standard grade pass.
“You might have had six As but somewhere, maybe in Afrikaans, you got 30% and you are a doctor today. It’s the same drama,” she said.
One SA Movement leader Mmusi Maimane is at the forefront of the “matric pass mark debate” and has slammed the basic education system for failing pupils and subjecting them to minimum pass standards.
Maimane said the 30% pass requirement for certain subjects demonstrated the department’s failure to equip pupils for competitive post-high school requirements.
“When the education results are announced they are benchmarked against this 30% which means that ultimately, it sets our young people for mediocrity in schools, it means we cannot compete globally and ultimately will have a disastrous impact on our economy,” said Maimane.
The movement launched a petition last week demanding that basic education scrap the 30% pass mark. The petition has so far received over 10,000 signatures.
TimesLIVE
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