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Reading between the lines — Most children entering grade two in SA do not know the alphabet

Reading between the lines — Most children entering grade two in SA do not know the alphabet
“Pit toilets are an immediate threat to learners, especially small learners,” says Section27 legal research and advocacy officer Motheo Brodie. (Illustration: Lisa Nelson)

Children are far behind in learning to read and the problem is deepening.

Fewer primary school children can read for meaning now than before the Covid pandemic, and most children entering grade two do not know the alphabet. But despite a literacy crisis, there is no national reading plan, no proper budget, no accurate reporting, and no progress on implementing vital interventions.

The results of the 2023 Background Report for the 2030 Reading Panel, written by leading education economist Nic Spaull, released Tuesday, show a country going backwards in the fundamental unit of education: literacy.

The 2030 Reading Panel is a group of leaders and researchers convened by former deputy president Phumzile Mlambo-Ngcuka to ensure that all children in South Africa aged 10 or older can read for meaning by 2030. The report finds that “nothing short of a sustained countrywide overhaul of the education system would be likely to yield this result”.

Extrapolating from Western Cape data, the report estimates that the share of grade 4 children that cannot read for meaning has increased to at least 82%, from 78% recorded in 2016.

The report finds that about 60% of children have not learned most of the letters of the alphabet by the end of grade one, citing data from the Department of Basic Education (DBE) Early Grade Reading Study (EGRS), which has followed children from over 200 schools for more than seven years in the North West province.

By the end of Grade 2, over 30% still don’t know all the letters of the alphabet. The report finds that these children are “perpetually behind and in ‘catch-up’ mode, although they never actually catch up”.

What is being done to ensure that literacy is put first? Frighteningly little, says the report.

The most visible national reading programme is the Presidential Youth Employment Initiative (PYEI) Educator Assistant Programme. In 2023, nearly 30,000 Educator Assistants (EAs) are to be ‘Reading Champions’ focused on improving reading for foundation phase learners. The report notes this with some scepticism, since the only requirements to enter are very low — 30% in matric and fluency in the home language of the school — and the Reading Champions will have no face-to-face training or be submitted to a selection process.

Nationally, the DBE is not giving the reading for meaning crisis-specific attention. Despite claims to the contrary from the DBE, the report finds that there is no National Reading Plan, and that the most recent “National Reading Strategy” was published in 2008.


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In the 2022 Education Budget Vote, the budget for reading is R11-million for the Early Grade Reading Assessment. This targets 18 schools. The DBE only managed to reach nine schools.

Some hopeful signs

There are some sparks of hope in two provinces, the Western Cape and Gauteng.

In the Western Cape, the provincial government has chosen Funda Wande, an education NGO, as a partner to roll out a province-wide Reading for Meaning programme in all Afrikaans and isiXhosa schools in the province. Over the next three years, the Western Cape Education Department will fully fund the R111-million programme.

In Gauteng, the provincial Department of Education is working with WordWorks, also an education NGO, to implement a grade R programme in all schools. The three-year R107-million budget is 80% funded by a consortium of donors, with the remaining 20% coming from the provincial budget.

While the Eastern Cape Department of Education recently launched its Reading Strategy & Campaign 2022 – 2030, it has not provided any budget for these programmes.

The report estimates that South Africa will take until 2026 to return to 2016 levels of improvement, without immediate intervention.

The report identifies two types of interventions which have shown excellent results in smaller trials. One is the use of a teacher coach who visits teachers in their classrooms. The other is employing Educator Assistants who are trained and given enough resources to teach reading. The Educator Assistants in the PYEI programme are not trained or specially resourced.

But interventions are scarce. Almost no progress has been made to bring effect to the Panel’s four recommendations from last year: to assess reading at every school in the country annually; to allocate new national budgets for reading programmes or reading resources (only the Western Cape has done so); to give all Foundation Phase classrooms a standard minimum set of reading resources (only done in the Western Cape and Gauteng); and to audit teacher education programs before graduates enter the workplace.

“The problem is not about lacking an evidence base on how to improve reading outcomes, but rather the political economy issues of why adequate funding for reading interventions has not been forthcoming,” says the report. DM

First published by GroundUp.

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Comments - Please in order to comment.

  • Judith Heunis says:

    Children’s reading levels will not improve until the DBE stops the Balanced Literacy approach and retrains every teacher in a systematic synthetic phonics approach, with enough decodable readers for every child in the country (yes, expensive but what price our children’s literacy? These readers are not negotiable) to teach reading, with appropriate attention to phonological skills in Grade R and below. As for Reading Champions as described in the article, the title of internationally recognised expert in teaching reading, Louisa Moats’ report “Teaching Reading IS Rocket Science” says it all. Nor is it enough to confine training to Foundation Phase teachers. All primary school teachers should be well-educated in the science of reading and taught how to include vocabulary and written language development into EVERY lesson. No excuses!

  • Johan Buys says:

    Whose fault is this? We spend R340,000,000,000 on a system that appears to spend more on administrators than teachers. Bang-for-buck, our comrades in China can teach us about both health and education.

  • Ritey roo roo says:

    The big question is why not? What are these kids being taught if not the alphabet and how to spell and count. I remember we were sent to the Std 5 class to spell words aloud in front of them for the teacher when I was in Grade 1. Of course we all tried to the be the best!

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