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Issue 28 - 2019
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18 - 25 July 2019
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Department to implement Kiswahili in SA schools
Minister Angie Motshekga
Johannesburg - Basic Education Minister Angie Motshekga says the department’s plans to implement Kiswahili in schools are underway, and pilot schools had started with the process. Motshekga said South Africa has embraced Kiswahili, which is an official African Union language. “There is lots of excitement that South Africa will finally embrace Kiswahili language. I am even talking with the minister of arts and culture to say perhaps they should
be able to provide that for people outside school, because we will not be able to do it as the department.” The department’s director-general Mathanzima Mweli said this year the department was only doing the piloting, mainly in Gauteng, intending to get ready for the implementation next year. The minister said although there were still issues around the implementation of Kiswahili in South Africa, the country would have to deal with them as
language issues and not as educational issues. “The key thing in education is cognitive development and it’s best served in the language you are comfortable in. If most African homes now speak English, it’s fine in the homes if that has become their home language, its fine for them because it will assist them. I don’t agree with that assertion that any mother tongue instruction is not good. There are issues about language which we have to deal with as
language issues, and not as educational issues.” Motshekga said. She added that according to the Constitution conditions would be created for the promotion of all the 11 SA official languages. “The council of education ministers overwhelmingly agreed to introduce Kiswahili in our schools. Kenya and Tanzania have committed to assist with the training of educators and development of learning and teaching materials in Kiswahili,” she said.