Clare has high-speed internet at home. She has any number of digital platforms from which to continue her learning during the lockdown period, but her school prefers Google Classrooms and they do virtual assemblies via Webcast. Most teaching is live or in real time (synchronous) and the teachers are highly trained in the technology so they can make lessons highly interactive and engaging. In her own room with her own television (TV), Clare puts on her headphones and disappears into the school day, learning from home.
Siphokazi lives in a crowded informal settlement. There are obviously no fibre-optic cables in her neighbourhood and the only possible way of accessing lessons is from the sporadic broadcasting of education programmes on TV. The problem is that the illegally connected TV is the one source of entertainment for all 12 people in the two-bedroomed shack.
As a young girl, Siphokazi has to wait till uncles and aunts have watched their favourite programmes, and then has to hope she can find an education topic for her grade level at the right time. Sometimes her mother shares the cellphone and Siphokazi can download what her teacher sends via WhatsApp. The problem is that her mother needs the phone for her informal business and most times there is no data. Siphokazi then watches her mother make that difficult decision: do I buy data for my child to learn or do I buy bread for my family to eat?
The Coronavirus did not create this inequality in South African education and society. It merely exposed it. What we knew from the statistics on inequality was now so visible and in our faces that we could no longer look away. About roughly 20% of our children would have reliable access to online learning while the rest would struggle to enjoy any form of education during the pandemic lockdown because of a lack of devices or data or both.
この記事は Big Issue の Issue 288 版に掲載されています。
7 日間の Magzter GOLD 無料トライアルを開始して、何千もの厳選されたプレミアム ストーリー、9,000 以上の雑誌や新聞にアクセスしてください。
すでに購読者です ? サインイン
この記事は Big Issue の Issue 288 版に掲載されています。
7 日間の Magzter GOLD 無料トライアルを開始して、何千もの厳選されたプレミアム ストーリー、9,000 以上の雑誌や新聞にアクセスしてください。
すでに購読者です? サインイン
Visit The ‘Seaside Circus'
There’s a new art activation on the prom …
SA's Food Capture?
While the debate rages on over glyphosate-based herbicides, farmers are spraying the chemical all over the world
Design That Uplifts, Delight Intrigues
A collaboration with Southern Guild at the Silo District in Cape Town showcases designer Rich Mnisi’s first solo exhibition, titled Nyoka, on show from 2 October 2021 through to 4 February 2022. Designed to reach out and inspire.
Why Kaaps Language Dictionary Matters!
The first-ever dictionary of South Africa’s Kaaps language has launched. Why it matters …
Hungry, And Tired
This charity has been feeding Cape Town’s hungry for more than 80 years. Never have so many people queued for food.
Life's Ups And Downs
Feeling burnt out? Clinical Psychologist and Business Director at The Human Edge, Helene Vermaak, gives some grounded self-care advice for anyone feeling overstressed or depleted.
WHAT'S ON?
Get out and about under the spring sun, or enjoy entertainment online from the comfort of your couch …
SPACE TO REFLECT
When former Big Issue editor, Alicia English, lost her husband to Covid-19 earlier this year, she and her son discovered a novel way to process overwhelming, difficult feelings.
INSPIRATIONAL READING
Whether you tap, turn pages or listen to audiobooks, an inspirational read can help you relax and see the world differently.
Rough sleeping
“Winters are the worst nightmare for us,” says a homeless man in Springs. Temperatures dropped to minus 7º C recently.