People's Post Retreat - 21 July 2020

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TUESDAY 21 July 2020 | Tel: 021 910 6500 | Email: post@peoplespost.co.za | Website: www.peoplespost.co.za

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People’s Post

Heathfield High School to fence out ‘unsavoury characters’ RACINE EDWARDES racine.edwardes@media24.com A 12-year battle for learners’ safety has ended in success. For years, the community and school bodies have pushed the Western Cape Education Department (WCED) to have Heathfield High School’s dilapidated fencing replaced. Not only was the fence unsightly, but it allowed for unsavoury characters to enter the school’s premises and interact with learners. Its state also facilitated several incidents of vandalism and burglary. In a previous interview with the school’s principal Wesley Neumann, (“Vandalism, theft on the rise at school”, People’s Post 28 January), he said the school’s Quintile 5 classification contributed to the delay in the replacement of the fence. He said this classification was made in error. A Quintile 5 school is required to raise funds for its needs independently. According to the department’s spokesperson, Bronagh

Hammond, the quintile system was introduced through the publication of the National Norms and Standards for School Funding in 1998. Schools were identified per quintile based on the poverty levels of the areas at that time. She continues: “No-fee schools comprise of Quintile 1-3 schools and fee-paying schools comprise of Quintile 4-5 schools. Times have evolved and socio-economic situations have changed, thus resulting in many schools being unfairly classified as Quintile 4 and 5, yet, in reality, they serve poor communities.” She says the demand has, therefore, been placed on the department to increase the number of no-fee schools but “we can only do so at our own cost”, she explains. Fortunately for Neumann and Kevin Southgate, the councillor for ward 72, the need for a new fence is now being tended to. Work on the fence began on Tuesday 9 June. In a message sent to the community, Neumann said: “After 12 years of active campaigning and six years

Last year, Heathfield High School learners marched for a new fence. This year, their prayers were answered. Reconstruction of the fence began on 9 June. PHOTO: KEVIN SOUTHGATE being on the WCED’s priority list for a new perimeter fence, the Heathfield High School governing body is pleased to inform the school community that the department has

finally acceded to our demand and has committed to replace the perimeter fence in its entirety.” Southgate, who has been an advocate for the new fence for years, de-

clared the commencement of the project “a victory for dedication, determination and commitment”. The cost to reconstruct the fence is estimated at R2.2 million.

EDUCATION

End of an era for Robson RACINE EDWARDES RACINE.EDWARDES@MEDIA24.COM @RAEEDWARDES

B

oasting more than 40 years as an educator – 39-and-a-half of which were spent at Lavender Hill High School – a pioneering teacher is going on retirement. Annelize Robson commemorated her last day at the school on Tuesday 30 June when she looked back on a journey that stretched over almost four decades. The teacher started her career at Perivale Primary School in Lotus River. A year later, she moved to Lavender Hill High School. “When I started, I was actually a geography teacher and I did HSS (Human Social Sciences) for grades 8 and 9. After that I went on to teach the FET (further education training) phase for the Grade 10s and then I moved with

EL ED RE

them to Grade 11, then Grade 12,” Robson recalls. “Then I became a Grade 11 and 12 geography teacher at the school. In 2004, I started the tourism department at the school and I loved it. It was my great passion because I love travel so much, and bringing life to the subject. I then passed the subject on. It is one of the strongest subjects at the school,” she says, adding that for some time now it has been a compulsory subject for learners from Grade 10 to 12. Over the years, she says, she was able to instil a passion for the subject in the learners whom she taught and was even able to assist their careers in the field by sending 10 learners to train with a touring company. In 2015, Robson won a national accolade: the Global Travel & Tourism Partnership (GTTP SA) Travelport Tourism Teacher of the Year award.

And while she is still proud of her achievement, she says her main reason for becoming a teacher was not for recognition but to make a difference. “My highlight would have to be touching the lives of so many learners. I began with one objective – to touch lives. Hearing the success stories of how they turned their lives around gave me the greatest joy and pleasure. To know the suffering, the gang violence, the adversity that these kids endured; and still they could make something of themselves. That is what I did it for,” she says. But her farewell was bittersweet with only part of the Grade 7 and 12 learners present to

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see her off as a result of the Covid-19 lockdown. “What is sad for me is that I didn’t get to say goodbye to the kids. I was at school just to complete a chapter with the learners and to hand over a laptop and other stuff on Friday,” she says solemnly. During her retirement, she hopes to get some rest first, next to take some time to travel and then to plough back into the school she loves by assisting the feeding schemes and non-government organisations who partner with the high school. Once the lockdown restrictions have been lifted, she hopes to have a special farewell with her learners.

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