E Rasool: Matric examination results

Premier Ebrahim Rasool says matric class of 2007 has done us
proud, again

28 December 2007

The Western Cape's matric class of 2007 has done us proud, again.

Despite a three percent drop in our matric pass rate for the Western Cape,
there is much to celebrate. We should celebrate the fact that:
* 80.6% of our learners who wrote matric passed this year
* the Western Cape has again performed well and we are the top-performing
province in South Africa;
* the quality of our passes are improving with more learners passing with
subjects, like Science, which are relevant to the economy of the province
and,
* the gap between historically advantaged and disadvantaged learners, in the
main, is closing.

We must also celebrate the top achievers:
* those learners who have dedicated themselves not only to passing, but to
achieving the best they are capable of
* the top 100 learners in the Western Cape
* those who swelled the ranks of the part-time matriculants who returned to
school and wrote successfully despite previous failures and
* those thousands of matriculants who passed despite a 30 day strike and the
subsequent haggling about payment for implementing the recovery plan.

This was a monumental achievement by our learners, teachers and officials.
Whatever our viewpoints of the correctness of strikes in a sensitive area like
education, it remains a democratic right to strike by teachers. The impact of
the strike was greatest in Khayelitsha and this is reflected in the drop in
pass rate from 76% in 2006 to 62% this year. This has interrupted the
trajectory Khayelitsha was on of increased overall pass and endorsement
rates.

But Zola High School in Khayelitsha illustrated that, had everyone simply
gotten on board to implement the recovery plan, we could have turned matters
around. Zola High, in fact, improved their pass rate from 88% in 2006 to 93% in
2007. The difference is that they embraced the recovery plan, improved on and
implemented it before even knowing what the stipend would be.

Siphamandla is another school in Khayelitsha that withstood the ravage of
the strike by responding with a good recovery plan. The example of an educator,
Mrs Raubenheimer, stands out: she conducted extra maths classes at 07h00 before
every school day for matriculants at Siphamandla.

In what has been a difficult year, I want to thank the learners and their
parents for their sacrifices this year. This makes their achievements sweeter.
I also want to thank those educators and officials who embraced the recovery
plan and gave our children a glimpse of the future.

My advice to all matriculants is that the Western Cape will always have
employment for those who have the right skills. Matric only opens the door for
further skills. For those who did not do too well, please persevere and don't
give up.

Enquiries:
Shado Twala, Premier's Spokesperson
Cell: 083 640 6771

Issued by: Office of the Premier, Western Cape Provincial Government
28 December 2007

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