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10 - Challenging ‘The Ladder to Privilege’, 1963–1965

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  10 September 2020

Kevin Shillington
Affiliation:
University of London
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Summary

Accurate figures are hard to come by, but, in the early 1960s, it seems that of the two-thirds of school-age children who entered primary school in Bechuanaland more than half dropped out along the way, for a whole variety of reasons, and those who remained faced a competitive examination which barred the vast majority from secondary education. Only a small minority gained admission to one of the country's six secondary schools and these, in turn, would be further weeded out by the Junior Certificate (JC) examination at the end of their third year.

In 1963 there were only three secondary schools in the country that took students up to Form Five and the Cambridge Overseas School Certificate (‘O’ level). Although that number would increase in the next few years, the whole system, as Patrick perceived it, was directed towards the creation of an élite, who, like the colonial administration itself, would care little about the fortunes of those they left behind.

In a direct challenge to the system – the first of many to come – Patrick had offered places on a first-come-first-served basis. And for this first year he restricted the intake to one class of twenty-eight, among whom were two unmarried mothers. The Swaneng governing committee and several of Serowe's elders were opposed to the admission of these girls but, in his own words, Patrick ‘took a strong stand against their position, on the grounds that these girls needed education even more than others, to be forearmed against impregnation in future and to be able better to care for their children’. The target intake of twenty-eight students, several of them of South African origin, was quickly signed up.

Patrick held his first assembly, outdoors, in the manner that he was determined to continue, with two minutes’ silence for personal reflection rather than the customary religious prayer or hymn. He then took the students into his confidence, explaining the financial constraints the school was under and that it would only survive with the willing cooperation and hard work of everyone – students and staff.

They would begin with the students electing a head boy and head girl and, fulfilling the dream he had had at Glenwood High, he asked them to elect three additional students who would serve with them on a school council. The council would be advisory, but he promised to take its advice seriously.

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Patrick van Rensburg
Rebel, Visionary and Radical Educationist, a Biography
, pp. 141 - 160
Publisher: Wits University Press
Print publication year: 2020

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