Educational System of Botswana, South Africa
Education in Botswana is free, but it is not compulsory. The Ministry of Education has authority over all of Botswana's educational structure except the University of Botswana. The educational structure mirrors that of the United Kingdom: there is universal access to primary and junior secondary school, but a process of academic selectivity reduces entrance to the senior secondary school and the university. However, educational curricula incorporate prevocational preparation in the junior and senior secondary schools.
In 2001 Botswana's education system was comprised of seven years of
primary education, three years of junior secondary education, and two years of
senior secondary education. Each year at the primary level is a Standard, and
each secondary level is a Form. This system was implemented in 1995 as a result
of a 1993 National Education Commission study.
Botswana's basic education program is comprised of the primary and junior
secondary levels.
Primary education is the most important stage in
the educational system, and the government strives to make this level of
education accessible to everyone. One central objective of primary education is
for children to be literate first in Setswana and then in English. Other goals
are for children to become knowledgeable in mathematics and to have a command
of science and social studies. From 1991 to 1997, the number of students
completing the primary level and entering junior secondary increased from 65.0 percent
to 98.5 percent.
Completing the Junior Certificate program may lead
to admission to the senior secondary school program. Only those pupils whose
grades are high enough on the Junior Certificate Examination are admitted to
the senior secondary program. From 1991 to 1994, the number of students
admitted to senior secondary schools increased from 28 to 34 percent. Botswana
is in the process of building unified secondary schools, Form I to Form V, in
the remote areas of the country to increase access to a senior secondary
education.
Education has been given priority in the national budget. In the
1994-1995 financial year, the Ministry of Education received 10 percent of the
national budget. The Department of Secondary Education and Teacher Training and
Development shared 64 percent, and the ministry headquarters, which was
responsible for four projects including the University of Botswana and Brigades
development, received 25 percent. The 11 percent balance was spent on improving
facilities and functions under the technical education, nonformal education,
curriculum development, and evaluation and special education departments. The
Ministry of Education expanded from a small unit of government in 1966 to one
that looks after the educational needs of hundreds of thousands students from
primary to tertiary levels. In addition, the ministry writes all required
textbooks. The ministry's emphasis is on training qualified teachers, developing a
diversified curriculum, and expanding facilities to meet the national
commitment of universal education. The concern for achieving national literacy
is underscored by the fact that 40.6 percent of the country's population is
under the age of 15.
Botswana's first educational policy, called
Education for Kagisano (Social
Harmony), guided the country's educational development and administration from
1977 to 1993. In the early 1990s, the recognition that the country's
socioeconomic situation had changed significantly resulted in a review of
policies and strategies for Botswana's educational development. In March 1994,
the Minister of Education presented Government Paper No. 2, The Revised
National Policy on Education. Its recommendations will provide direction for
Botswana's educational system until 2020.
The objectives of the new policy are to review the
current education system and its relevance and to identify problems and
strategies for its further development in the context of Botswana's changing
and complex economy; to reexamine the structure of the education system to guarantee
universal access to primary and junior secondary education, while consolidating
and vocationalising the curriculum content at these levels; to advise on ways
to ensure the education system is sensitive and responsive to the people's
wishes and the country's manpower requirements; to study the various methods of
streaming into vocational and academic groups at the senior secondary level; to
study how the senior secondary structure relates to the University of Botswana
degree programs and to determine how the two programs may best be reconciled;
to advise on the organization and diversification of the secondary school
curricula to prepare students who do not continue with higher education; and to
make recommendations to the government on the best and most cost-effective
methods of implementing the recommendations proposed by the Ministry of
Education.
The education system makes minimal provisions for
children with disabilities. Few disabled children are integrated in regular
school classes, and there is a limited special education curriculum. Parents
must pay fees to nongovernmental organizations if their special needs children
are educated. However, the government has committed to intensify efforts to
educate these children by paying the nongovernmental organizations' fees (education.stateuniversity.com).
Educational System in Botswana
(http://www.classbase.com/Countries/Botswana/Education-System)
Grading System
(http://www.classbase.com/Countries/Botswana/Grading-System)
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Read more: Botswana - Educational System—overview - Secondary, Senior, Primary, and Percent - StateUniversity.com http://education.stateuniversity.com/pages/186/Botswana-EDUCATIONAL-SYSTEM-OVERVIEW.html#ixzz4LtBLf3NC
Educational System in Botswana
(http://www.classbase.com/Countries/Botswana/Education-System)
Grading System
Grade | Scale | Grade Description | Division | US Grade |
---|---|---|---|---|
A | 80.00 - 100.00 | First Class Honours (Outstanding) | A | |
B | 70.00 - 79.99 | Second Class Honours (Very Good) | Upper Division | A- / B+ |
C | 60.00 - 69.99 | Second Class Honours (Good) | Lower Division | B |
D | 50.00 - 59.99 | Pass (Pass) | C | |
E | 40.00 - 49.99 | Fail | D | |
F | 0.00 - 39.99 | Fail | F |
Please include a link to this page if you have found this material useful for research or writing a related article.
<a href="http://education.stateuniversity.com/pages/186/Botswana-EDUCATIONAL-SYSTEM-OVERVIEW.html">Botswana - Educational System—overview</a>
Read more: Botswana - Educational System—overview - Secondary, Senior, Primary, and Percent - StateUniversity.com http://education.stateuniversity.com/pages/186/Botswana-EDUCATIONAL-SYSTEM-OVERVIEW.html#ixzz4LtBLf3NC
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