Applied English Language Studies: Further Explorations (ENG2601)
Exam (elaborations)
ENG2601 October/November 2024 | Due 9 October 2024
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Course
Applied English Language Studies: Further Explorations (ENG2601)
Institution
University Of South Africa (Unisa)
ENG2601 October/November 2024 | Due 9 October 2024. Multiple Essays Provided. Read Text A and answer the questions that follows.
South Africa’s massive reading problem Luke Fraser 16 May 2023 Grade 4 learners in South Africa have the worst reading ability in the world, with 81% incapable of read...
Applied English Language Studies: Further Explorations (ENG2601)
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Read Text A and answer the questions that follows
South Africa’s massive reading problem
Luke Fraser
16 May 2023
Grade 4 learners in South Africa have the worst reading ability in the world, with 81% incapable of
reading for meaning. This is according to the 2021 Progress in International Reading Literacy Study
(PIRLS 2021), which tested 12,426 learners across the country and compared them to students at a
similar age level across 42 other nations. South Africa’s mean achievement score was 288 in the study,
far below the 500 international average. Egypt was the second worst country in the study, but its score
of 378 was well ahead of South Africa. A major concern for South Africa is that its achievement score
has dropped significantly from the PIRLS 2016 study, where South Africa reported that 78% of
children in Grade 4 could not read for meaning in any language. However, researchers noted that 21 of
the 32 countries with trend data noticed a drop, with the Covid-19 pandemic having a major effect on
teaching hours globally. In the 2021 study, Singapore (587), Hong Kong (573), the Russian Federation
(567), England (588), and Finland (549) had the highest overall scores:
The results in South Africa varied heavily across languages. Learners who were tested in Afrikaans
and English scored significantly higher than those who were tested in African languages. Those tested
in Afrikaans (387) and English (382) scored well above the average, while nine African languages
scored below the mean, with Setswana (211) being the worst-performing language. Moreover, the
Western Cape (363), Gauteng (320) and Kwa-Zulu Natal (297) outperformed the 288 mean, with more
remote provinces Limpopo (244) and North-West (232) significantly lower. The biggest area of
concern is that 81% of learners in the study were below the study’s low international benchmark,
meaning that 81% of students cannot read for meaning. Moreover, only 11% of learners reached the
low international benchmark, while 94% of students internationally could reach the low international
benchmark. For South Africa, only 2% of readers could reach a high benchmark, while 1% reached the
advanced benchmark.
State of education
The Centre for Development and Enterprise (CDE) previously said that South Africa has one of the
worst-performing education systems in the world. “The President speaks of a ‘silent revolution’, while
the minister talks of a ‘system on the rise’. The truth is that we face a silent crisis in our schools: South
Africa has one of the worst performing education systems in the world,” said CDE’S Executive
Director Ann Bernstein. The CDE said that South Africa spends roughly 13% of government revenue
on education, which should improve competitive learning levels, reduce learning inequality, and train
a large workforce. However, Professor Lant Pritchett said that South Africa is the biggest learning
underperformer relative to GDP per capita among low and middle-income countries. Despite spending
equivalent levels as high achieving Scandinavian countries, South Africa’s learning outcomes are
worse than Kenya, Tanzania and Eswatini. Although poverty and ongoing infrastructural challenges
have a debilitating effect on students, the incompetence of teachers has a massive effect on results.
80% of teachers in public schools lack the content knowledge and pedagogical skills for their subjects,
For instance, the proficiency level of South African teachers (41%) is far below that of teachers in
Zimbabwe (87%). Corruption is also not helping South Africa’s education system. A 2015 report by
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