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UMALUSI Presentation to the Parliamentary Portfolio Committee 27 th March 2007. GENFETQA ACT Objectives. To give effect to the following: Ensuring continuous enhancement of quality in delivery and outcomes of the General and FET
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UMALUSI Presentation to the Parliamentary Portfolio Committee 27th March 2007
GENFETQA ACT Objectives • To give effect to the following: • Ensuring continuous enhancement of quality in • delivery and outcomes of the General and FET • sectors of the national education and training system • Developing a quality assurance framework for GET • and FET • Regulating the relationship between DoE, SAQA, • other ETQAs, providers and the Council
This means………………… • Development of a Quality Assurance Framework for the GET and FET bands • Focus is on a combination of three aspects that determine standards for certification in GFET: • Institutional accreditation and monitoring • Quality assurance of qualifications and curricula • Quality assurance of assessment
This means……………… • Setting standards and monitoring provincial departments of education iro public schooling, FET colleges, ABET centres and public assessment bodies – and reporting to the Minister • Accreditation of private providers of education and training and assessment bodies to offer and/or assess specified approved qualifications and curricula • Evaluation and approval of qualifications and • curricula in GET and FET bands • Quality assurance of assessment both internal and • external (exams) at exit points • Certification of learner attainments
Public Provider monitoring • Inherited and established quality assurance • processes: • Quality assurance of assessment and certification • Senior certificate (being replaced byNSC) • GETC: Adults • ASECA • National Technical Certificates ( N1 – N3) and the • NSC – being replaced by National Certificate • Vocational (NCV)
Public Provider monitoring • New quality assurance processes: • Evaluation and Monitoring (against accreditation • criteria) public assessment bodies (9 PDEs and DoE) • Full evaluation completed 2005 – next evaluation • due 2008 • Areas of limited action: • Monitoring of provincial departments iro public • schools, FET colleges and ABET Centres
Public Provider monitoring • 2005 – Colloquium ( Umalusi Council and DoE) • 2005 – Commissioned Dr Trevor Coombe to develop a • discussion paper • 2006 – On request from the Minister • submitted a proposal (15 July 06)
Public Provider monitoring • Conceptual Challenges: • PDE’s are defined as the “provider” in GENFETQA Act - Problematic and not straight forward • PDE’s are “deemed accredited” by Umalusi - • Appropriateness of “accreditation” of a body that has a constitutional duty to provide quality education
Public Provider monitoring • Practical challenges: • Evaluation overload – (Auditor general and Public • Service commission) • Duplication of mandate with DoE - collaboration is difficult to establish and maintain • Funding and resources are limited
Public Provider monitoring • Umalusi’s role in examinations and private providers is clear, but not clear for public provision • Umalusi, by its mandate, is required to make judgments about the quality of public education • Restrictions on Umalusi are a function of resources and absence of resolution to allow Umalusi to carry out its mandate.
What Umalusi would like to do: • Promotion of quality in Provincial departments: This would include the management of standards of learning, site management, curriculum, teaching and learning, assessments, learner support, and governance. • Educational outcomes: aims at assessing the extent to which schools are able to meet the educational outcomes that are considered to be important. Examples would be: learner attainment, successes, transitions, participation rates, philosophical and policy goals, values. • Capacity is stretched at Umalusi at this stage and Umalusi will require the financial and professional support and engagement of the department with these plans.
Private Provider monitoring and accreditation • Processes with independent schools: • 2006: site visits to 100 schools (Half of which were • “poorly” performing in 2005 matric exams) • 2007 / 2008: Site visits to all schools provisionally • accredited with Umalusi • Use findings to inform possible future initiatives in the • public system