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#1
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| Article on South African Board Schools
I know this isn't either distance education or tertiary education, but since the subject of the South African educational system comes up here from time to time, I thought I'd post this positive article in the London Telegraph about South African boarding schools. Of particular interest is the description that educational standards in South Africa have been rising since the end of Apartheid. -=Steve=-
__________________ BS, Info Sys concentration, Charter Oak State College MA in Educational Tech, George Washington University Starting a PhD in Economics, Swiss Management Center More at http://hiresteve.com/blog |
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#2
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| Re: Article on South African Board Schools Quote:
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#3
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Driver went to UCT, though a few years before I did. He was considered something of a leftist (and hence exiled). It occurs to me that someone considered a leftist in apartheid South Africa might be considered conservative elsewhere! I went to a boarding school -- though not in South Africa but next door in what was then called Rhodesia (this was about the time the name changed from Southern Rhodesia to simply Rhodesia). We took Oxford & Cambridge A-levels, and were very scornful of the South African matric. In any case, this made life easy for me when I first went to UCT -- e.g. I had at that point completed 3 years of calculus whereas my South African peers generally had done none. I hear complaints from South Africans that matric is not as rigorous as it once was -- echoing the complaints one hears about modern A levels. I don't know whether the article is accurate. It's a little misleading in referring to Driver as a headmaster for 23 years without noting that he was a headmaster in Hong Kong and in England (Wellington College) not in South Africa (where he was prohibited by the government). |
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#4
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| Quote:
Jack |
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