NEWS & ANALYSIS

Matric 2013: Why the FState and NWest's success is illusionary

James Myburgh says the two top-ranked provinces owe their position to a massive drop-out rate post-Grade 10

One of the surprises of the 2013 government matric results has been the fact that the Free State (87.4%) and North West (87.2%) secured higher pass rates than both Gauteng (86.9%) and the Western Cape (85.1%), which was pushed into fourth place in the rankings (see table 1 below).

In their reactions to the results both Minister of Basic Education, Angie Motshekga, and the African National Congress, cited the top rankings of these two provinces to rebut claims that the ANC government had failed to deliver decent education to the poor. The ANC stated that: "We are particularly proud of and congratulate the Free State and North West Provinces which were ranked 1st and 2nd best performing provinces respectively. These provinces, which are largely rural and under-resourced, occupy pride of place in our national schooling system."

Critics of the DA in the Western Cape gleefully seized upon the province's slide in the rankings to argue that the Zille administration was failing to deliver. NEHAWU slammed the province's "mediocre performance" while ANC Western Cape leader Marius Fransman expressed disappointment at the results and called for a shake-up of the provincial education department.

When it comes to Bachelors degree passes - the pass needed to progress on to university study - the Western Cape (40.9%) and Gauteng (38.9%) were ranked first and second, ahead of the North West (34.9%) and Free State (33.1%). Nonetheless, the performance of these two "rural and poor" provinces, as Motshekga describes them, is nonetheless striking. The substantial increase in the government matric pass rate in 2013 still needs to be subjected to proper forensic analysis. However, what the provincial rankings illustrate are the danger of using the pass rate as the sole measure of performance in matric.

Table 1: Government 2013 matric examination results by province

 

Wrote

Passed

% pass

Ranking

Bachelors degree pass

BP %

Ranking

 

EASTERN CAPE

72 138

46 840

64.9%

9

13 686

19.0%

9

FREE STATE

27 105

23 689

87.4%

1

8 961

33.1%

3

GAUTENG

97 897

85 112

86.9%

3

38 104

38.9%

2

KWAZULU-NATAL

145 278

112 403

77.4%

6

47 202

32.5%

5

LIMPOPO

82 483

59 184

71.8%

8

18 781

22.8%

8

MPUMALANGA

50 053

38 836

77.6%

5

12 954

25.9%

6

NORTH WEST

29 140

25 414

87.2%

2

10 166

34.9%

4

NORTHERN CAPE

10 403

7 749

74.5%

7

2 424

23.3%

7

WESTERN CAPE

47 615

40 542

85.1%

4

19 477

40.9%

1

NATIONAL

562 112

439 769

78.2%

N/A

171 755

30.6%

N/A

One of the ways schools and provincial administrations have been traditionally able to increase their pass rates is by "culling" weaker pupils between Grades 10 and Grade 12. In other words huge numbers of ill-educated pupils fall or are pushed out of the system before they even sit down to write final National Senior Certificate examinations.

One means of controlling for this is to measure the number of government matric passes against the number of pupils in Grade 10 two years previously. This is not a perfect measure as higher numbers of pupils tend to be held back in Grade 10 than in earlier years (see the paper by Dr Stephen Taylor here - PDF.) Another wrinkle is that while the Department of Basic Education provides a breakdown, in its published literature, of the number of pupils in independent and government schools in Grade 10 it is does not provide a similar breakdown for the government matric exam results, even though a significant number of pupils in independent schools sit this exam rather than the IEB one. The effect is however relatively marginal given the small percentage of pupils (4%) in independent schools.

If one measures, by province, the ratio of the 2013 government matric results against the 2011 Grade 10 government school enrolment figures it is evident that the Free State and the North West owe much of their current success to an exceedingly high drop-out rate in the two years preceding matric. Indeed, of all provinces, the North West had the highest drop-out rate between Grade 10 and matric (56.5%) with the Free State following closely behind (54.8%). By contrast, the Western Cape had by far the lowest drop-out rate (35%), followed by KwaZulu-Natal (42.1%) and Gauteng (43.2%). See Table 2.

Table 2: Number of government matric passes in 2013 against the number of pupils in Grade 10 in 2011*

 

Pupils in grade 10 in 2011

Numbers who wrote govt matric in 2013

% of 2011

Passed

% of 2011

Ranking

Bachelors pass

% of 2011

Ranking

EASTERN CAPE

144 855

72 138

49.8%

46 840

32.3%

9

13 686

9.4%

9

FREE STATE

60 012

27 105

45.2%

23 689

39.5%

5

8 961

14.9%

5

GAUTENG

172 430

97 897

56.8%

85 112

49.4%

2

38 104

22.1%

2

KWAZULU-NATAL

250 755

145 278

57.9%

112 403

44.8%

3

47 202

18.8%

3

LIMPOPO

173 722

82 483

47.5%

59 184

34.1%

8

18 781

10.8%

8

MPUMALANGA

92 677

50 053

54.0%

38 836

41.9%

4

12 954

14.0%

6

NORTH WEST

66 916

29 140

43.5%

25 414

38.0%

6

10 166

15.2%

4

NORTHERN CAPE

21 162

10 403

49.2%

7 749

36.6%

7

2 424

11.5%

7

WESTERN CAPE

73 261

47 615

65.0%

40 542

55.3%

1

19 477

26.6%

1

NATIONAL

1 055 790

562 112

53.2%

439 769

41.7%

171 755

16.3%

 

* Figures for 2011 are for public ordinary schools only (not independent schools). The government matric results include some pupils from independent schools who wrote the NSC rather than the IEB examinations. The percentages given are thus maximums. The distorting effect is likely to be highest in Gauteng given the disproportionate number of independent schools based in the province.

Dividing the number of pupils who passed the 2013 government matric over the number of Grade 10 pupils in ordinary public schools in 2011 - rather than simply the number who sat the examinations - may be a somewhat crude measure, given the provisos mentioned above, but it provides a far more realistic picture of provincial performance. On this measure the Western Cape has by far the highest percentage passing matric (55.3%), followed by Gauteng (49.4%) and then KwaZulu-Natal (44.8%). The Free State and North West come limping in, in 5th and 6th place respectively.

What this does not explain however is the jump in the government matric pass rate to 78.2% in 2013 from 73,9% in 2012, and 70,2% the year before that. The degree to which this increase reflects political manipulation, rather than an underlying improvement in educational standards, awaits further analysis.

***

Data sources: DBE, Education Statistics in South Africa reports from 2006 - 2011, NSC examination reports 2008-2013

Update (January 9 2014): Following publication of this article we received data on the government matric results for pupils in public schools alone (i.e. excluding those pupils in independent schools who wrote the government, not IEB, examinations.) The following is a table with this data.

It should also be noted that if "bunching" occurs in different provinces in different grades this may have some effect on provincial comparisons. 

Table 2: Number of matric passes by public schools pupils in 2013 against the number of ordinary public school pupils in Grade 10 in 2011

Province Name

2011 Grade 10 enrolment

Total wrote 2013 govt matric

As a % of 2011 cohort

Passed

As a % of 2011 cohort

Achieved bachelors

As a % of 2011 cohort

EASTERN CAPE

144 855

 69 332

47.9%

44 708

30.9%

 12 864

8.9%

FREE STATE

60 012

 26 216

43.7%

22 929

38.2%

 8 649

14.4%

GAUTENG

172 430

 88 060

51.1%

76 527

44.4%

 33 478

19.4%

KWAZULU-NATAL

250 755

 141 646

56.5%

109 443

43.6%

 45 260

18.0%

LIMPOPO

173 722

 79 198

45.6%

56 502

32.5%

 17 546

10.1%

MPUMALANGA

92 677

 47 240

51.0%

36 662

39.6%

 12 189

13.2%

NORTH WEST

66 916

 28 682

42.9%

24 983

37.3%

 9 994

14.9%

NORTHERN CAPE

21 162

 10 197

48.2%

 7 579

35.8%

 2 359

11.1%

WESTERN CAPE

73 261

 45 216

61.7%

 38 313

52.3%

 17 905

24.4%

NATIONAL

1 055 790

 535 787

50.7%

 417 646

39.6%

 160 244

15.2%

This article was published with the assistance of the Friedrich-Naumann-Stiftung für die Freiheit (FNF). The views presented in the article are those of the author and do not necessarily represent the views of FNF.

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