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/ 19 July 2005

Stunting the sports stars of tomorrow

Sports facilities are notoriously dodgy at most township schools, with soccer and netball usually played on dusty and bumpy surfaces using well-worn equipment. A possible solution to this — at least in the short term — would be for schools to use existing municipal sports facilities nearby to them, many of which lie dormant during weekdays.

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/ 19 July 2005

Feast of learning

A Cape Town event that links learning to the world of work will take place for the third time early next month. The annual Learning Cape Festival is the brainchild of the Western Cape’s department of economic development and tourism, but much of its success lies in its involvement of other key players — other government departments, as well as civil society and labour organisations.

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/ 19 July 2005

Finger-pointing deadlock

Heated words are flying between the Department of Education and teacher unions as they blame each other for the faltering process of teacher appraisals. The snail’s pace at which the Integrated Quality Management System has unfolded is the crux of the trouble, as time frames agreed to in 2003 have not been met.

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/ 19 July 2005

Just say: I am somebody

‘Half-naaitjies [little bastards].” This is one of the stinging labels that children of farm labourers in South Africa have endured for generations. Children like these have, for centuries, been denied any value beyond the cheap muscle-power they provide to farm owners.

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/ 19 July 2005

A healthy body leads to a healthy mind

Childhood is a stage of human development full of promise and endless possibilities. The influences that shape the mind and body of the young person have lasting effects. These include the obvious such as factual knowledge and conceptual thinking as taught in schools, as well as the general development of value systems and a sense of morality as shaped by family and society.

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/ 19 July 2005

Schools will save the world!

The next best thing to travelling to other countries is meeting foreigners in your own. So, even before the International Confederation of Principals (ICP) convention began earlier this month, I was relishing the prospect of gathering with more than 2 000 principals from 33 countries as diverse as Ghana, Canada and Singapore.

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/ 19 July 2005

Corruption threatens Cameroon’s forests

Just more than a decade ago, Cameroon drafted a law that was intended to regulate commercial use of the country’s forests. In spite of this, corruption and uncontrolled exploitation are putting forest areas at risk, say NGOs. The 1994 Law on the Regulation of Forests, Fauna and Fishing contains clauses that limit logging, with a view to protecting the environment.

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/ 19 July 2005

Ex-unionist rides BEE wave

Ask anybody who has made the most money out of empowerment and they will probably say Tokyo Sexwale, whose shares in Mvelaphanda this week were worth R400-million. Not far behind is Hosken Consolidated Investments’ John Copelyn, whose shareholding until recently was worth R358-million. Unlike Sexwale, though, Copelyn, is white.

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/ 19 July 2005

Celebrating South Africa’s rich heritage

Conserving and recognising a country’s natural and cultural heritage are important elements of nation building. This is especially true in South Africa where there has been an historical bias towards recognising and preserving European-based histories and landmarks, while indigenous cultures and forms of knowledge were systematically undermined.

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/ 19 July 2005

An all-South African game

One of eight recognised indigenous sports codes, jukskei is an all-South African game devised by white settlers as far back as 200 years ago. As they travelled across the land, they spent their spare time competing to see who could throw the pins of the yokes of the oxen closest to the target, which was a stick planted in the ground.