Showing posts with label Stellenbosch. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Stellenbosch. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 30, 2008

Thursday's children



On the last day of the first month of the new year, we will be inundated by the grade ten and eleven students from Lückhoff High in Ida's Valley, a suburb of nearby Stellenbosch.

''Especially the grade tens in the subject physical science need a firsthand approach to the subject - to feel something, see something, experience a process - so it becomes real to them,'' said Mrs Cheryl King, the life sciences teacher at Lückhoff.

The 60 or so students will be accompanied by physical science teacher Mrs Georgina Apples, and it's hoped that the visit to the MTN Sciencentre will spark their curiosity about the astonishing world we live in.

''At the moment we do moderately, we're not where we want them to be,'' said Mrs King. ''They have the ability to do much better - especially in science subjects. A lack of good facilities is an issue. We have qualified teachers. The surroundings play quite a great role in their lack of interest. They're not stimulated maybe enough at home.''

Lückhoff was the first Afrikaans-language high school for so-called coloured people in the Boland, said Stellenbosch University rector Russell Botman. In fact, the desire for education was so strong that Lückhoff was the third school to be built in the entire Boland region.

Pupils came to the school from as far away as neighbouring countries such as what was then South-West Africa (now Namibia). Children from remote regions lived with local families, guided by the motto “Education is Light”.

The school was deliberately shut down in 1964 by the education department of the National Party in terms of the Group Areas Act, which threw out the so-called bruin mense in favour of the white minority.

Barely three months before writing their finals, the 1964 matric students were unceremoniously evicted from the building and forcefully relocated — along with students from various church schools — to a cramped, barracks-like building in the ''coloureds-only'' township of Ida’s Valley, where the school remains today.

Ida's Valley was founded in 1920 on the northeast side of Stellenbosch, when many of the first residents farmed vegetables and fruit such as strawberries. Today it is a low-income to working-class suburb of the university town, and you can find many of its residents singing their hearts out in the famous Libertas choir.

According to an article by Hazel Friedman in The Teacher, for more than 25 years educator and activist Pat William, the current headmaster of Lückhoff, has watched with despair how the engine of post-apartheid change has moved in fits and starts.

Together with community stalwarts like Moegamat Kara and Isgak Pool, Williams has embarked on an epic project to rewrite the history of Stellenbosch and to document the trajectory of cultural dispossession experienced by the communities of Ida’s Valley and neighbouring Cloeteville. This, he hopes, will instil in his students a sense of pride in their heritage, helping to heal the wounds of a fractured history.

Let us hope that the visit to the MTN Sciencentre can form part of this process.

Tuesday, October 9, 2007

Visitors from the NorthWest province


50 students from the NorthWest province are coming to the MTN Sciencentre on Wednesday October 10 2007, in addition to our casual visitors and our outreach efforts.

This particular group of grade 11s are coming all the way from Hoerskool Skoonspruit in the Freemanville suburb of Klerksdorp, now also known as the city of Matlosana.

But we have local visitors too, we hasten to add. This week, locals are coming from various parts of the Mother City, including the private co-educational Christian secondary school Elkanah House in Table View, organised by teacher Liz Broad. (For more on the school, surf to http://www.elkanah.co.za/)

Others are arriving from further away in the Western Cape, such as Hoerskool Stellenbosch, with teacher Daleen Muller.

Both Hoerskool Schoonspruit from the North West Province and Hoerskool Stellenbosch from the Western Cape were provincial winners last month in a travel and tourism award organised by the National Business Institute, and both are coming here this week, so they seem to be thinking along the same lines, despite the hundreds of kilometres that separate them.

Monday, August 27, 2007

Famous again

Well done to all the boys from the Paul Roos Gymnasium, who came all the way from Stellenbosch to compete in the Eskom Expo for Young Scientists recently.

The Expo was held for the first time at the MTN Sciencentre.

And students Harish Vallabhapurapu and Timo Goosen (seen here), Jancke Eygelaar and Pieter Jansen van Rensburg, all from Paul Roos, appeared in photographs in the 'nuus' section of the weekly newspaper The Bolander on Wednesday August 22.

Mention was also made of Zimasa Combined School in Langa, which competed for the first time, and the hard work done by the judging panel, led by Peter Davidson, an information technology teacher from Fish Hoek.

We were particularly fond of the headline 'Young Scientsts go for gold, silver and bronze at MTN Expo.' Baie dankie, Bolander!