Unit 1
Executive Summary
This document synthesizes the legal and policy framework governing ordinary public
schools in South Africa, drawing from foundational legislation, recent amendments, draft
policies, and landmark court judgments. A central theme is the significant recalibration
of power between School Governing Bodies (GBs) and provincial education
departments, culminating in the Basic Education Laws Amendment Act, 2024. This
Act centralizes substantial authority with the provincial Head of Department (HOD),
particularly concerning learner admissions and school language policies, fundamentally
altering the governance landscape established by the South African Schools Act
(SASA) of 1996.
Key transformations and takeaways include:
● Centralization of Authority: The 2024 Amendment Act grants the HOD the
final authority to admit a learner to a public school, following consultation with
the GB. This represents a decisive shift from the previous model where GBs held
primary authority over school-level admission policies.
● Language Policy Overhaul: The Act empowers the HOD to direct a public
school to adopt more than one language of instruction where it is deemed
practicable. This legislative change directly supersedes the legal precedent set
by the 2005 Supreme Court of Appeal case, Governing Body of Mikro Primary
School v Western Cape Minister of Education, which had affirmed the GB's
exclusive power to determine language policy.
, ● Compulsory Grade R: The 2024 Act makes Grade R attendance compulsory for
learners starting from the year they turn six, expanding the scope of basic
education.
● Codification of "Reasonable Accommodation": Principles established in the
2007 Constitutional Court case, MEC for Education: KwaZulu-Natal v Pillay, are
now legislated. The 2024 Act mandates that school Codes of Conduct must
account for learner diversity (cultural, religious, medical) and include a formal
exemption clause, entrenching the duty to provide reasonable accommodation.
● Strengthened Prohibitions: The prohibition on corporal punishment is explicitly
extended to all school activities and hostels. Furthermore, a blanket prohibition
on initiation practices has been enacted.
● Inclusivity and Non-Discrimination: A consistent principle across all policies is
the prohibition of unfair discrimination in admissions. This includes an explicit
mandate to admit learners irrespective of their documentation or immigration
status, placing the onus on the HOD to assist parents in regularizing their
paperwork.
● Procedural Fairness: Case law, such as the 2007 'Bad-girl' case, underscores
that even a lawful school policy can be invalidated if its implementation is
procedurally unfair, reinforcing the need for transparent processes that allow for
representation.
In essence, the framework for public schooling has evolved towards greater state
control to drive transformation, equity, and access, while simultaneously codifying
judicial principles of fairness and accommodation for cultural and religious diversity.
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1. The Evolving Legal and Policy Framework
The governance of public schools in South Africa is primarily dictated by the South
African Schools Act, 1996 (Act 84 of 1996), commonly known as SASA. This
foundational legislation was enacted to create a new national school system, redress
past injustices, and establish uniform norms for governance and funding.
,Over time, SASA has been subject to various amendments and policy interpretations.
Two significant recent developments have reshaped its application:
1. The Draft Admission Policy for Ordinary Public Schools (2021): Published
for public comment on 10 February 2021, this draft policy signaled a move
towards strengthening the administrative role of provincial education departments
in the admissions process and clarifying rules around non-discrimination and
learner documentation.
2. The Basic Education Laws Amendment Act, 2024 (Act 32 of 2024): Assented
to on 13 September 2024, this Act introduces sweeping amendments to SASA. It
formalizes and expands the powers of the Head of Department (HOD) over
admissions and language policies, makes Grade R compulsory, and legally
embeds principles of reasonable accommodation for religious and cultural
practices, among other changes.
These developments must be understood in the context of key judicial precedents that
have shaped the interpretation of SASA, notably the Mikro Primary case on language
policy and the Pillay case on cultural and religious rights.
2. Admissions Policy and Administration
The process and authority for learner admissions have been a central focus of legal and
policy reform, shifting power from individual schools to the provincial education
department.
2.1 Shift in Authority: Governing Body vs. Head of Department
Under the original framework of SASA, the governing body (GB) of a public school was
empowered to determine the school's admission policy (Section 5(5)). However, the
2024 Amendment Act significantly enhances the HOD's authority. While the GB still
determines the policy, the HOD, after consultation with the GB, now has the final
authority to admit a learner to a public school.
, Furthermore, the Act mandates that GBs must review their admission policy every three
years, or when circumstances require, taking into account the needs of the broader
community in the education district.
2.2 Principles of Non-Discrimination
A core, unwavering principle is the prohibition of unfair discrimination. The 2021 Draft
Admission Policy explicitly states that an admission policy must not unfairly discriminate
on grounds including, but not limited to: race, gender, sex, ethnicity, social origin, colour,
sexual orientation, age, disability, HIV status, religion, culture, language, birth, or
immigration status.
Key prohibitions reinforced across policy documents include:
● No learner may be refused admission solely based on the school's language
policy.
● No learner may be refused admission because their parent is unable to pay
school fees, does not subscribe to the school's mission statement, or refuses to
sign a liability waiver.
● Governing bodies are prohibited from administering any test for the purpose of
admission. Tests are only permissible for placement into a specific specialized
course (e.g., technical studies, music, dance).
2.3 Procedural Fairness
The 'Bad-girl' case (2007) established a crucial legal principle: even if an admission
policy is lawful, its implementation can be overturned if it is procedurally unfair. In that
case, a school's policy to scrutinize a learner's disciplinary record was deemed lawful,
but the decision to refuse admission was flawed because the learner and her parents
were not informed that her record could influence admission and were not given an
opportunity to make representations.
2.4 Learner Documentation Requirements