Pupils at this Limpopo school are writing exams in an old carport | News24

Pupils at this Limpopo school are writing exams in an old carport | News24


Learners at Tshilogoni Secondary School in Nzhelele, Limpopo, are writing exams in an old carport.

  • Pupils at a Limpopo school are writing exams in the carport and under trees after classrooms closed due to cracks and unsafe asbestos roofing.
  • The school requested help since 2015, but only received three second-hand mobile classrooms out of 10 requested in 2023.
  • The provincial Department of Education is promising two additional mobile units temporarily, with 11 in total planned, pending structural engineer approval.

Pupils at Tshilogoni Secondary School in Nzhelele, Limpopo, are writing exams in an old carport and under trees after several classrooms and the administration block were closed because of safety concerns, according to GroundUp.

This followed a prohibition notice issued by the Department of Employment and Labour after an inspection on 26 May.

Inspectors found substantial cracks in several classroom blocks and declared them unsafe. Concerns were also raised about deteriorating asbestos roofing sheets.

Parts of the school were closed, leaving hundreds of pupils without classrooms during the exam period.

“The classroom blocks were closed just as we were preparing for our June exams,” said Grade 12 pupil Asakundi Makhalimela.

“Writing in a shack and under trees is stressful, especially during the rainy season.”

Classrooms were closed because of safety concerns after a Department of Labour inspection.

Classrooms were closed because of safety concerns after a Department of Labour inspection.

Established in 1983, Tshilogoni Secondary has 983 pupils.

School governing body chairperson Selina Muthavhini said the school had been asking for help with infrastructure for years.

“We first applied in 2015 and requested ten mobile classrooms in 2023, but only received three second-hand units. Learners are now writing examinations in a structure that was previously used as a car shelter. When it rains, it becomes a serious problem,” she said.

Muthavhini said some of the mobile classrooms are also in poor condition.

“One unit is being used as a staff room, and it leaks when it rains. The principal had to move into a storeroom and sometimes uses his car as an office,” she said.

WATCH | Some pupils still taught under trees at Limpopo high school because of classroom shortage

Limpopo Department of Education spokesperson Mike Maringa said two additional mobile classrooms would be provided as a temporary measure.

He said the school remains on the department’s priority list but infrastructure backlogs have delayed intervention. Some buildings have been recommended for demolition, pending approval by a structural engineer.

According to the department, at least 11 mobile classrooms are to be provided once the necessary approvals have been obtained.

The school principal is using the storeroom as an office.

Published with the Limpopo Mirror

Thembi Siaga
www.news24.com

Thembi Siaga
Author: Thembi Siaga

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