Alexandra – Banele Phaladi wolfed down a thin slice of bread and kissed his mother goodbye before walking around the dilapidated streets of Alexandra township to his colourful classroom at the Kgololo Academy.
“Here we are able to focus on the ones who are struggling. Any child can learn when given the right platform,” she said.
Tolbert-Mbatha co-founded the school ten years ago with her husband Thulani Mbatha, a native of the poverty-stricken township which borders the affluent neighbourhood of Sandton, known as Africa’s richest square mile.
When Mbatha was a child, a visiting American teacher spotted him writing his homework in an abandoned bus. The teacher tutored him and his friends and eventually funded their university education.
“This completely changed the trajectory for him – but it is problematic that all the people who made it were ‘discovered’ because they happened to be at the right place at the right time,” Tolbert-Mbatha, who has a teaching background, told AFP.
“We wanted to create an environment where everyone gets discovered,” she said.
Quality education at home
To achieve academic success, Alexandra’s best pupils usually rely on scholarships to private schools in more affluent areas. South Africa’s ongoing legacy of racial segregation, even 30 years after the end of apartheid, means the children often stand out in rich, white-majority schools.
Kgololo Academy aims to give them – at least at primary school level – access to “high quality education that doesn’t focus on academics only” without having to leave their community, says the school’s principal, Nelly Mhlongo.
“It brings a new, fresh air in our community to have a private school in a township,” agrees Phaladi’s mother, Eva, who raises her son as a single mother in a house shared with his uncle, aunt and cousins.
The fees of about 30,000 rands ($1,628) per year, a fortune in one of the country’s poorest neighbourhoods, are covered more than halfway by NGOs and private donors. Parents and grandparents scrape pennies together to afford the rest.
To support the children, who face a myriad of challenges in a community plagued with unemployment and crime, the school has hired two psychologists and a social worker.
“It has been a game-changer” and many pupils now see the counsellors even for everyday issues, said Tolbert-Mbatha, whose own children are also enrolled at the Academy.
Unlike other prestigious private schools, the key to admission at Kgololo Academy isn’t the child’s academic prowess, but rather the parents’ involvement.
“We can take any student, we cannot take any parent,” the founder said. “They must create habits to help their kids be successful.”
Before heading to their first-period isiZulu lesson, Banele Phaladi and his classmates warmed up with a lively game of musical chairs in the courtyard.
The teachers here know how to make learning “interesting and fun”, the good-natured pre-teen said.
Next year, Phaladi’s commute to school will be very different: like 90 percent of Kgololo’s learners, he has just been awarded a fully-funded ride to a prestigious high school.
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Source: AFP