Gwarube extends public comment period on draft history curriculum

The Department of Basic Education has published a new draft History Curriculum and Assessment Policy Statement (CAPS) for grades 4 to 12, adopting an African-centred approach away from Eurocentric narratives. Minister Siviwe Gwarube extended the public comment period by 30 days to May 19, 2026, citing strong public interest. Stakeholders praise the decolonisation effort but note concerns over content depth and representation.

The Department of Basic Education (DBE) released the draft CAPS, influenced by Unesco's General History of Africa. It aims to reconstruct history through a multidisciplinary lens, emphasising Africa's past and global connections, without settling scores against colonialism.

For younger grades, the curriculum starts with personal heritage in Grade 4, early innovations in Grade 5, and ancient histories including Egypt and the Kingdom of Mali in Grade 6. Higher grades cover pre-colonial southern Africa, the minerals revolution, resistance movements, imperialism, apartheid, and the 1994 transition, questioning the Truth and Reconciliation Commission's accountability.

The South African Democratic Teachers’ Union (Sadtu) called it a “progressive and timely intervention” and renewed calls for History to be compulsory. Historian Zikhona Valela praised its comprehensiveness but criticised limited representation of women, non-ANC movements, and LGBTQ roles, plus outdated terms like “chiefs” instead of “inkosi”.

Lufuno Lerato Monguni, chairperson of the South African Society for History Teaching, welcomed the shift but warned the content is “jam-packed”, risking superficial teaching. Department spokesperson Terrence Khala said the extension to May 19 ensures broad participation with no preconceived outcomes.

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Basic Education Minister Siviwe Gwarube announced an independent probe into textbook procurement and outlined priorities for early childhood development during her 2026/27 budget vote on 26 May.

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The Commission on Higher Education will accept submissions on its reframed general education curriculum until June 15 and has already received 256 papers from higher-education institutions. The rollout of the changes has been deferred until 2028.

The Kenya National Examinations Council has extended the deadline for uploading Grade 4 and 5 School-Based Assessment results to June 15. Schools that fail to comply face a KSh 1,000 penalty per learner.

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The Economy and Development Council has approved a trimester school calendar to improve learning outcomes. The new system divides the 201-day school year into three terms, according to the Department of Economy, Planning and Development. However, the Alliance of Concerned Teachers opposes it for lacking teacher input.

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