South African report reveals grade 3 reading crisis

A new report shows that 15% of South African Grade 3 pupils cannot read a single word, highlighting a deepening literacy crisis. Data from the Funda Uphumelele National Survey indicates stark disparities across languages, with only 30% of early-grade pupils performing at level. Provinces are launching targeted interventions to address the issue.

The 2030 Reading Panel’s 2026 Background Report, released on 24 February 2026, draws on the Department of Basic Education’s Funda Uphumelele National Survey (FUNS), which for the first time assesses reading outcomes in grades 1 to 4 across all South African home languages against national benchmarks.

Nationwide, 15% of Grade 3 pupils scored zero on reading assessments, meaning they cannot decode even a single word after three years of schooling. This figure reaches up to 25% in some languages. Overall, only about 30% of pupils in grades 1 to 3 perform at grade level in their home language. In English, 48% of Grade 3 pupils meet the benchmark, but the rate drops sharply for African languages: 11% in Sepedi, 14% in isiNdebele, and 16% in Xitsonga.

Sipumelele Lucwaba, who leads the panel’s secretariat, stated: “These are not abstract statistics. They represent millions of children in our system without the ability to read in any language. As a country, we have analysed this crisis from every angle, but diagnosis is no longer enough – the point now is to change it. Without urgent intervention, these children have no pathway to educational success.”

Provincial responses have gained momentum. In 2022, no province implemented large-scale interventions for foundation phase reading or maths; by 2026, six of nine provinces are doing so. The Eastern Cape’s R89-million Mabafunde Bonke programme targets 1,652 poorer schools with training and materials in isiXhosa and Sesotho at R465 per pupil. The Free State’s R82.3-million Operation Tharollo covers 433 schools with 32 training days over two years. Gauteng reaches over 88,000 Grade 3 pupils in 588 schools, while Mpumalanga’s R100-million Grade R programme equips 965 schools.

The Western Cape, which started reforms in 2021, provides a model with extra instructional hours and early assessments. Professor Mary Metcalfe, a panel member, noted: “We certainly are not achieving the goal of every child reading for meaning by the age of 10, and that is shown in the DBE’s two assessments, South African Systemic Evaluation and FUNS.” She highlighted challenges like large class sizes, scarce reading materials, and insufficient teacher support.

The report recommends universal standardised assessments, ring-fenced funding, guaranteed classroom resources, and enhanced teacher training to track progress and enable interventions. It acknowledges that the 2030 goal for all 10-year-olds to read for meaning was overly optimistic, citing Brazil’s Sobral turnaround which took over 20 years.

Awọn iroyin ti o ni ibatan

Mississippi has seen substantial gains in fourth-grade reading and math scores over the past decade, following the implementation of stricter literacy standards and phonics-based instruction. The state's fourth-grade reading proficiency rose from 49th to 9th nationally between 2013 and 2024, according to National Assessment of Educational Progress data. These changes contrast with declining performance in states like California and Massachusetts that relaxed academic requirements.

Ti AI ṣe iroyin

An open letter published on International Day of Education urges South African scientists to actively engage with students to improve stagnant STEM marks, despite a record-high matric pass rate of 88%. The piece highlights declining maths and physics performance and calls for visibility and storytelling to inspire future innovators.

The shift from primary to Grade 10 under Kenya's Competency-Based Curriculum has created major challenges for public secondary schools, with many small ones facing closure risks due to low enrollment. Prestigious national schools are attracting most students, leaving smaller institutions empty. The Ministry of Education has identified 2,700 public schools with fewer than 150 students total.

Ti AI ṣe iroyin

The Ethiopian education sector faces severe funding challenges due to inflation and reduced foreign aid. A proposed trust fund aims to fill these gaps through corporate and pension contributions. It seeks to improve access and infrastructure, especially in underserved areas.

Ojú-ìwé yìí nlo kuki

A nlo kuki fun itupalẹ lati mu ilọsiwaju wa. Ka ìlànà àṣírí wa fun alaye siwaju sii.
Kọ