Education department moots dropping compulsory maths

Math
Math
The Department of Education wants to remove maths as a compulsory subject for pupils studying accounting until matric.

The department has gazetted the proposed change to the Schools Act for public comment.

Anyone interested in the potential change can send comments to the department by August 4.

Department of Education spokesman Troy Martens said feedback from parents‚ teachers and pupils revealed that many pupils who do not want to study pure maths still have an interest in accounting.

"In a number of engagements with teachers and parents‚ learners don't want to take pure maths‚ but still want to take accounting."

The restriction stopping pupils who study maths literacy from choosing accounting as a matric subject is "stifling the opportunities of learners"‚ said Martens.

She explained that there were professions in administration‚ marketing and bookkeeping that used accounting but do not require advanced maths skills.

Martens said that if pupils wanted to study a Bachelor of Commerce degree in accounting or do degrees in finance and taxation‚ they would still need to study maths.

The proposal does not change university entry requirements for business and chartered accounting degrees.

Before the curriculum changed in 2011‚ learners could choose accounting as a matric subject without studying maths.

-TimesLIVE

Source: TMG Digital.


subscribe

Would you like to comment on this article?
Register (it's quick and free) or sign in now.

Speech Bubbles

Please read our Comment Policy before commenting.