Decoloniality and “Model C” Schools: Ethos, Language and the Protests of 2016

Authors

  • Pam Christie School of Education, University of Cape Town
  • Carolyn McKinney School of Education, University of Cape Town Univeristy of Queensland, Australia

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.17159/1947-9417/2017/2332

Keywords:

decoloniality, language policy, “Model C” schools, student protests

Abstract

This article argues that theories of “decoloniality†provide valuable insights into the social relations of “Model C†schools that have been brought into visibility in particular ways by the wave of student protests during and after 2016. Our starting point is to provide a brief outline of the central arguments made by a particular strand of theorists who have developed the term “decoloniality.†We then look briefly at the history of “Model C†schools, locating their formation in the compromises of the negotiated settlement that characterised South Africa’s political transition in the 1990s. We look in particular at language policy and practices in these previously white schools and at the power relations of language in South Africa. In this account, we argue that “Model C†schools exemplify the entangled power matrix that characterises coloniality. “Model C†schools, we argue, provide a clear example of how deep historical inequalities persist well past the formal end of colonialism. Pressing this argument further, we outline some possible implications for changes in schooling that a decoloniality approach invites.  

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Published

2018-01-31

How to Cite

Christie, Pam, and Carolyn McKinney. 2018. “Decoloniality and “Model C” Schools: Ethos, Language and the Protests of 2016”. Education As Change 21 (3):21 pages. https://doi.org/10.17159/1947-9417/2017/2332.

Issue

Section

Articles
Received 2017-03-17
Accepted 2017-09-28
Published 2018-01-31