Respuesta :
The apartheid government of South Africa passed the Bantu Education Act in 1976, requiring that black South Africans, the majority in their own nation but not consulted in their country's government, could only be instructed in their own languages and not the other languages of the world.
Afrikaners wanted to cut them off from communicating with the rest of the world.
What were the other effects that followed?
As a result of the law, the law was translated as follows:
- The government took full administration of all schools.
- Missionary schools were forced to close.
- White pupils' funding was raised at the cost of black kids.
- Teachers of color were underpaid.
- There was a high rate of school dropout.
How did Bantu End?
The Act was repealed in 1979 by the Education and Training Act of 1979, which maintained the system of racially segregated education while also eliminating tuition discrimination and the segregated Department of Bantu Education and allowing native language education until the fourth grade as well as limited attendance at private schools.
After the Interim Constitution was introduced in 1994, segregation became unlawful, and the South African Schools Act of 1996 removed major provisions of the Education and Training Act. The Bantu Education Act established a distinct, inferior system of education for black children.
The goal of this legislation was to ensure that black South Africans could only work as unskilled or semi-skilled laborers, even if they were intellectual enough to become skilled. As a result, they remained servants to white South Africans.
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Full Question:
What changed with the law being put in place (implemented) of Bantu education?