In his recent address, he argued that South Africa cannot defend a system that lowers expectations.
“We wanted an education system that will make sure South Africans can compete with anyone in the world,” Maimane said.
He added that expecting proficiency at only a 30% pass mark undermines academic growth.
“It’s the belief in the young person… if you up the standards, young people rise up to reach it,” he puts it.
Maimane said keeping the 30% benchmark protects a “fictitious” pass rate that hides the real performance gaps in key subjects.
He also questioned why the government continues to defend the policy despite its impact on learner outcomes.
30% PASS MARK MOTION: CALLS FOR SYSTEMIC IMPROVEMENT CONTINUE
Although the motion was defeated, BOSA insists that raising academic standards must form part of fixing the broader education system.
Maimane further said improving Early Childhood Development, reducing classroom sizes and filling vacant teaching posts remain urgent priorities.
For him, the goal is to ensure every young person leaves school with real choices.
“True freedom must mean that young people become lawyers, doctors, teachers, professionals… not limited by low standards,” he further stated.
Today we lost the vote to end 30% as a pass mark at any level in our public education system.
The following parties voted to keep Bantu education standards – ANC , DA, VF, PA and Al Jamah. They hugged incompetence and embraced mediocrity. Now SA knows.pic.twitter.com/3CabOyWSyQ