Children - Your rights PDF Print E-mail

First steps into the Constitution
by Christopher Woodrow  & illustrated by Monique Toich

Are you a young person growing up in South Africa? If you are, then this book is especially for you! This book is about children’s rights. All people younger than 18 have children’s rights.

This book is aimed at grade 5 learners, but can also be used for learners in grades 3-6. These are just a sample of the pages in the book, but hard copies of the book, with pages to colour in and worksheets to complete are available from the Centre for Child Law. A Teacher’s Guide is also available.

The work books are R20 each and if you order 20 copies you get a teacher’s guide free.

Contact the Centre for Child Law to order your copy.
Tel:  +27 12 420 4502
E-mail: This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it

Click on the thumbnails to see bigger pictures of a selection of the book's pages.

Front cover
Introduction
Children's rights to a name and a nationality
Children's rights to nutrition and shelter
Children's rights to be protected from abuse and degradation
The Law and children
 

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Latest News

Mud schools to get millions rand revamp
6 February 2011

It has taken all of 17 years, but the pupils and staff at Tembeni Senior Primary School have finally been guaranteed a proper school. On Friday afternoon the Eastern Cape department of education reached an R8-billion out-of-court settlement with seven schools, of which Tembeni is one. The schools had taken the ­department to court to force it to provide adequate resources. Most of the schools were built from mud and lacked the most ­basic resources.


Ann Skelton, director of the Centre for Child Law who took up the schools case, said yesterday although only seven schools had brought a case against the department, they were fighting on behalf of all inadequate schools.  “It means that finally when the process is completed the children will be taught in decent schools. It is what they should have had all along. We were simply getting their basic rights for them. “There have been promises before, but now I have more faith that it will happen,” Skelton said.

Sarah Shepton from the Legal Resources Centre in Grahamstown, acting on behalf of the ­Centre for Child Law, said: “Our clients are relieved and delighted with the outcome of the litigation and intend to keep a close eye on the developments, so that promises are not broken.”
Granville Whittle, director of communications in the department of basic education, said the national department would take over the responsibility of providing infrastructure to schools in dire need, as part of its accelerated school infrastructural development initiative.

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Centre for Child Law