Mindscape Education – School 360°

Mindscape is an affordable, quality and independent education system with a vision of making independent learning more accessible to parents wishing to home school their children. Independent schooling is on the rise in South Africa with parents taking the education of their children into their own capable hands.

Mindscape is devoted to ensuring the best possible learning environment for your children as they explore new ways of learning and become forward thinkers with independence.

At Mindscape we equip parents with a School-in-a-box-solution, complete with Curriculum books, assessments, teachers resources as well as online support for selective subjects. Some parents have enlisted Tutor Centres to assist them in giving the student the best possible advantage, we have a list of available centres for you to peruse. Mindscape’s curriculum is in line with the National curriculum and assessment policy statement (CAPS) and Grade 10 – 12 is quality assured by SACAI and Umalusi.

What ages does your online schooling cover?

GR4 to GR11 live lessons but we do cater from GR1 to GR12 for curriculum.

Are you taking new learners at this time

Yes, for Term 3 with exclusion of GR12.

How are your online classes conducted?

Edu Core Solutions facilitate our live lessons using own developed secure video platform.

Are lessons conducted in groups or one on one?

Scheduled group lessons are conducted.

Is your school able to mark and report on students work submitted?

Parents responsible for marking. With recognised report issued by Mindscape Education allowing progression of a learner. 

Contact Details

Email: [email protected] 

Contact: 011 704 0687

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Parenting Hub

Learning in the time of Corona

The spread of the Covid-19 pandemic and the resultant closure of schools, has led to a new educational crisis. While school closures are important to contain the coronavirus in South Africa, a comprehensive catch-up plan for learners has yet to be devised by the Minister of Basic Education, Angie Motshekga. The Minister on the other hand, is leaving it up to each province, district, circuit and school to develop their own comprehensive catch-up plan. Currently only ten schooling days will be lost, which will be caught up by shortening the mid-year break, but the length, and extent, of the disruption to schooling is hard to predict at this stage with some experts forecasting that schools will only reopen at the end of April, or even May. The reality is, that very few schools in our country are able to administer e-learning, and critically, to ensure that learning material is adapted to alternative platforms such as tablets.

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