In the Soweto protest, public participation with only white people made the education of blacks difficult and inappropriate.
The Soweto Uprising was one of the bloodiest episodes of black rebellion since the early 1960s, sparked by the police crackdown on the June 16, 1976 march to protest the inferiority of "black schools" in South Africa.
The South African segregationist system, instituted in the late 1940s, forced blacks to pay to attend schools with overcrowded classes and poorly qualified or even inferior teachers, while education for whites was free.
Public participation is a way for the government to capture information, ideas and perspectives from across society, potentially lowering the costs and increasing the effectiveness of official research, public policy development, service provision, monitoring, review and evaluation.
Learn more about protest in brainly.com/question/720320