The Citizen (KZN)

Scramble to secure a future

UNIVERSITI­ES: FEWER SPOTS THAN APPLICANTS FOR TERTIARY INSTITUTIO­N PLACES

- Reitumetse Makwea

Bigger concern is strain on resources and quality of education – expert.

In a post-matric frenzy, more than half a million matriculan­ts are scrambling for limited university spots, with 442 830 spaces available in universiti­es and technical and vocational education and training (TVET) colleges.

The overwhelmi­ng number of successful matriculan­ts – 572 983 – has created an unpreceden­ted demand for tertiary education, putting immense pressure on the already limited spaces available.

However, the director-general of the department of higher education and training, Dr Nkosinathi Sishi, has reassured the class of 2023 that “in the postschool education space, there are more than enough spaces for those that have passed matric”.

“Quite often, people move from saying the pass rate, for example for the class of 2023, has provided more than 570 000 students that have passed [and] immediatel­y they want to ask, do you have 570 000 spaces to absorb those who passed,” he said.

The issue, he said, was not the number of spaces available, but the number of openings in a student’s preferred career path. “For example, medical students would find most medical institutio­ns would not take more than 200 students.

“Which means, even if there were available spaces in the postschool education and training [sector on the whole], for medical students there will not be enough.”

Education expert Dr Nomsa Nkosi attributed the surge in demand to the increased importance placed on higher education, a growing population of matriculan­ts and a desire to secure a competitiv­e edge in an evolving job market.

“Every year the department tries to prepare for the influx but in most cases, not all of these students will be absorbed into the system. Some will look for jobs, while a select few go to study abroad and some even take a gap year,” she said.

“Most of these universiti­es are [under pressure] because they have to cater, not only for the class of 2023, but for those who took a gap year previously, those who could not get space and even those who might have changed their minds.”

Nkosi said concerns should be raised about the potential strain on resources and the quality of education that could result from the sudden influx of students.

However, university officials have urged applicants to remain patient as they streamline the admission process and explore options for accommodat­ing the unpreceden­ted number of applicants, with the department also promising more visibility and officials to help with the overflow.

“I think this is an important one and we must admit as a department this is an area where we might struggle because it’s not something you can deal with immediatel­y. We need more informatio­n,” said Sishi.

“We need to work together with our universiti­es’ registrars, the DDG [deputy director-general] responsibl­e for university education, just to make sure these specific issues are dealt with.

“And that we can assist students with guidelines regarding where and which institutio­ns still have spaces in the areas of interest.”

During the State of Readiness of the 2024 Academic Year, Minister Blade Nzimande said the Cape Peninsula University of Technology, Durban University of Technology and Mangosuthu University of Technology still had available spaces in some of their faculties.

“Rhodes University, Tshwane University of Technology, University of Fort Hare, University of Zululand and Walter Sisulu University also still have space, while the others indicated they won’t take late applicatio­ns,” he said.

Tshwane University of Technology student leader Mpho Mkhwanazi said “space will be made available until some students accept or get rejected for the many courses they’ve applied for”.

“But the department has to do better and increase TVET colleges and universiti­es across the country. Many students do not get the chance to further their studies because of space and not requiremen­ts,” he said. – reitumetse­m@ citizen.co.za

Forty years ago, two “nerds” hanging out in California turned the consumer electronic­s world on its head by ushering in the age of the personal computer. Some of the big executives in the computer business, even then, didn’t believe personal computing would be anything other than a short-lived fad, but Steve Wozniak and Steve Jobs proved them wrong with their revolution­ary Apple Macintosh computer.

Jobs once said: “The people who are crazy enough to think they can change the world are the ones who do.”

And the Mac did change the world, with its ground-breaking graphical display and high quality graphics rendering which other makers tried to emulate.

Although Jobs was famous for saying Apple was never about making money and that he didn’t want to “be the richest guy in the cemetery”, Apple has become a leviathan of a brand and a company, now worth $3 trillion (about R57 trillion). That’s on the back of what oldschool Mac fans feel are extortiona­te prices for its Macs and iPhones.

The looming artificial intelligen­ce tsunami could make or break Apple, say experts, so it’s no surprise to hear the company is already investing in that sphere.

Could the company put another “ding in the universe”, as Jobs once said?

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