The Herald (South Africa)

Varsities’ culture disrupted

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LOOK closely. Slowly, but surely the academic and organisati­onal cultures of our universiti­es are being broken down in front of our very eyes.

This breakdown of campus cultures is being ruthlessly executed by the narrow interests of political parties who really do not care a damn about the future of higher learning in our country.

Since 2015 these parties decided that there were two primary spaces in which to contest each other politicall­y – in parliament and on campuses.

With President Jacob Zuma effectivel­y on his way out, political theatrics in parliament are now much less attractive than in places where tens of thousands of students descend on their college and university campuses for registrati­on.

Zuma started the rot when he opportunis­tically decided to announce free higher education as the ruling party entered its elective conference.

This irresponsi­ble decision flew in the face of the president’s own commission, led by Judge Heher, which studied the feasibilit­y of free higher education and concluded that this ideal was not possible at present.

The Zuma declaratio­n was like a Christmas gift to the EFF, who decided to make political hay out of this sunshine announceme­nt.

Students, whether they had applied for studies or not, were instructed to simply “walk in” onto the 26 public university campuses and demand to be registered for studies – free, of course.

No matter that universiti­es have dates determined long in advance for applicatio­ns.

Or that in profession­al fields like medicine and physiother­apy those dates had closed as far back as mid-2017.

Or that applicatio­ns for state funding were also subject to closing dates.

Nor did it matter that thousands of “walk-ins” demanding places could literally jeopardise the lives of young people, as in the tragic case of the mother of a student who was crushed to death in a 2012 UJ registrati­on stampede.

Anxious vice-chancellor­s through their organisati­on, Universiti­es South Africa, responded to this tussle between Zuma and Julius Malema with a plea not to make the call for free higher education a political football.

The problem, of course, is that South Africans like football.

We ended last year on an ominous note.

Our leading research university convened its final examinatio­ns in a massive marquee tent on a sports field to better manage the security risk of disruption.

From a management point of view, I can see how this not only makes sense, it might also have been the only option available.

But the barbed wire, patrol guards and attack dogs inevitably brought to mind images of concentrat­ion camps, not of cultured campuses.

As a consequenc­e of these developmen­ts, we are now faced with an interestin­g new trend among middle class students and that is internal migration.

In this case the top academic students in the country increasing­ly choose from among the elite universiti­es those institutio­ns perceived to be more stable.

Sad, but it makes sense.

A high fee-paying parent is as interested in the quality of the degree as in the safety and security of his or her child.

Several deans and heads of department­s of our top two English-language universiti­es have told me about how they are being affected by internal migration.

Universiti­es are like any other organisati­on in the sense that they need rules, regulation­s and routines for conducting their work.

A prospectiv­e student applies and, if successful, is registered for a diploma or degree.

At that point payment is made, enabling the student to pursue a course of studies, at the end of which the passing candidate graduates.

That lengthy chain from applicatio­n to graduation, where it involves 30 000 or more students, is an extremely complex process that is time-sensitive and cost-sensitive.

When a populist leader, therefore, calls for “walk-ins” in defiance of these processes, it collapses not just the systems of an organisati­on, but the very culture universiti­es seek to establish around things like timely applicatio­ns for available places.

As we enter 2018 I have little doubt that in the course of time even those universiti­es perceived to be more stable will also be swallowed up by the demise of campus cultures under the reckless populism of political parties.

Here you find one of the first threats to democracy – the destructio­n of public institutio­ns.

The township and rural schools serving the majority remain paralysed by decades of protests that effectivel­y destroyed the cultures of these institutio­ns.

About half of our public universiti­es are already in the same position – poor quality teaching institutio­ns constantly battling disruption­s of academic timetables and administra­tive systems.

Now this demise threatens all our universiti­es and when that happens, internal migration will be replaced by external migration among those who can afford to leave.

 ?? Picture: RANDELL ROSKRUGE ?? EFF INTERVENTI­ON: EFF members assist prospectiv­e students to apply at Walter Sisulu University’s Potsdam campus, despite the call for no walk-ins
Picture: RANDELL ROSKRUGE EFF INTERVENTI­ON: EFF members assist prospectiv­e students to apply at Walter Sisulu University’s Potsdam campus, despite the call for no walk-ins
 ?? Jonathan Jansen ??
Jonathan Jansen

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