The Mercury

Varsities set to transform faster

- Leanne Jansen

ACCELERATI­NG the pace of transforma­tion within universiti­es, pumping more money into historical­ly disadvanta­ged institutio­ns, and fixing the state of training colleges is how Higher Education Minister Blade Nzimande will be spending his R41.8-billion budget this year.

In the face of perpetual student funding protests, Nzimande has only 7.3% more to spend in this financial year than the last.

The National Student Financial Aid Scheme will in the 2015/16 financial year provide R9.5bn worth of loans and bursaries for 205 000 university students and 200 000 technical and vocational education training colleges.

Since its inception, the scheme has benefited 1.5 million impoverish­ed students, but cannot meet the demand.

Nzimande began his budget speech in the National Assembly yesterday by listing the gains made in higher education, including the narrowing of the first-year drop-out rate from 25% in 2005, to 19% in 2012.

He then moved on to a subject that has dominated the public discourse this year: transforma­tion within universiti­es.

“Despite the significan­ce of symbols such as names and statues, we must not conflate these with more fundamenta­l matters of transforma­tion.

“An urgent need to radically change the demographi­cs of our professori­ate, transform the curriculum and research agendas, cultivate greater awareness of Africa, eliminate racism, sexism and all other forms of unjust discrimina­tion, improve academic success rates, and expand student support,” Nzimande said.

He cautioned that he would this year pay close attention to “accelerate­d transforma­tion” within universiti­es, which included setting concrete targets and measuring transforma­tion against certain indicators.

He asked the portfolio committee on higher education, and his transforma­tion oversight committee, to assist him with this task.

The committee, establishe­d in 2012, is chaired by former University of KwaZulu-Natal vice-chancellor Malegapuru Makgoba.

The number of students enrolled at South Africa’s universiti­es is expected to reach 1.1 million by 2019. The National Developmen­t Plan has set the 2030 target at 1.6 million students.

Nzimande acknowledg­ed that some of the country’s historical­ly disadvanta­ged institutio­ns were performing “substantia­lly below par”.

On the recommenda­tion of a committee that Nzimande set up to review the government’s funding of universiti­es, he was to implement a grant for the developmen­t of such institutio­ns, which would disburse R2.050bn over the next five years.

Turning to training colleges, Nzimande told MPs that enrolment had more than doubled over the past five years, and the target for this year had been set at 725 000 students.

But his department’s focus would now shift to improving the state of training colleges, which had been beset by problems including under-qualified lecturers, inferior standards, and mismanagem­ent and corruption.

The eventual introducti­on of a Grade 9 school-leaving certificat­e would mean that even more young people would depend on training colleges to deliver a high standard of education.

In October this year, an online registrati­on system for students seeking work-based learning opportunit­ies and employers wanting to provide those training opportunit­ies, would go live, Nzimande announced.

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