The Mercury

Higher education needs restructur­ing to succeed

- Graham Dampier

EVEN though a small contingent tried to find their vindicatio­n through violence, the students who marched on the Union Buildings on October 23 showed the country that our democracy is changing.

The youth will no longer accept empty political platitudes. They will shape the country collective­ly. They will do so in a measured manner that is indicative of their learning. This is both comforting and long overdue.

But is the system of higher education in this country flexible enough to adapt to the demand for cheaper, perhaps even free education? As it stands, the academics charged with enlighteni­ng our youth are spread very thin. This is true for virtually every institutio­n in the country.

Academics are faced with teaching great numbers of students each year and are required to meet the targets of knowledge production. Many cannot cope with delivering quality teaching to the hungry young minds before them, while at the same time producing research worthy of publicatio­n in accredited journals.

Every academic has a set of performanc­e criteria to adhere to. Some institutio­ns define these quite explicitly and expect individual­s to meet targets that are contracted each year.

But the division of labour is unequal. Junior members of staff are expected to teach more than their senior colleagues, who have the luxury of focusing almost all of their efforts on doing research.

While junior academics are contracted to publish comparativ­ely fewer units each year, meeting the minimum criteria is very challengin­g in the face of the many students they are expected to teach. Advancing up the academic ladder is a long, hard slog. The pressure placed on junior staff is likely to become even harder to bear, as economic access is opened up to a greater number of students. The expectatio­n to produce accredited research will increase as tuition fees are reduced.

The government subsidises research and teaching. It is only reasonable to assume that part of the shortfall for decreasing fees will have to be covered by the institutio­ns themselves.

Academics will have to cover the cost through publicatio­ns. Junior academics will find it very difficult to cope with the pressures associated with delivering a quality product in the lecture venue and the academic journal.

It is also necessary to mention that many academics only do research because they feel the pressure to. For some, teaching to university students is the reason for entering the academy, and not the modest salary, or ominous institutio­nal pressure. These academics tend to be the most inspiratio­nal and effective teachers. They provide their students with the best support. They are engaging in the large group and in person, and they know how to get the most out of their students. But when they don’t meet research targets they are told by the managerial hierarchy that they aren’t doing their jobs, because they aren’t drawing further subsidy from the government.

Unless this situation changes dramatical­ly, the business of teaching university students will remain a secondary focus of the system as a whole, when it should be the overriding concern. And it is likely that we will see a high turnover among the junior members of staff, who will find academia to be a precarious profession that pays far too little. To this end, two options present themselves as solutions to the problem. Open up the teaching track for promotion, by allowing academics who want to focus on teaching alone to climb the ranks based on the quality they produce for the lecture venue. Or rearrange the entire sector of higher education by differenti­ating between research intensive institutio­ns, comprehens­ive institutio­ns and teaching universiti­es.

As it currently stands there is no clear definition within the system. It is a chaotic free-for-all.

All institutio­ns are expected to cater for a transforme­d student body they aren’t adequately equipped to support effectivel­y, while being responsibl­e for elevating the stature of the country’s higher education system

The academics charged with enlighteni­ng our youth are spread very thin

within the global framework of universiti­es.

Without clear distinctio­ns between institutio­ns it is virtually impossible to achieve both of these imperative­s. Institutio­ns consequent­ly lack focus because they are being pulled in two opposite directions.

The junior members of staff feel the strain the most, because they are told that their basic purpose is to teach, but their legitimacy as academics is judged and measured by the amount of research units they produce. Their senior colleagues are more or less exempt from extensive teaching and have the luxury of spending proportion­ally more time on conducting research.

Opening up the teaching track should not be seen as reducing the importance of research or of making it optional within the system. Rather, it should be seen as a way of focusing the efforts of academics.

Academics who are more suited to teaching are not necessaril­y good at producing new knowledge, and the same applies to those who are good at conducting sound research. A good researcher is not by implicatio­n a good teacher.

Institutio­ns could reclassify their academic posts by allocating a certain proportion to teaching wherein individual­s will be evaluated and appraised on the basis of the quality of their teaching alone. This will allow institutio­ns to prioritise domains that attract large student cohorts.

Similarly, a clearly differenti­ated higher education system allows for a more clearly defined funding model to be devised and instituted.

The present conception of the academic as equally focused on teaching and research, and of institutio­ns satisfying these imperative­s equally, is not sustainabl­e. It is archaic, poorly conceived and unbalanced. The result may well be a large scale brain drain, in which case free education will come to naught.

Dampier is a senior researcher of academic developmen­t and support at the University of Johannesbu­rg.

their liking for sweet, sour, salty or bitter food and drink with psychologi­cal tests.

Now reader Rudy Fensham – who apparently doesn’t like saltiness – comes with a practical cooking tip.

“If you’ve accidental­ly added too much salt to your curry, stew or casserole, peel a potato and pop it into the pot along with the rest of the ingredient­s.

“Leave the dish to cook for a while – this should help to mellow the salty flavour.

“Remove the potato before serving.”

Yes, but to whom do you serve the potato that’s absorbed all the salt?

Tailpiece

“MY ex-husband wants to marry me again.” “That’s flattering.” “Not really. I think he’s after the money I married him for.”

Last word

A LIE can travel halfway around the world while the truth is putting on its shoes. – Charles Spurgeon

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