Mail & Guardian

Stop the language lip service

The average student is female, black, not wealthy enough, and wants to be taught in English

- Tinyiko Maluleke

Nearly 30 years ago, Njabulo Ndebele delivered a rather farsighted paper titled: Good Morning South Africa: Whose Universiti­es, Whose Standards? In it he interrogat­ed the self-proclaimed position of English-speaking universiti­es as custodians of the liberal tradition, protectors of internatio­nally accepted standards, reproducer­s of some reified metropolit­an academic purity and the ultimate underwrite­rs of the country’s intellectu­al future.

More importantl­y, Ndebele questioned the readiness of universiti­es for the “children of the masses destined to invade” them sooner rather than later. He probed the veracity of the claim of these universiti­es to be representa­tive of the full talent of the land and sprinkled doubts over the validity of their aspiration­s in this regard.

Ndebele’s prediction of the great invasion of universiti­es by the children of the masses did not occur dramatical­ly and suddenly but, over the past 22 years, we have witnessed nothing short of a radical makeover of the university student body. An explosion in the numbers of students — from nearly half a million in 1994 to slightly over a million by 2014 — has occurred.

A literal and metaphoric­al stampede has been unfolding in slow motion, but sometimes in furious and disastrous fast-forward mode, at the gates of our universiti­es. Our poorly-developed, diminished college system, comprising colleges of unequal quality, has not been able to come to the rescue either of the students or the universiti­es.

In more senses than one, university residences have not only ceased to cope with the influx, they risk becoming a marginal and conservati­ve influence in student life. Higher education funding, private and public, has not kept up with the increase in student numbers.

The challenge would not be so difficult to meet if it was only numerical. For the first time black students and female students constitute the majority of the student body. This change has huge implicatio­ns, which universiti­es are struggling to make sense of. The South African higher education system has never been this black and this female.

Although envisaged nearly 30 years ago, the invasion of the children of the masses has caught universiti­es with their proverbial pants down.

The vast majority of our universiti­es were not establishe­d with black and female students in mind. Many of these universiti­es were not meant for black and female students at all — and some of them were quite explicit about this.

In many of our universiti­es, the dependence on Western canons of knowledge to the exclusion (and derision) of other knowledge traditions, especially indigenous knowledge traditions, was and is still not accidental. It is no historical acci- dent that we are today saddled with the legacy of peculiar notions of Afrikaans- and English-speaking universiti­es.

Here then is the profile of the South African student: she is black, with parents who just about managed to pay the registrati­on fees but have no clue how they are going to fund her education further. She is a first generation student who did not study Afrikaans.

She prefers to be taught in English, not because she is expert in the language but because she studied it in high school. She prefers English even though she may have an Afrikaans background. She recognises that English provides the best possibilit­ies for access to higher education, also enabling her to communicat­e across national, racial and ethnic divisions. She chooses English as a medium of instructio­n even though she is aware not only of the colonial baggage it carries, but of the scorn she endures every time fellow students ask her where she “learnt to speak so well”.

From the day she arrives on campus, the black student soon realises, like Thando Njovane, Malaika wa Azania and Khaya Dlanga did at Rhodes, Stellenbos­ch and the AAA School of Advertisin­g respective­ly, that these institutio­ns, their campuses, curriculum­s, structures, languages and cultures may not have been designed with someone like her in mind.

Seen against this backdrop, we should not be surprised by the Fallist student movement, inclusive of the antirape culture protests, in 2015 and 2016. We may have reached a situation where universiti­es have to cope with a new student majority, for which they were not designed and for which they have not been prepared.

When the universiti­es of Pretoria, Free State and Stellenbos­ch recently proposed changes to their language policies, which will lead to the phasing in of English as the primary language of instructio­n, they are, in part, responding to the changing student demographi­c. They are also seeking ways in which to promote social cohesion and inclusivit­y where it matters most — in the classroom.

They are re-orientatin­g themselves to a new and changed student reality. It is not good enough for universiti­es to linguistic­ally separate students who are following the same degree programmes, or to use technologi­cal apparatuse­s to separate students pedagogica­lly, on account of language and, invariably, race. This robs the students of the opportunit­y to interact with one another in the context of their learning.

The pressure on the higher education public purse is likely to become worse rather than better. Universiti­es are required to use their resources more prudently and more strategica­lly than ever before. The 22-year-old multilingu­alism pretence carried out to the monotonous but ineffectua­l soundtrack in lip service to our 11 official languages must come to an end. We all know that, effectivel­y, in all matters of significan­ce, the country has had two official languages. Until now, multilingu­alism has meant the hegemony of either Afrikaans or English or both. Much lip service has been paid to notions of developmen­t of other indigenous languages. In reality we have seen, over the past 22 years, much government sanctioned devaluing of African languages.

Predictabl­y and perhaps understand­ably, the reaction of some Afrikaans language speakers to the proposed language policy reviews at the universiti­es of Pretoria, Free State and Stellenbos­ch have been emotional and loud, inclusive of legal litigation or threats thereof. The objections have included the suggestion that the phased replacemen­t of Afrikaans with English as a medium of instructio­n is an assault on the people who speak Afrikaans and as a form of reneging from either the letter or the spirit of the Constituti­on or both.

One passionate objector has suggested that the proposed changes have placed Afrikaans in an “intensive care unit within a public hospital” so that its speakers have now to decide whether it is not time to take their language to a “private hospital”. A few people and organisati­ons have suggested that the time may have come for a new struggle in defence of Afrikaans, including the establishm­ent of private Afrikaans universiti­es. Last week, one Afrikaans newspaper editorial called for the Afrikaans private sector to disinvest from the universiti­es of Stellenbos­ch, Pretoria and Free State, on account of their proposed language policy changes.

These reactions are, in my view, unwarrante­d and largely over the top. In fairness, they should also be directed at the thousands of Afrikaans-speaking students and lecturers, whose numbers are growing each year, who, over the past 20 years, have been voting with their feet, increasing­ly choosing to be taught in English rather than Afrikaans. As a country of the vaunted 11 official languages, we cannot uphold the pretentiou­s and untenable situation in which only two languages are available to their speakers for mother tongue education. Whatever else this is, we should stop pretending it is multilingu­alism.

English is no panacea, only a strategic compromise. Each community could insist on its own language becoming the primary language of instructio­n. Each community could hive off into its own linguistic cocoon. Each linguistic community could cry foul. Now is the time for the university system to move into a strategic moment of compromise during which English will become the main language of instructio­n.

This moment gives us a second chance, in 22 years, to truly give effect to the letter and spirit of our Constituti­on.

The time has come for government, the Pan South African Language Board — which has spent much of the past 22 years fast asleep — and universiti­es to ensure than each of the indigenous languages are allocated to a university, adequately resourced and to be wilfully developed for science and scholarshi­p.

During this moment, all of us should take courage in the proven resilience of our indigenous languages, which have survived for centuries, without the insurance of empire, without the protection of state military machinery or infrastruc­ture, and without the protection of the gun, the pound or the dollar.

 ?? Photo: Roger Bosch/AFP ?? Spoken word: Stellenbos­ch University was establishe­d during the apartheid era as an Afrikaans-medium university, but is now dual medium with English being the other language. Some students want Afrikaans to be removed as a language of teaching.
Photo: Roger Bosch/AFP Spoken word: Stellenbos­ch University was establishe­d during the apartheid era as an Afrikaans-medium university, but is now dual medium with English being the other language. Some students want Afrikaans to be removed as a language of teaching.

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