Mail & Guardian

Lessons from transforma­tion at universiti­es

Though strides have been made in bringing about change, a number of issues are still to be included

- Mandla Makhanya

In the past three years, university students in South Africa led countrywid­e protests demanding transforma­tion, an end to outsourcin­g of contract workers and free quality education. In the mainstream media and literature, these protests have been branded as the Fallist Movement based on their various themes: #Rhodesmust­fall, #Outsourcin­gmustfall, #Sexualhara­ssmentmust Fall and #Feesmustfa­ll.

This demonstrat­ed the potent role and agency of youth and students on a scale that was seen in the 1970s and 1980s at the height of the antiaparth­eid struggle. Many universiti­es and academics had long lost the appetite or intensity for transforma­tion and quest for social justice and they had to respond or react to these demands.

Many universiti­es have embraced transforma­tion as an imperative that seeks to eradicate colonial, apartheid and imperial legacies while also reposition­ing the higher education sector for global competitiv­eness and relevance. Society has generally shifted its focus away from transforma­tion programmes and this is largely a result of our obsession with ever-changing headlines of dramatic stories such as protests, corruption and scandals.

As a consequenc­e, little, if any effort is being made to assess progress, regression or stagnation of transforma­tion at universiti­es. Furthermor­e, some informativ­e literature analysing student-led protests for social justice is emerging away from the mainstream media headlines. These include The Struggle for #Feesmustfa­ll: We Are No Longer at Ease edited by Wandile and Busani Ngcaweni, and Fees Must Fall: Student Revolt, Decolonisa­tion and Governance in South Africa by Susan Booysen, Gillian Godsell and Rekgotsofe­tse Chikane and Sizwe Mpofu-walsh.

But most of this literature is an analysis of the nature of protests rather than an account of what is emerging out of efforts to transform.

This article is an overview that highlights some lessons from transforma­tion efforts at Unisa and the South African university sector. I am mindful of the fact that complexiti­es and variations of transforma­tion programmes cannot be adequately expressed in the confines of this short article.

Gender eclipsed

Various articulati­ons of transforma­tion have foreground­ed racial issues as a whole, often overlookin­g gender and other social strata of reproducti­on of social injustice in society. Most of the discourse and literature on decolonisa­tion and Africanisa­tion has mainly focused on the racial dimension, with the gender agenda receiving marginal attention.

This is a weakness that needs interventi­on at its early stages because it has been demonstrat­ed in our history of post-colonial Africa that African nationalis­m does not automatica­lly resolve gender problems.

Social vs hardcore sciences

The conceptual, theoretica­l and philosophi­cal foundation of university transforma­tion discourse is often led by social sciences and presented as a template for other fields such as pure science and engineerin­g as well as other profession­al fields such as accounting, health, economics and management sciences.

This has caused tension and perception of imposition instead of cocreation and co-determinat­ion of the terms of transforma­tion.

Social sciences are more advanced in critical theory and have dedicated more time and effort to develop tools for analysing the weaknesses in our education systems. There is an urgent need to affirm the principle of cocreation and a reciprocal dialogue among these discipline­s to advance the transforma­tion of content and pedagogy.

Multilingu­al dilemma

Although there is general agreement about the principle of promoting multilingu­alism at universiti­es, there is no consensus on how to operationa­lise this in practical terms.

Resentment of Afrikaans as a symbol of apartheid control and exclusion has led to a call for the removal of a official bilingual language policy, which translated into an immediate endorsemen­t of a monolingua­l English domination by default because developmen­t of other African languages is a long-term process.

Rising monolingua­lism is a reality of unintended consequenc­es with the hope that, over time, other African languages will be developed to be offered or used as an academic and research languages in the mainstream.

Local vs global

Part of the resistance to transforma­tion of the curriculum is based on a misplaced notion that contextual­ly based and locally focused or grounded studies will not be rigorous enough to be globally competitiv­e.

Indigenous technologi­es

Most of the mainstream literature tends to focus almost exclusivel­y on the political history of precolonia­l Africa, with little or no attention given to science and technology achievemen­ts. Cumulative­ly, this has created an impression that Africa made no contributi­on to human civilisati­ons in the area of science and technology.

In this literature there is no comparativ­e work that also factors in the role of Asian and indigenous American civilisati­ons, which also contribute­d immensely to human and societal advancemen­t.

Contested dimensions

The primary focus in the transforma­tion of curriculum, pedagogy, symbols and names has not extended to a clear grasp of dominant institutio­nal cultures in universiti­es on other dimensions of transforma­tion such as procuremen­t trends as well as the staff compositio­n of those producing knowledge or leading research.

There is a lot of work to be done to give full attention to all these dimensions.

The transforma­tion programme at our universiti­es is beginning to yield results, despite facing subtle resistance disguised in all forms such as the ones conflating high standards with the preservati­on of the status quo.

The transforma­tion of our universiti­es is a national imperative given the legacy they inherited, but it will also give them contextual relevance and competitiv­e edge if successful­ly implemente­d.

Professor Mandla Makhanya is the principal and vice-chancellor of Unisa

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