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Post-Covid challenges for SA universiti­es

- NONTOBEKO MTSHALI Mtshali is education editor at The Conversati­on.

ACROSS the world, the higher education sector is changing because of the pandemic. Vice-chancellor­s from three South African universiti­es share their insights

What long-lasting changes to South Africa’s higher education sector has the pandemic brought? And how will these affect the way universiti­es deliver teaching and research?

● Mamokgethi Phakeng, UCT: University teaching will draw from various methods that range between fully face-to-face and fully online. Long before Covid-19, the University of Cape Town recognised the need to prepare students for a digitally mediated world. For example, by the beginning of this year, about 60% of UCT lecturers had chosen to record their lectures. Covid-19 fast-tracked the process as we launched emergency remote teaching.

Many of our academics say they will never teach in the same way as before. The new way puts the needs of students with barriers to learning at the forefront.

It helps us design good learning experience­s and reconsider methods of assessment. Students can revisit online course material, ask questions and get personal support, in and out-of-normal teaching hours. It’s especially helpful to students who are second-language English speakers or who have a disability.

Lecturers have found how easy it is to engage with students in a WhatsApp group. There are challenges, of course, such as how we can conduct assessment for some invigilate­d exams, and in data access and electricit­y provision for some students at home.

We are surveying students and academics to monitor their experience­s and review lessons for the future.

● Tawana Kupe, University of Pretoria: The reliance on face-to-face or contact teaching was under question

because of the rise of digital technologi­es that were slowly disrupting it. For a number of reasons, higher education institutio­ns were taking their time. Some lacked capital. There was also the issue of students’ lack of access.

A return to purely contact learning is not going to be possible. People have experience­d something that seems more relevant to a future marked by increasing digitisati­on.

Universiti­es will need more resources allowing them to move with greater speed in changing to hybrid or blended teaching and learning. When it comes to research, the use of simulation­s will increase, as will the use of technologi­es that can gather research data.

● Adam Habib, Wits University: I believe we are going to see a stronger shift to a blended learning model. Anecdotal evidence is showing that our students are performing better in the online environmen­t than face to face. This suggests we need to reimagine how we test and assess our students’ capabiliti­es. Obviously certain degrees require faceto-face learning but this can also be reimagined.

The shift to online also means we are going to see the digital divide in our country grow sharper, unless we are able to develop public-private partnershi­ps to assist. The government will also need to adjust its thinking about how we achieve this financiall­y and in terms of curriculum changes.

Do universiti­es have the human and financial capacity to respond to the long-lasting changes?

● Phakeng: New ways of teaching can release human capacity by allowing lecturers to manage their course loads

more easily. And if they make it possible to increase the number of students who can enrol in certain courses, then they could bring more income to the institutio­n, to help finance human capacity or infrastruc­ture developmen­t.

Of course, there will always be courses that require students to work collaborat­ively, or to have access to labs, and those courses remain available. Other universiti­es are beginning to use the extensive resources we’ve developed under Creative Commons licences, to benefit the sector during the pandemic.

● Kupe: Most universiti­es do not have the human and financial capacity to respond to the changes, given that they have not been adequately funded for decades. Many face an existentia­l crisis if government­s do not include them in the stimulus packages meant to reverse the impact of Covid-19.

The training of staff who manage the informatio­n technology infrastruc­ture and academic staff who teach and do research is critical for a successful transition from contact teaching to hybrid teaching. Innovative and creative ways to fund the transition­s will have to be developed.

They should include partnershi­ps and collaborat­ions among universiti­es and with government­s, the private sector and internatio­nal donors.

● Habib: Many academics and profession­al staff have been able to adjust fairly quickly to the new online mode of teaching.

This has been under discussion for some time. I do not believe we will have a human capacity issue. The real issue will remain how to finance higher education. There is going to be a significan­t financial challenge as a result of subsidy cuts (given state finances) and the inability

of students to pay fees (because of the economic crisis).

In South Africa, we will also see a growing “missing middle” cohort as a result of job losses. Providing financial support to these students is going to be more important now than ever.

Are South African universiti­es unique in facing these long-lasting changes? What can they learn from other universiti­es?

● Phakeng: Universiti­es across the world are re-examining how they teach, do research and serve their students, staff and alumni.

Digital technology has opened ways for people and institutio­ns across the world to discuss and collaborat­e on problems that are universal. Covid-19 is demonstrat­ing that, across the globe, we are facing the same problems, so we need to work together to find solutions.

● Kupe: No, South African universiti­es are not unique. What South African universiti­es can learn is how to navigate changes in modes of teaching, learning and research from those universiti­es that are ahead in adopting hybrid or blended modes.

● Habib: South African universiti­es have similar problems to other institutio­ns across the world. The big distinctio­n with South Africa is that we are undertakin­g these activities in the midst of deep inequaliti­es. This means that we have much to teach the world on how to engage in blended learning in unequal contexts and how to assist poor people in this regard. | This article first appeared in The Conversati­on.

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 ??  ?? Mamokgethi Phakeng
Mamokgethi Phakeng
 ??  ?? Tawana Kupe
Tawana Kupe
 ??  ?? Adam Habib
Adam Habib

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