Sunday Times

Be nice to a pensioner in return for free tertiary study

Students must do community service and meet other Ts&Cs

- By PREGA GOVENDER

● Those students who, from this year, will benefit from the state’s offer of free higher education, will have to perform a minimum of 80 hours community service a year “to inculcate a culture of giving back”.

So says an internal Department of Higher Education document, which stipulates that the community service will kick in during a student’s second year and must be performed annually until the student graduates.

Some examples of service that students can do include assisting in environmen­t clean-ups and reading stories to, or playing games with, young children at early-childhood developmen­t centres.

They could also assist early-grade teachers by listening to young children read; visit old-age homes and spend time with old people; assist nursing staff at clinics and hospitals; or volunteer at libraries or in community watch programmes.

Students can perform these services during their vacation, over weekends or in the mornings or afternoons when they do not have classes, according to the document, which the Sunday Times has seen.

A spokesman for the department, Madikwe Mabotha, said: “The issue is about making sure people who are benefiting from taxpayers’ money give back to the country.”

Mabotha said the idea of getting students to do community service was “taken from all the inputs that were made at the Heher commission”.

The commission, chaired by retired Judge Jonathan Heher, investigat­ed whether the government could provide free higher education.

Mabotha said students would have to submit a participat­ion report signed by the manager of the volunteer programme before they could get funding for the following year.

A further condition was that after graduation, students had to remain in the country and “participat­e in the economy in whichever way is most opportune for them for at least the number of years they have been funded”.

Those who wanted to emigrate permanentl­y would be required to pay back the money.

Other conditions include meeting minimum performanc­e standards, such as attending lectures and obtaining satisfacto­ry test results.

Students must pass at least half of their courses in their first year of study and finish their qualificat­ion within “the minimum number of years plus one”. This means they may only fail one year.

From this year new students will be eligible for free higher education if they come from households with annual incomes of less than R350 000, according to a surprise announceme­nt made by President Jacob Zuma last month.

Mabotha said 14 674 prospectiv­e students, who had not applied for a place at higher education institutio­ns last year, had since applied through the department’s online applicatio­n portal known as the Central Applicatio­ns Clearing House.

The top three preferred provinces for study were Gauteng (5 165 applicatio­ns), KwaZulu-Natal (2 786) and the Eastern Cape (1 893).

The EFF student wing has urged matriculan­ts, no matter when they finished school, to apply for places. But several institutio­ns, including North-West University, the University of Pretoria and Stellenbos­ch University, said they would not accept late applicatio­ns.

Cape Peninsula University of Technology spokeswoma­n Lauren Kansley said late applicants would only be entertaine­d from January 24 to February 2, once the registrati­on of those students who had applied on time had been processed.

“We expect our engineerin­g and applied science faculties to be the most likely to have spaces available. We have spaces for 9 878 first-year students and roughly 9 395 of those have already been allocated.”

Willa de Ruyter, spokeswoma­n for the Tshwane University of Technology, said the university had started accepting late applicatio­ns online from last Monday.

“At that time, just over 1 000 spaces were still available. We are processing these applicatio­ns. However, most courses are now fully subscribed.”

Zandile Mbabela, spokeswoma­n for Nelson Mandela University, said 600 late applicatio­ns had been received by Wednesday, while the vice-chancellor of Sol Plaatje University in the Northern Cape, Professor Yunus Ballim, said they had received 400 late requests for applicatio­ns since Monday.

“We have been able to accept applicatio­ns from 60 of these and they are being considered for possible offers of admission.”

Registrati­on at the Capricorn TVET College in Limpopo was suspended this week following a stampede in which several prospectiv­e students were injured.

 ?? Picture: Alon Skuy ?? Students brave the heat to queue at the University of Johannesbu­rg this week. Some wanted to establish if they had been accepted to study this year and others wanted to change their courses.
Picture: Alon Skuy Students brave the heat to queue at the University of Johannesbu­rg this week. Some wanted to establish if they had been accepted to study this year and others wanted to change their courses.

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