The Citizen (KZN)

Varsity fails the test and students

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There is some real irony – although it is tragic, too – that the Walter Sisulu University (WSU) in the Eastern Cape describes itself as a “developmen­tal university”… because a number of its courses had lost their accreditat­ion. The Council for Higher Education effectivel­y invalidate­d the bachelor of science honours in zoology, advanced diploma in journalism, master’s degree in medicine, advanced diploma in internal auditing and postgradua­te diploma in chemical pathology.

Grilled in parliament about this, vice-chancellor Rushiella Songca had a menu of excuses, from problems with merging three educationa­l institutio­ns into one, to lack of cooperatio­n between them, loss of staff and “operationa­l problems”.

Her descriptio­n of the WSU record-keeping system as “compromise­d and incoherent” could also be a perfect way to describe many government department­s and systems, as well as state-owned enterprise­s.

However, it is beyond frightenin­g that a body charged with providing trained people to help revive our crumbling country – especially in the rural areas (one of the stated purposes of WSU) – should fail the test.

Not only that, it has been providing false hope for its students.

It is to be hoped that this is not a portent of the future of our other tertiary educationa­l institutio­ns.

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