The Mercury

BAQONDE – Learn in your language

- RAYLENE CAPTAIN HASTHIBEER http://ulpdo.ukzn.ac.za/HomePage.aspx.

UKZN is collaborat­ing with universiti­es in South Africa and Europe to develop the “Boosting the use of African Languages in Higher Education: A Qualified Organised Nationwide Developmen­t Strategy for South Africa (BAQONDE) Project”, which was establishe­d to provide an effective response to one of South Africa’s national priorities: the developmen­t of African languages in higher education.

UKZN is involved in the project through the University Language Planning and Developmen­t Office (ULPDO) under the stewardshi­p of Deputy Vice-Chancellor for Teaching and Learning, Professor Sandile Songca.

Songca said the project is important because it “enables students to reach their potential through access to learning (in) African languages. The majority of learners do not receive education in their home language(s). Research has underlined the extremely negative impact that this can have on students’ performanc­e throughout the education system.”

BAQONDE seeks to establish an inter-institutio­nal network of African

Language Developmen­t Units (ALDUs) to optimise training strategies, co-ordinate the production of materials, and harmonise teaching standards for multilingu­al teaching in higher education, among other goals.

Songca is confident that BAQONDE, which commences next semester, will enhance the use of isiZulu as part of the implementa­tion of the university’s Language Policy. “Lecturers will be trained to use isiZulu for teaching and learning, followed by the developmen­t of teaching and learning material in an African language for the benefit of the country,” he said.

Acting Director of the ULPDO, Dr Lolie Makhubu-Badenhorst, is part of UKZN’s BAQONDE team, along with Dean and Head of the School of Arts, Professor Nobuhle Hlongwa and senior lecturer, Dr Gugu Mazibuko.

Makhubu-Badenhorst is pleased at the inroads the project is making to facilitate and promote the use of indigenous African languages as a medium of instructio­n in tertiary education. “The collaborat­ive network of ALDUs plays a fundamenta­l role

in training lecturers in innovative and multilingu­al methodolog­ies and co-ordinating the developmen­t of materials, both for teachers and students, to be able to teach and learn

multilingu­ally. The various participan­ts will foster the implementa­tion of top-down nationwide strategies to guarantee more inclusive and legitimate access to higher education in South

Africa,” she said.

Songca thanked all involved in the genesis and realisatio­n of the project and noted that BAQONDE will solve challenges experience­d in the past. “The commendabl­e vision of the national education authoritie­s, at basic and higher education levels, to address this problem by encouragin­g the developmen­t and use of African languages as a medium of education has intermitte­ntly been set back by concerns of staffing, training and infrastruc­ture, among others.”

The institutio­ns involved include UKZN, North-West University, the University of the Western Cape, Rhodes University and three European universiti­es: Trinity College Dublin, the University of Groningen and the University of Salamanca.

The BAQONDE project team members are Pedro Álvarez Mosquera (University of Salamanca), Lolie Makhubu-Badenhorst (UKZN), Johan Blaauw (North-West University), Dion Nkomo (Rhodes University), Aurelie Joubert (University of Groningen), Lorna Carson (Trinity College Dublin) and Bassey Antia (University of the Western Cape). At UKZN, Makhubu-Badenhorst works with Hlongwa and Mazibuko.

Visit the website at https://baqonde. usal.es/ for more informatio­n on the project, or see UKZN’s ULPDO website at

 ??  ?? The UKZN BAQONDE team (from left): Acting Director of the University Language Planning and Developmen­t Office, Dr Lolie Makhubu-Badenhorst; Dean and Head of the School of Arts, Professor Nobuhle Hlongwa; and senior lecturer, Dr Gugu Mazibuko.
Photograph: Supplied
The UKZN BAQONDE team (from left): Acting Director of the University Language Planning and Developmen­t Office, Dr Lolie Makhubu-Badenhorst; Dean and Head of the School of Arts, Professor Nobuhle Hlongwa; and senior lecturer, Dr Gugu Mazibuko. Photograph: Supplied

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