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Showing 1 to 15 of 40 results Save | Export
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Kirstin Wilmot – Teaching in Higher Education, 2025
Making a contribution to knowledge is a cornerstone requirement of the PhD. It requires candidates to provide new understandings about a phenomenon to push the boundaries of an intellectual field. To achieve this 'boundary pushing', the findings offered in the research must have relevance for contexts beyond the site of study. In effect, the…
Descriptors: Doctoral Students, Academic Language, Writing Strategies, Expectation
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Retha Knoetze – Higher Education: The International Journal of Higher Education Research, 2024
Neoliberal practices such as managerialism and academic casualisation impact higher education systems globally. While these practices can constrain any curriculum aimed at enabling transformative learning, this paper shows that they place particular limitations on arts and humanities curricula intent on cultivating criticality and a sense of…
Descriptors: English Instruction, Neoliberalism, Formative Evaluation, Teaching Methods
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Bennett, Jane – Arts and Humanities in Higher Education: An International Journal of Theory, Research and Practice, 2016
Following a global trend in humanities since the mid-1970s, South African humanities faculties began to include formal programmes in gender and sexualities studies from the mid-1990s on. While the immediate post-flag democratic era encouraged intellectual concentration on diverse questions of power and knowledge, the new century saw a decline in…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Humanities Instruction, Humanities, Feminism
Mugari, Zvenyika Eckson – London Review of Education, 2021
The supervision and production of a PhD thesis often presents a potentially interesting tension between PhDs as conforming to disciplinary epistemologies and PhDs as breaking epistemological boundaries. No academic discipline has been left untouched by decolonial thinking in the South African university space since the eruption of radicalized…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Doctoral Dissertations, Educational Change, Non Western Civilization
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Sindi Msimango – Journal of Student Affairs in Africa, 2024
Postgraduate output is important in any country's knowledge development and their knowledge economy. The development of postgraduate output especially at master's and PhD levels in South Africa is at risk due to its slow pace. An argument that can be made is that undergraduate experiences lend to postgraduate access and success. This article…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Study, Knowledge Economy, Competency Based Education, Mentors
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Hundermark, Genevieve – Journal of Student Affairs in Africa, 2018
Do we really know who our students are as they enter university? This was the question that the Faculty of Humanities at the University of the Witwatersrand was grappling with. In response, the Humanities' Teaching and Learning Unit compiled a registration survey for first-year students to complete that gives an overview of who our incoming…
Descriptors: College Freshmen, At Risk Students, Humanities, Student Surveys
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Eybers, Oscar O. – Transformation in Higher Education, 2019
Background: South Africa's institutions of higher learning are currently experiencing a dispensation in which calls for curricula transformation and decolonisation reverberate. While the need for curricula evolution is generally accepted, there appears to be a lack of awareness of methodologies which are applicable to changing curricula. To this…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Higher Education, Indigenous Knowledge, African Culture
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Muller, Johan; Hoadley, Ursula – Journal of Curriculum Studies, 2021
We set out to address the question--what does it mean for educational knowledge to be 'powerful'? We compare the Anglo tradition of curriculum studies with the "Didaktik" tradition through the lens of an analysis of curriculum structure in postgraduate courses in South African universities rooted in either the Anglo or…
Descriptors: Educational Philosophy, Elementary Secondary Education, Achievement Tests, Science Achievement
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Luckett, Kathy – Teaching in Higher Education, 2019
This article reports on an analysis undertaken in the field of African philosophies using selected conceptual tools from Maton's Legitimation Code Theory (LCT). In response to calls by South African students for 'decolonising' the Humanities curriculum, the practical purpose of the analysis was to generate theoretically-informed guidelines for…
Descriptors: African Culture, Humanities, Educational Change, Curriculum Development
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Kentridge, William – Arts and Humanities in Higher Education: An International Journal of Theory, Research and Practice, 2016
This is a lightly edited text of an address given to the graduating class of the University of Cape Town in December 2014. The author points out that the studio has made him. It is, however, "a place where the world is taken apart and re-arranged" and "where peripheral thinking is demanded". Like the studio, contemporary South…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Humanities, Artists, Studio Art
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Ndebele, Hloniphani; Zulu, Nogwaja S. – Language and Education, 2017
Over the past few decades, there has been an increased awareness of the strategic role of indigenous African languages in multilingual South Africa. This article discusses the strategic role that indigenous languages could and should play in the promotion of multilingual South Africa. The article pays attention to bilingual education and the…
Descriptors: Language Usage, Language of Instruction, African Languages, Bilingualism
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Masola, Athambile – Arts and Humanities in Higher Education: An International Journal of Theory, Research and Practice, 2016
This article explores the experiences of a humanities graduate after leaving the academy. The author considers her own education in light of the historical changes in South Africa's education system. The article is a personal account of the questions and challenges encountered in choosing a humanities degree in a context where a tertiary education…
Descriptors: Humanities, Graduate Surveys, Educational Change, Educational Practices
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Parker, Jan – Arts and Humanities in Higher Education: An International Journal of Theory, Research and Practice, 2014
Seamus Heaney talked of poetry's responsibility to represent the "bloody miracle", the "terrible beauty" of atrocity; to create "something adequate". This article asks, what is adequate to the burning and eating of a nun and the murderous gang rape and evisceration of a medical student? It considers Njabulo Ndebele's…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Poetry, Drama, Violence
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Luckett, Kathy – Universal Journal of Educational Research, 2016
This is a theoretical paper that addresses the challenge of educational access to the Humanities and Social Sciences. It plots a theoretical quest to develop an explicit pedagogy to give "disadvantaged" students in the Humanities ways of working successfully with texts. In doing so it draws on Bernstein, Moore and Maton's work to…
Descriptors: Humanities, Social Sciences, Disadvantaged Youth, Inferences
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Hurst, Ellen; Mona, Msakha – Education as Change, 2017
South African higher education relies primarily on English as the medium of education. This is a result of the colonial history of the country, yet it disadvantages a large section of South African students who undertake their education in a language that is not their first language. It also reproduces the monolingual norm and anglonormativity.…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, College Students, Higher Education, Code Switching (Language)
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