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Towards a qualitative framework for blending equity and excellence in transforming South African higher education to achieve development

South Africa has been on a difficult journey over the last two decades in its attempts to transform its higher education system. The key question around which major debates have revolved relates to achieving development within the context of a post-apartheid South Africa. At the heart of this questi...

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Main Author: January, Chanaaz Charmain
Other Authors: Soudien, Crain
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: School of Education 2022
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access_status_str Open Access
author January, Chanaaz Charmain
author2 Soudien, Crain
author_browse January, Chanaaz Charmain
Soudien, Crain
author_facet Soudien, Crain
January, Chanaaz Charmain
author_sort January, Chanaaz Charmain
collection Thesis
description South Africa has been on a difficult journey over the last two decades in its attempts to transform its higher education system. The key question around which major debates have revolved relates to achieving development within the context of a post-apartheid South Africa. At the heart of this question stand the twin imperatives of equity and excellence. This potential trade-off features extensively in the early theoretical work of Wolpe and Badat and is reflected in subsequent frameworks and policies. If the country had favoured excellence, as it was defined globally, the system's elite features would have been reproduced. Instead, South Africa aspired towards both excellence and equity. This choice has been critical, but it has not been easy for institutions to develop their own management strategies. Here, two critical global theories used to explain the drivers for human development, known as the human capital and human capability theories, were used to frame the research question. This study made use of these theoretical perspectives to understand the South African approach to the role of higher education in society. The political, social, economic, and ideological dimensions of development were thus deconstructed. With this background, the concepts of excellence and equity were further explored in relation to the higher education system's experience of massification and differentiation. Terms such as “quality”, “fitness for purpose”, “social justice”, and “equality” are relevant to this discussion and provide meaning for the concepts of excellence and equity. A grounded theory approach was used to gather data and sixteen leading experts in the field were participants representing an elite sample. These data provided the basis for the themes used to construct a qualitative framework for higher education transformation that reconciles both equity and excellence. This study led to the conclusion that transformation is founded on five key measurable indicators: individual transformation, student success, institutional culture, demographic representivity of staff and students, and defining and operationalising the South African knowledge project. The framework provides suggestions for understanding the project of higher education transformation and realising it through an ongoing process of consultation, action, and reflection.
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language eng
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license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2022
publishDateRange 2022
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spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/36784 Towards a qualitative framework for blending equity and excellence in transforming South African higher education to achieve development January, Chanaaz Charmain Soudien, Crain Higher Education Studies South Africa has been on a difficult journey over the last two decades in its attempts to transform its higher education system. The key question around which major debates have revolved relates to achieving development within the context of a post-apartheid South Africa. At the heart of this question stand the twin imperatives of equity and excellence. This potential trade-off features extensively in the early theoretical work of Wolpe and Badat and is reflected in subsequent frameworks and policies. If the country had favoured excellence, as it was defined globally, the system's elite features would have been reproduced. Instead, South Africa aspired towards both excellence and equity. This choice has been critical, but it has not been easy for institutions to develop their own management strategies. Here, two critical global theories used to explain the drivers for human development, known as the human capital and human capability theories, were used to frame the research question. This study made use of these theoretical perspectives to understand the South African approach to the role of higher education in society. The political, social, economic, and ideological dimensions of development were thus deconstructed. With this background, the concepts of excellence and equity were further explored in relation to the higher education system's experience of massification and differentiation. Terms such as “quality”, “fitness for purpose”, “social justice”, and “equality” are relevant to this discussion and provide meaning for the concepts of excellence and equity. A grounded theory approach was used to gather data and sixteen leading experts in the field were participants representing an elite sample. These data provided the basis for the themes used to construct a qualitative framework for higher education transformation that reconciles both equity and excellence. This study led to the conclusion that transformation is founded on five key measurable indicators: individual transformation, student success, institutional culture, demographic representivity of staff and students, and defining and operationalising the South African knowledge project. The framework provides suggestions for understanding the project of higher education transformation and realising it through an ongoing process of consultation, action, and reflection. 2022-08-30T10:31:25Z 2022-08-30T10:31:25Z 2022 2022-08-29T11:37:10Z Doctoral Thesis Doctoral PhD http://hdl.handle.net/11427/36784 eng application/pdf School of Education Faculty of Humanities
spellingShingle Higher Education Studies
January, Chanaaz Charmain
Towards a qualitative framework for blending equity and excellence in transforming South African higher education to achieve development
thesis_degree_str Doctoral
title Towards a qualitative framework for blending equity and excellence in transforming South African higher education to achieve development
title_full Towards a qualitative framework for blending equity and excellence in transforming South African higher education to achieve development
title_fullStr Towards a qualitative framework for blending equity and excellence in transforming South African higher education to achieve development
title_full_unstemmed Towards a qualitative framework for blending equity and excellence in transforming South African higher education to achieve development
title_short Towards a qualitative framework for blending equity and excellence in transforming South African higher education to achieve development
title_sort towards a qualitative framework for blending equity and excellence in transforming south african higher education to achieve development
topic Higher Education Studies
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/36784
work_keys_str_mv AT januarychanaazcharmain towardsaqualitativeframeworkforblendingequityandexcellenceintransformingsouthafricanhighereducationtoachievedevelopment