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How is work-integrated learning adapting to the future of work and employability? A phenomenograhic study of graduate mathematicians internship experiences across selected African countries

The future of work and employability is evolving at an accelerating pace, impacted by the changes brought about by the fourth industrial revolution and the increasingly digital economy. This research study explored work-integrated learning through a sample of African graduate mathematicians' collect...

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Main Author: Heerden, Mark
Other Authors: Hall, Martin
Format: Thesis
Language:Eng
Published: Graduate School of Business (GSB) 2025
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access_status_str Open Access
author Heerden, Mark
author2 Hall, Martin
author_browse Hall, Martin
Heerden, Mark
author_facet Hall, Martin
Heerden, Mark
author_sort Heerden, Mark
collection Thesis
description The future of work and employability is evolving at an accelerating pace, impacted by the changes brought about by the fourth industrial revolution and the increasingly digital economy. This research study explored work-integrated learning through a sample of African graduate mathematicians' collective internship experiences. The research methodology was based in phenomenography, which seeks to understand the collective outcomes experienced by the participants from their workspace internships. Twenty participants were purposively selected to give a broad range of experiences and maximise the likelihood of variation. All were mathematics graduates or postgraduates who sought employment in industry. They represented eight African countries, and 55% were female. Although almost all responded that their internships were positive work-integrated learning experiences, they also highlighted their challenges in meeting the demands of the workspace internships. Six further distinct collective outcomes, or conceptions, were experienced centered around managing their expectations, company readiness, structured supervision, workplace training, team inclusion and independent working. The study also found that the learning experiences in the African workplace were largely comparable with those experienced in more industrialised countries, as reflected in the literature. However, a key recommendation arising from this study is the need for greater structure in the African internships, termed ‘structured hospitable learning spaces', better connecting the learning environment for interns and employers. The participants collectively believed this greater structure was necessary to improve their internship experiences, both aimed at themselves in that they should have better prepared before their internships, and then at the internship companies, where there should have been more planning for their arrivals. This study concludes by asserting the growing importance of work-integrated learning in the future of work and, in particular, data analytical roles in the accelerating digital economies of African countries. It also recognises the impact that generative artificial intelligence solutions will have on learning in the decades to come. Keywords: work-integrated learning, experientiall learning, African internships, future work, phenomenography, digital economies, workspaces
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language Eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:34:33.896Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2025
publishDateRange 2025
publishDateSort 2025
publisher Graduate School of Business (GSB)
publisherStr Graduate School of Business (GSB)
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spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/40957 How is work-integrated learning adapting to the future of work and employability? A phenomenograhic study of graduate mathematicians internship experiences across selected African countries Heerden, Mark Hall, Martin Business The future of work and employability is evolving at an accelerating pace, impacted by the changes brought about by the fourth industrial revolution and the increasingly digital economy. This research study explored work-integrated learning through a sample of African graduate mathematicians' collective internship experiences. The research methodology was based in phenomenography, which seeks to understand the collective outcomes experienced by the participants from their workspace internships. Twenty participants were purposively selected to give a broad range of experiences and maximise the likelihood of variation. All were mathematics graduates or postgraduates who sought employment in industry. They represented eight African countries, and 55% were female. Although almost all responded that their internships were positive work-integrated learning experiences, they also highlighted their challenges in meeting the demands of the workspace internships. Six further distinct collective outcomes, or conceptions, were experienced centered around managing their expectations, company readiness, structured supervision, workplace training, team inclusion and independent working. The study also found that the learning experiences in the African workplace were largely comparable with those experienced in more industrialised countries, as reflected in the literature. However, a key recommendation arising from this study is the need for greater structure in the African internships, termed ‘structured hospitable learning spaces', better connecting the learning environment for interns and employers. The participants collectively believed this greater structure was necessary to improve their internship experiences, both aimed at themselves in that they should have better prepared before their internships, and then at the internship companies, where there should have been more planning for their arrivals. This study concludes by asserting the growing importance of work-integrated learning in the future of work and, in particular, data analytical roles in the accelerating digital economies of African countries. It also recognises the impact that generative artificial intelligence solutions will have on learning in the decades to come. Keywords: work-integrated learning, experientiall learning, African internships, future work, phenomenography, digital economies, workspaces 2025-02-13T13:21:52Z 2025-02-13T13:21:52Z 2024 2025-02-13T13:18:21Z Thesis / Dissertation Masters MPhil http://hdl.handle.net/11427/40957 Eng application/pdf Graduate School of Business (GSB) Faculty of Commerce University of Cape Town
spellingShingle Business
Heerden, Mark
How is work-integrated learning adapting to the future of work and employability? A phenomenograhic study of graduate mathematicians internship experiences across selected African countries
thesis_degree_str Master's
title How is work-integrated learning adapting to the future of work and employability? A phenomenograhic study of graduate mathematicians internship experiences across selected African countries
title_full How is work-integrated learning adapting to the future of work and employability? A phenomenograhic study of graduate mathematicians internship experiences across selected African countries
title_fullStr How is work-integrated learning adapting to the future of work and employability? A phenomenograhic study of graduate mathematicians internship experiences across selected African countries
title_full_unstemmed How is work-integrated learning adapting to the future of work and employability? A phenomenograhic study of graduate mathematicians internship experiences across selected African countries
title_short How is work-integrated learning adapting to the future of work and employability? A phenomenograhic study of graduate mathematicians internship experiences across selected African countries
title_sort how is work integrated learning adapting to the future of work and employability a phenomenograhic study of graduate mathematicians internship experiences across selected african countries
topic Business
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/40957
work_keys_str_mv AT heerdenmark howisworkintegratedlearningadaptingtothefutureofworkandemployabilityaphenomenograhicstudyofgraduatemathematiciansinternshipexperiencesacrossselectedafricancountries