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South Africa
To view the virtual HE initiatives, go to the Virtual Initiatives in South Africa Re.ViCa page.
Partners situated in South Africa
None. On the International Advisory Committee there is Herman J. van der Merwe.
South Africa in a nutshell
The Republic of South Africa (also known by other official names) is a country located at the southern tip of Africa. South Africa's coast borders both the Atlantic and Indian oceans. To the north of South Africa lie Namibia, Botswana, Zimbabwe, Mozambique and Swaziland, while the Kingdom of Lesotho is an independent enclave surrounded by South African territory.
South Africa is known for its diversity, and eleven official languages are recognised in its constitution. English is the most commonly spoken language in official and commercial public life, however it is only the fifth most spoken home language.
South Africa is ethnically diverse, with the largest Caucasian, Indian, and racially mixed communities in Africa. Although 79.6% of South Africa's population is Black, this category is neither culturally nor linguistically homogeneous, as they speak a number of different Bantu languages, nine of which have official status.
Midyear 2007, South Africa's population was estimated at 47.9 million. This makes it quite large compared with the typical European country.
(Above section adapted from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/South_Africa and http://www.info.gov.za/aboutsa/landpeople.htm)
South Africa education policy
In recent history, South Africa has seen major changes, both in governments, society and education as the Apartheid only came to a halt in 1994. Apartheid was a government-enforced system of racial segregation which had a very limiting impact on the everyday life, living areas, job opportunities and education of coloured people in South Africa. An example of this is the Bantu Education Act of 1953 (No. 47) which enforced racial segregation in education. The Apartheid lasted from 1948 to 1994, after which the Constitution was established and the educational system was revised to improve racial diversity and equality in education.
Document of relevance:
- Wikipedia entry on Apartheid
- South Africa: A Country Study > Education, 1996 by Rita M. Byrnes, ed. for the Library of Congress, USA.
- Wikipedia's page on Bantu Education Act of 1953 (No. 47)
The Bill of Rights, contained in the Constitution, 1996, even mentions the need to redress the results of past racially discriminatory laws and practices (Section 29. Paragraph 2.3 ).
The Bill stipulates that everyone has the right to a basic education, including adult basic education and further education, which the State, through reasonable measures, must progressively make available and accessible: 28. Children: Every child has the right (...) not to be required or permitted to perform work or provide services that (...) place at risk the child's well-being, education, physical or mental health or spiritual, moral or social development; 29. Education:
- Everyone has the right to a basic education, including adult basic education; and to further education, which the state, through reasonable measures, must make progressively available and accessible."
- Everyone has the right to receive education in the official language or languages of their choice in public educational institutions where that education is reasonably practicable. In order to ensure the effective access to, and implementation of, this right, the state must consider all reasonable educational alternatives, including single medium institutions, taking into account equity; practicability; and the need to redress the results of past racially discriminatory laws and practices.
- Everyone has the right to establish and maintain, at their own expense, independent educational institutions that do not discriminate on the basis of race; are registered with the state; and maintain standards that are not inferior to standards at comparable public educational institutions.
- Subsection (3) does not preclude state subsidies for independent educational institutions.
Sources & Related Documents:
- Bill of Rights > Section 28. Children > Paragraph 1.f.ii and Section 29. Education
- Constitution of the Republic of South Africa, 1996 and amendments
- South African Government Information - Education Policy (web page)
- Plan of Action Improving access to free and quality basic education for all (PDF), June 2003 by the Department of Education
The Council for Higher Education (CHE) has also published the Ministry of Education's Language Policy Framework for South African Higher Education (PDF) in 2001, which has the promotion of multilingualism as a central aspect. It also affects the language of each qualification certificate and transcript issued to a student within the South African higher education system, as stated in the Higher Education Qualifications Framework (HEQF) (PDF), 2007.
The National Education Policy Act, 1996 (Act 27 of 1996), empowers the Minister of Education to determine national norms and standards for education planning, provision, governance, monitoring and evaluation. The South African government is divided into departments instead of what we call Ministries. Department of Education is responsible for formulating policy, setting norms and standards, and monitoring and evaluating all levels of education and also in funding Higher Education Institutions through subsidies and by providing financial support to students through National Student Financial Aid Scheme (NSFAS).
The government puts its focus on equity, quality of teaching and learning and literacy. As the Department of Education states on its site:
- "Our vision is of a South Africa in which all our people have access to lifelong education and training opportunities, which will in turn contribute towards improving the quality of life and building a peaceful, prosperous and democratic society" and part of its mission is "creating a vibrant further education and training system to equip youth and adults to meet the social and economic needs of the 21st century."
In 1994 The government-in-waiting’s commitment to increasing access to education through the use of distance education methods was evident in the 1994 Policy Framework for Education and Training (ANC Education Department, Johannesburg):
- The development of a well-designed and quality distance education system based on the principles of open learning is the only feasible approach to meeting the needs of the vast numbers of our people who were systematically deprived of educational opportunity in the past, while at the same time providing opportunities for the youth coming up through the educational system at present. It will allow people access to education and training and the ability to determine where, when, what and how they want to learn (ANC, 1994:78).
- Source: Designing and Delivering Distance Education: Quality Criteria and Case Studies from South Africa. Section One (PDF - EN - 17 pages, by Tessa Welch and Yvonne Reed with NADEOSA Quality Criteria Task Team
Formal education in South Africa is categorised according to three levels – General Education and Training (GET), Further Education and Training (FET) and Higher Education (HE). By mid-2007, the South African public-education system had 12,3 million learners, 387 000 educators, 26 592 schools, 2 278 Abet centres, 50 public FET institutions, 4 800 Early Childhood Development (ECD) centres and 23 HE institutions.
There are also policy frameworks in South Africa that focus on inclusion such as the Policy Framework on HIV and AIDS in October 2008, which was adopted by the Minister of Education (Naledi Pandor in 2009), and the 23 public sector higher education institutions in South Africa. HEAIDS is South Africa’s nationally co-ordinated, comprehensive and large-scale effort designed to develop and strengthen the capacity, the systems, and the structures of all HEIs in managing and mitigating the causes, challenges and consequences of HIV/AIDS in the sector and to strengthen the leadership role that can and should be played by the HE sub-sector.
Source: Higher Education South Africa (HESA) > HEAIDS, Strategic framework 2006-2009 and beyond (PDF).
Related document: HESA > Press Release > SA higher education adopts policy framework to mitigate HIV and AIDS at institutions (PDF), Oct. 2008
Councils and advocacy groups:
- Higher Education South Africa (HESA) represents all 23 public universities and universities of technology. It is the successor of the South African Universities Vice-Chancellors Association (SAUVCA) and the Committee of Technikon Principals (CTP). The launch of HESA was in part driven by the restructuring of the higher education sector, which resulted in the establishment of new institutional types, but also by the need for a strong, unified body of leadership.
- the African Council for Distance Education (ACDE)
- the South African Council for Educators (SACE) aims to enhance the status of the teaching profession, and to promote the development of educators and their professional conduct
- the South African Nursing Council (SANC) which focuses on nursing education and practice standards
- the South African Council for English Education (SACE) promotes the use of English as one of South Africa's official languages. (If web site is offline, there is also information on myggsa.co.za)
- the Southern African Regional Universities Association (SARUA) is an association for the 63 public universities in the Southern African Development Community (SADC) region
- the Association of African Universities (AAU) which strives to raise the quality of higher education in Africa and strengthen its contribution to African development by fostering collaboration among its member institutions
- the Council on Higher Education (CHE) is an independent statutory body responsible for advising the Minister of Education on all matters related to higher education policy issues, and for quality assurance in higher education and training
- the South African Qualification Authority (SAGA)
- one of the roles of the South African Technology Network (SATN) is to provide a forum to discuss higher education issues in the universities of technology, including co- operative education, teaching, research training; technological innovation and technology transfer, advocate the needs, interests and purposes of technological higher education and their communities to government, industry and other groups and to develop policy positions and guidelines on various related higher education matters
Related Documents:
- South African Government Agencies and Policy Documents and Speeches on Education, up to 2004
- Department of Education > Documents > Policies
- The South African Schools Act, 1996 (Act 84 of 1996) The South African Schools Act, 1996 (Act 84 of 1996) (PDF)
South Africa education system
The Constitution has vested substantial power in the provincial legislatures and governments to run educational affairs (other than universities and universities of technology), subject to a national policy framework. The national Department of Education is responsible for formulating policy, setting norms and standards, and monitoring and evaluating all levels of education. It also funds HE institutions through subsidies and by providing financial support to students through the National Student Financial Aid Scheme (NSFAS).
Source: South African Government Information - National and Provincial Departments
Formal education in South Africa is categorised according to three levels:
- General Education and Training (GET): consists of the Reception Year (Grade R) and schooling up to Grade 9 and the equivalent Adult Basic Education and Training (ABET) qualification.
- Further Education and Training (FET): consists of grades 10 to 12 in schools and all education and training from the National Qualifications Framework (NQF) levels 2 to 4 (equivalent to grades 10 to 12 in schools), and the N1 to N6 in FET colleges. After completion of level 1 of the NQF, a learner could achieve a GETC and after completion of level 4 of the NQF, an FETC.
- Higher Education (HE): consists of a range of degrees, diplomas and certificates up to and including post-doctoral degrees
Educational levels
Band | Age | School grade | NQF Level | Qualification Type |
Higher Education and Training | 21 | 8 | Post-doctoral research degrees (Postgraduate Diploma, Bachelor Honours Degree at Exit Level 8) | |
Doctorates | ||||
Masters degrees | ||||
20 | 7 | Professional Qualifications / Post Graduate Certificate | ||
Honours degrees (Advanced Diploma, Bachelor\'s Degree at NQF Exit Level 7) | ||||
19 | 6 | National first degrees | ||
Higher diplomas (Advanced Certificate, Diploma at NQF Exit level 6) | ||||
18 | 5 | National diplomas | ||
National certificates (Higher Certificate at NQF Exit Level 5) | ||||
Further Education and Training | 17 | 12 | 4 | National certificates |
16 | 11 | 3 | ||
15 | 10 | 2 | ||
General Education and Training (ABET Level 4) | 14 | 9 | 1 | |
13 | 8 | |||
12 | 7 | |||
11 | 6 | |||
10 | 5 | |||
9 | 4 | |||
8 | 3 | |||
7 | 2 | |||
6 | 1 | |||
5 | 0/R | Grade R (reception year) | ||
Legenda | Compulsory education |
- The age of a child entering grade 1 is age five turning six by 30 June in the year of admission.
- Grade R (reception year) or grade 0, the age is four turning five by 30 June in the year of admission.
- Grade 12 is the year of matriculation: the final exams of high school are administered by the government and are called "matric exams" so students in the final year of high school (grade 12 or the matriculation grade) are known as "matrics" and if they pass these exams they are called matriculants or it's said that they "matriculated". Becoming a matriculant is required (with certain minimum conditions) for tertiary education. Some private schools also offer a post-matric "sixth form" year which allows students to sit for A-level examinations.
- The minimum requirement for admission to a higher education institution from 1 January 2009 is the National Senior Certificate. Related document: Minimum Admission Requirements - for Higher Certificate, Diploma and Bachelor's Degree, Programmes requiring a National Senior Certificate (EN – PDF), 2005, by the Department of Education
- Government is (...) bound by the Constitution to progressively improve access to further education and training (FET) (which is Grades 10 to 12 in schools).
Source: Plan of Action Improving access to free and quality basic education for all (PDF), June 2003 by the Department of Education
Teacher-student ratio
There is usually some correlation between class size and fees. The average teacher-to-pupil ratio in state schools is 1:33, as compared with 1:18 in private schools. At those state-aided schools where parents pay for extra teachers by way of school fees, and at the more expensive private schools, the maximum number of pupils is usually about 30. At poorer schools this is often higher, with as many as 40 to 50 children in a classroom.
Sources:
- A parent's guide to schooling > How large will my child's class be?
- South African Government Information - Introduction (web page)
- Matriculation in South Africa (Wikipedia page)
- GOVERNMENT GAZETTE, 5 OCTOBER 2007
- Levels of education in South Africa, 2006.
Distance education in primary education
OLSET is a provider of Open and Distance Learning in South Africa specifically for primary school children. Committed to the goal of 'Education for All', OLSET, a South African-based NGO working in collaboration with the country's National and Provincial Departments of Education, actively supports the United Nations Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) through the considerable geographic outreach of its Interactive Radio Learning Programme. In 2008-9 OLSET's English In Action Radio Learning Programme reached over 1.8 million learners and 52,000 teachers in seven of South Africa’s nine provinces. A highly-regarded education provider, OLSET has worked and works in collaboration with, inter alia, South African Provincial Departments of Education, South African Broadcasting Corporation, UNICEF/Operation Lifeline Sudan, UNESCO IICBA, the British Council, DFID and the BBC.
Source: http://www.olset.org.za
The Department of Education established the Thutong portal, with the aim to aims to improve learning in the country through appropriate use of technology. It offers free educational resources, policy information, and interactive services concerning all aspects of the South African Schooling Sector.
Source: http://www.thutong.doe.gov.za/
There are organisations that are trying to enhance education with digital resources and connectivity such as the e-Schools' Network, founded in 1993 is a non-profit, self-funded, organisation that provides 1700 schools and the FET College community e-services such as SchoolMail, (a mailbox for each learner and educator in a school), connectivity and communication solutions and training support.
Source: http://www.esn.org.za/
The Further Education & Training (FET) institutions were affected by restructuring as they were reduced from 152 to 50 institutions.
Source: South African Government - Information about Education:
Higher education
The Wikipedia List of universities in South Africa is informative at a general level as well as for details. It also provides comprehensive listings of the many other providers both domestic and foreign.
Public universities in South Africa are divided into: traditional universities, which offer theoretically-oriented university degrees; universities of technology, which offer practically-oriented diplomas and degrees in technical fields; while the list on Wikipedia also makes a distinction for comprehensive universities (indicated with a star), which offer a combination of both types of qualification.
There are also a large number of other educational institutions in South Africa - some are local campuses of foreign universities, or foreign HEIs that conduct classes for students who write their exams at the distance-education University of South Africa while other institutions offer unaccredited diplomas.
In 2004 South Africa started reforming its higher education system, merging the (university and non-university) HEIs into larger, regional unitary institutions which also caused a renaming of the so-called Technikons to Universities of Technology.
More information about this reform can be found on this page under the section on Higher education reform
Universities in South Africa
- University of Cape Town (UCT), (Cape Town)
- University of Fort Hare (UFH), (Alice), (East London)
- University of the Free State (UOVS), (Bloemfontein)
- University of KwaZulu-Natal (UKZN), (Durban, Pietermaritzburg, Pinetown, Westville)
- University of Limpopo, (Polokwane, Ga-Rankuwa)
- North-West University (NWU), (Mafikeng, Mankwe, Potchefstroom, Vanderbijlpark)
- University of Pretoria (UP), (Pretoria)
- Rhodes University (RU), (Grahamstown)
- University of Stellenbosch (SUN), (Stellenbosch)
- University of the Western Cape (UWC), (Cape Town)
- University of the Witwatersrand (Wits), (Johannesburg)
- University of Johannesburg (UJ), (Johannesburg) *
- Nelson Mandela Metropolitan University (NMMU), (Port Elizabeth) *
- University of South Africa (UNISA), (Pretoria - Distance Education) *
- University of Venda (Univen), (Thohoyandou) *
- Walter Sisulu University for Technology and Science (WSU), (Buffalo City, Butterworth, Mthatha, Queenstown) *
- University of Zululand (Unizulu), (Empangeni) *
Universities of Technology in South Africa
There are 6 Universities of Technology (previously known as Technikons)
- Cape Peninsula University of Technology (CPUT), (Bellville, Cape Town)
- Central University of Technology (CUT), (Bloemfontein, Welkom)
- Durban University of Technology (DUT), (Durban, Pietermaritzburg)
- Mangosuthu University of Technology (MUT), (Durban)
- Tshwane University of Technology (TUT) (Pretoria)
- Vaal University of Technology (VUT), (Vanderbijlpark)
Relevant sources:
- SATN > Universities of Technology list
- the government's page on HEIs
- HESA > Public Universities (with overview of founding date and number of students)
Other providers
Notable provider
CIDA Foundation UK is a university that enables previously disadvantaged learners from taking up Higher Education. It depends on funding and sponsoring from companies and individuals and demands from its students that they go to their own communities and educate their peers. [..] The students to fully appreciate their education they all contribute financially towards tuition: £31 in total for year one, and £13 per month in years two to four. This is 6% of the cost of attending other universities in South Africa. [..] Students also help to run the campus by dedicating a minimum of five hours of their time each week. At the end of the course, rather than paying back a loan, students are encouraged to "pay it forward" by committing to funding another student from their hometown after they graduate and become employed.
Source: CIDA - About Us - Fees (web page)
Relevant document: Register of Private Higher Education Institutions, 13 July 2009 (PDF - EN), 2009, by the Department of Education
Higher education reform / The New Institutional Landscape
In 1997, the Education White Paper 3 was published with the central proposition to create a single national co-ordinated higher education system that is planned, governed and funded as a single system. To meet the transformation goals of this paper, a different HE system was necessary, as stated in the Towards a New Higher Education Landscape report (2002). This also meant that what fell under the jurisdiction of the provincial administrations was to be transferred to a national coordination.
The National Plan for Higher Education (NPHE) was set up to provide a framework for the White Paper and the National Working Group (NWG) advised the Minister of Education on the appropriate arrangements for restructuring the provision of higher education on a regional basis through the development of new institutional and organisational forms, including institutional mergers and rationalisation of programme development and delivery (the NWG warned to prevent an academic drift towards university-type programmes at the expense of technikon-type programmes).
The NWG identified three main properties flowing from the principles, which it believes are critical to ensuring the “fitness for purpose” of the higher education system. These are equity, sustainability and productivity.
In 2002, The Restructuring Of The Higher Education System In South Africa elaborated in detail on the restructuring of the HEI landscape and how to merge the dispersed institutions and campuses into regional unitary institutions. It made the HEIs refocus their mission but also their campuses and programmes. Its purpose was to regulate the Higher Education System in a response to globalisation, the growing economy and the needs of South Africa. Some statements taken from the document:
- The NWG believes that the implementation of its recommendations will result in the fundamental restructuring of the higher education system. It will transform the apartheid edifice of the higher education system and lay the foundation for a higher education system that is consistent with the vision, values and principles of our young and vibrant democratic order.
- Distance education programmes at traditionally residential institutions should be strictly regulated as further in the document it was noted that one HEI outsourced the face-to-face guidance in its Learning Centers, therefore not ensuring quality education.
- Apart from the one urban university and one urban technikon, and apart from the one comprehensive rural institution offering both technikon and university programmes, no other publicly funded higher education institutions should be allowed to offer programmes in the province (KwaZulu-Natal), with the exception of the new dedicated distance education institution.
The Ministry’s proposals would result in 23 higher education institutions and two National Institutes for Higher Education (outlined in Appendix 1), consisting of 11 Universities, 6 Universities of Technology (previously known as Technikons), 4 Comprehensive Institutions and 2 National Institutes for Higher Education.
The universities and technikons which were incorporated with others and thus no longer exist are listed at the end of the Wikipedia article List of universities in South Africa.
Sources and Relevant Documents:
- Final Report: Development of Performance Indicators for Universities of Technology (UoTs) and UoT related parts of Comprehensive Universities (CUs), November 2008 by SATN Online
- Commentary - on issues in Higher Education > Universities of Technology, January 2008 by the University of Auckland
- “Position, Role and Function of Universities of Technology in South Africa”, 2004 by Higher Education South Africa (HESA)
- Transformation and Restructuring: A New Institutional Landscape for Higher Education (PDF - 40 pages), 2002, by the Ministry of Education .
- The Restructuring Of The Higher Education System In South Africa (PDf - EN - 89pages), by the Ministry of Education, 2002.
- Towards a New Higher Education Landscape: Meeting the Equity, Quality and Social Development Imperatives of South Africa in the 21st Century, 2000, by the Council on Higher Education (CHE)
- Education White Paper 3: A Programme for the Transformation of Higher Education (PDF), 1997, by the Department of Education.
- Education Reform in Post-Apartheid South Africa, a video in which Helen Ladd and Edward Fiske speak about their book from 2004, Elusive Equity: Education Reform in Post-Apartheid South Africa, ISBN-13: 978-0815728405, 269 pages.
- 41st TB Davie Memorial Lecture Accounting for Autonomy: How Higher Education lost its Innocence by Jonathan D. Jansen, Dean of Education: University of Pretoria, 2004 (PDF - 11 pages) on the relation between the state and the Higher Education institutes and how autonomy in the South Africa Higher Education changed.
- Case studies on dealing with "pipeline students" within their respective institutions, Council of Higher Education (CHE), 2007. In 2005, the HEQC requested a number of people from different merger contexts to produce case studies on dealing with so-called "pipeline students" within their respective institutions.
Administration and finance
A 2004 document of the Ministry Of Education called A New Funding Framework: How Government Grants Are Allocated To Public Higher Education Institutions lists a broad summary of the ways in which funds flowed to public universities and technikons (now Universities of Technology) in South Africa:
- 50% Government grants
- 25% Student tuition & other fees
- 25% Other private income
= 100% Annual funds for public higher education.
Source: > A New Funding Framework: How Government Grants Are Allocated To Public Higher Education Institutions (PDF, 2004)(Diagram 1 p. 2/20)
Funding to institutions
"South Africa has one of the highest rates of government investment in education in the world. Education was allocated R105,5 billion in 2007/08."
Source: South African Government Information - “About Education” web page
The South African Qualification Authority (SAQA) lists:
- 5.7% Public Expenditure on Education as a % of Gross National Income (GNI)
- 14.5% of Education budget allocated to higher education in (2008)
- A Loan/Grant scheme is in place
Source: SARUA (2008) – Pillay report, referenced on the SARUA's South Africa web page
This table Allocation of MTEF Budgets 2006/7 to 2008/9 shows how the Medium Term Expenditure Framework (MTEF) budgets for the triennium 2006/07 to 2008/09 have been divided between the various
categories of grant in the new funding framework:
Source:Ministry of Education - Ministerial Statement of Higher Education Funding: 2006/7 to 2008/9 Quality Assurance (PDF), 2006
In the Department of Education's Higher Education Information Management System (HEMIS), the properties of a qualification determines the total number of units of state subsidy approved by the Minister of Education for that qualification. The record of subsidy units per qualification is an essential part of the determination of full-time equivalent student totals. In turn these enable the Department of Education to calculate the annual subsidy grant for each public higher education institution. Subsidy units are at present described for each qualification in terms of "approved total years", "approved formal years", and "approved experiential years".
Source: The Higher Education Qualifications Framework - Higher Education Act, 1997 (Act No. 101 of 1997), October 2007
Related Documents on Funding:
- [1]
- The funding framework, published in the Government Gazette of 9 December 2003 (Vol 462, no 25824)
Bursaries for students
"In 2007/08, government allocated R1,8 billion to FET colleges. Over 25 000 students registered in newly developed technical and service skills-related programmes. Some R600 million was provided for bursaries to FET college students."
The National Student Financial Aid Scheme (NSFAS) is responsible for, among other matters, allocating loans and bursaries to eligible students in public HE.
Source: South African Government Information - “About Education” web page
Furthermore there are also several scholarship options for South African students, for example the scholarships of the Medical Research Council of South Africa (MRC)
Related Documents:
- Bursaries and training scholarships at Universities and Technikons, 2008
- Department of Education > EMIS > Statistics
- Education Statistics in South Africa - 2006 (PDF) Published by the Department of Education in February 2008
- the National Information Service for Higher Education (NiSHE) is a project of Higher Education South Africa (HESA) to provide quality information and guidance to anyone interested in studying at a university or a university of technology in South Africa. This information can spread from entry requirements to qualification pathways related to career options.
Quality assurance
The South African Council on Higher Education (CHE) is an independent statutory body responsible for advising the Minister of Education on all matters related to higher education policy issues, and for quality assurance in higher education and training. Its statutory responsibility for the promotion and assurance of quality in higher education is carried out by one permanent sub-committee, the Higher Education Quality Committee (HEQC). The HEQC is responsible for evaluating and reporting on the effectiveness of the quality management systems of higher education institutions in relation to assessment, short courses, certification arrangements, and recognition of prior learning (RPL).
The Higher Education Act of 1997 (reference: Higher Education Act 101 of 1997) states that the functions of the HEQC are to:
- promote quality in higher education
- audit the quality assurance mechanisms of higher education institutions
- accredit programmes of higher education
National Qualifications Framework
In 2007 the Minister of Education published the Higher Education Qualifications Framework (HEQF) (PDF) as set out in the Schedule as policy in terms of section 3 of the Higher Education Act, 1997 (Act No. 101 of 1997). It recognized that separate and parallel qualifications structures for universities and technikons have hindered the articulation of programmes and transfer of students between programmes and higher education institutions. The HEQF is designed to facilitate vertical, horizontal and diagonal progression and provides the basis for integrating all higher education qualifications into the National Qualifications Framework (NQF) and its structures for standards generation and quality assurance.
South African Qualifications Authority (SAQA) is a body of 29 members appointed by the Ministers of Education and Labour with two major functions: to oversee first of all the development of the National Qualifications Framework (NQF), and second of all the implementation of the NQF
Accumulation of credits towards qualifications
Matriculation Board is a project from Higher Education South Africa (HESA) and strives to administer the Matriculation Board regulations as required by law for the 2006 and 2007 Senior Certificate examinations, and entry into public HE in 2007 and 2008, and via HESA it advises the Minister of Education on the minimum general admission requirements for first bachelor’s degree studies.
Credit accumulation and transfer (CAT) is the process whereby a student's achievements are recognised and contribute to further learning even if the student does not achieve a qualification.
The framework has nine qualification types mapped onto the six levels of the NQF occupied by higher education qualifications. Some levels have more than one qualification type. The framework comprises the following qualification types:
- Undergraduate
- Higher Certificate (primarily vocational, or industry oriented and minimum entry requirement is National Senior Certificate)
- Advanced Certificate (primarily vocational, or industry oriented and minimum entry requirement is Higher Certificate)
- Diploma (primarily professional, vocational or industry specific and minimum entry requirement is National Senior Certificate or alternate the Higher Certificate or Advanced Certiticate in a cognate field]
- Advanced Diploma (minimum entry requirement is an appropriate Diploma or Bachelor's Degree)
- Bachelor's Degree (often referred to as "professional" Bachelor's Degrees, minimum entry requirement is the National Senior Certificate)
- Postgraduate (postgraduate specialisation, minimum entry requirement Bachelor Honours Degree)
- Postgraduate Diploma (minimum entry requirement is an appropriate Bachelor's Degree)
- Bachelor Honours Degree (minimum entry requirement is a Postgraduate Diploma)
- Masters Degree (minimum entry requirement is a Bachelor Honours Degree or alternate a "professional" Bachelor's Degree with a minimum of 96 credits at level 8 or a Postgraduate Diploma)
- Doctoral Degree (minimum entry requirement is a Master's Degree)
The minimum requirement for admission to a higher education institution from 1 January 2009 is the National Senior Certificate, whose specifications were approved by the Minister of Education (in the document National Senior Certificate - A qualification at level 4 on the National Qualifications Framework published in the Government Gazette, Vol. 481, 1\10. 27819, July 2005). Given the diversity of programmes and qualifications in higher education, the Minister has declared as policy the Minimum Admission Requirements for Higher Certificate/ Diploma and Bachelor's Degree Programmes (published in the Government Gazette, Vol. 482, No. 27961, August 2005) requiring a National Senior Certificate. These minima must be met by all applicants to entry level higher education qualifications. Applicants with different qualifications may only be admitted in they are judged equivalent by the designated equivalence-setting bodies.
Documents / web pages of relevance:
- “Higher Education Monitor: A Case for Improving Teaching and Learning in South African Higher Education” by Ian Scott, Nan Yeld, Jane Hendry, 2007
- Review of Higher Education in South Africa (selected themes), 2007
- “The South African Council for Educators (SACE) aims to enhance the status of the teaching profession, and to promote the development of educators and their professional conduct.”
South African HEIs in the information society
Towards the information society
Organisations or Councils
- SchoolNet SA is a non-profit educational organisation that creates learning communities of educators and learners who use ICT to enhance education in South Africa. Since 1997 SchoolNet SA manages a variety of projects covering all aspects of the use of ICTs, directed mainly at historically disadvantaged schools in South Africa.
- The African Council for Distance Education (ACDE)(Kenya) is a continental educational organization comprising African universities and other higher education institutions, which are committed to expanding access to quality education and training through open and distance learning. Prof. Barney Pityana, Principal & Vice-Chancellor, Univ. of South Africa is Chairman of the board.
Umbrella institutions
- The South African Institute for Distance Education (SAIDE) promotes open learning principles, the use of quality distance education methods and the appropriate use of technology
- National Association of Distance Education Organisations of South Africa (NADEOSA) promotes access to lifelong learning of high quality
Documents of relevance:
- A Bibliography of ICT Applications in Education in Africa on WikiEducator.org
- UNSECO Observatory Portal > South Africa
- National Research Foundation > nformation and Communication Technology (ICT) and the Information Society in South Africa
Information society strategy
South African Virtual Initiatives in Higher Education
To view the initiatives, go to the Virtual Initiatives in South Africa Re.ViCa page.
References
- Wikipedia page on South Africa
- South African Government - Information about Education
- Department of Education, Republic of South Africa
- Transformation and Restructuring: A New Institutional Landscape for Higher Education, Ministry of Education, 2002 (PDF - 40 pages)
- Council for Higher Education
- SouthAfrica.info - South Africa's universities web page
- Higher Education South Africa (HESA)
- South Africa & the Organisation for Economic Co-operation & Development (OECD)
- Thutong is an educational portal, coordinated by the National Department of Education, which offers support materials and learning spaces for learners.
- Education in South Africa (wikipedia page)
- Reviews of National Policies for Education - South Africa by OECD Publishing. Also see the read-only e-book
- Higher Education Monitor - Information and Communication Technologies (ICTs) and South African Higher Education: Mapping the Landscape Research Report for the Council on Higher Education, July 2006, by Laura Czerniewicz, Neetha Ravjee, Nhlanhla Mlitwa.
- The Impact of South Africa’s ICT Infrastructure on Higher Education (p.69-76) (PDF), 2008, by Cheryl Brown (University of Cape Town South Africa), Herbert Thomas (University of the Free State, South Africa), Antoinette van der Merwe and Liezl van Dyk (University of Stellenbosch, South Africa). A paper presented at ICEL 2008, which is included in the Booklet with Abstracts of Papers.
- Landscaping Information and Communication Technologies in Higher Education in South Africa (WORD or PDF), by Cheryl Brown, Herbert Thomas, Antoinette van der Merwe, Liezl van Dyk. A paper prepared for TENET Symposium 12-14 November 2007.