Academics’ Views on Africanisation and Decolonization of Teacher Education Curricula: A Case Study of a Selected Higher Education Institution in South Africa

The purpose of the research was to assess the academics’ views on the afrikanisation and decolonisation of teacher education curricula in South African higher education institutions (HEIs). It is meant to draw their attention to redesigning the curricula which is appropriate to fit and benefit holis...

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Main Author: Berington Zanoxolo Gobingca
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Noyam Journals 2024-12-01
Series:E-Journal of Humanities, Arts and Social Sciences
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Online Access:https://noyam.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/12/EHASS202451620.pdf
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author Berington Zanoxolo Gobingca
author_facet Berington Zanoxolo Gobingca
author_sort Berington Zanoxolo Gobingca
collection DOAJ
description The purpose of the research was to assess the academics’ views on the afrikanisation and decolonisation of teacher education curricula in South African higher education institutions (HEIs). It is meant to draw their attention to redesigning the curricula which is appropriate to fit and benefit holistically the Africans and international students who are enrolled in teacher education programmes in HEIs of South Africa. A qualitative case study was conducted using face-to-face semi-structured interviews to collect data from ten purposely selected academics in the Faculty of Education of one of the South African Universities located in the Eastern Cape Province of South Africa. The thematic approach was used to analyse the collected data from the sampled academics. It emerged that there is a mismatch between the academics’ instructional and research practices in meeting the diverse learning capabilities of Africans. It is concluded that redesigning, aligning and re-structuring the HEIs’ curricula could improve the throughputs, graduation rates, and research publication competencies of Africans. The HEIs should offer an inclusive curriculum of African and international knowledge, theories and skills. Collaboration of various stakeholders, including students, instructors, University Faculty of Education advisory board, Department of Basic Education officials as employers and financial supporters, teacher unions, school principals, school governing bodies and financial sponsors to enrolled students for their university-related activities, researchers, book publishers, and other interested parties in education, is essential to developing and implementing a transformed, diverse, impactful, relevant and quality curriculum to meet the demands of the global market.
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spelling doaj-art-0f4bd50162cf4a0783b826a6fde13fcb2025-01-06T15:15:48ZengNoyam JournalsE-Journal of Humanities, Arts and Social Sciences2720-77222024-12-0151629302940https://doi.org/10.38159/ehass.202451620Academics’ Views on Africanisation and Decolonization of Teacher Education Curricula: A Case Study of a Selected Higher Education Institution in South AfricaBerington Zanoxolo Gobingca0https://orcid.org/0009-0002-8345-1191Walter Sisulu University, Mthatha, Eastern Cape Province, South AfricaThe purpose of the research was to assess the academics’ views on the afrikanisation and decolonisation of teacher education curricula in South African higher education institutions (HEIs). It is meant to draw their attention to redesigning the curricula which is appropriate to fit and benefit holistically the Africans and international students who are enrolled in teacher education programmes in HEIs of South Africa. A qualitative case study was conducted using face-to-face semi-structured interviews to collect data from ten purposely selected academics in the Faculty of Education of one of the South African Universities located in the Eastern Cape Province of South Africa. The thematic approach was used to analyse the collected data from the sampled academics. It emerged that there is a mismatch between the academics’ instructional and research practices in meeting the diverse learning capabilities of Africans. It is concluded that redesigning, aligning and re-structuring the HEIs’ curricula could improve the throughputs, graduation rates, and research publication competencies of Africans. The HEIs should offer an inclusive curriculum of African and international knowledge, theories and skills. Collaboration of various stakeholders, including students, instructors, University Faculty of Education advisory board, Department of Basic Education officials as employers and financial supporters, teacher unions, school principals, school governing bodies and financial sponsors to enrolled students for their university-related activities, researchers, book publishers, and other interested parties in education, is essential to developing and implementing a transformed, diverse, impactful, relevant and quality curriculum to meet the demands of the global market.https://noyam.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/12/EHASS202451620.pdfacademicsafricanisationdecolonisationcurriculaeurocentric knowledge systemhigher education institutions
spellingShingle Berington Zanoxolo Gobingca
Academics’ Views on Africanisation and Decolonization of Teacher Education Curricula: A Case Study of a Selected Higher Education Institution in South Africa
E-Journal of Humanities, Arts and Social Sciences
academics
africanisation
decolonisation
curricula
eurocentric knowledge system
higher education institutions
title Academics’ Views on Africanisation and Decolonization of Teacher Education Curricula: A Case Study of a Selected Higher Education Institution in South Africa
title_full Academics’ Views on Africanisation and Decolonization of Teacher Education Curricula: A Case Study of a Selected Higher Education Institution in South Africa
title_fullStr Academics’ Views on Africanisation and Decolonization of Teacher Education Curricula: A Case Study of a Selected Higher Education Institution in South Africa
title_full_unstemmed Academics’ Views on Africanisation and Decolonization of Teacher Education Curricula: A Case Study of a Selected Higher Education Institution in South Africa
title_short Academics’ Views on Africanisation and Decolonization of Teacher Education Curricula: A Case Study of a Selected Higher Education Institution in South Africa
title_sort academics views on africanisation and decolonization of teacher education curricula a case study of a selected higher education institution in south africa
topic academics
africanisation
decolonisation
curricula
eurocentric knowledge system
higher education institutions
url https://noyam.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/12/EHASS202451620.pdf
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