
Curriculum reform as a driver for change in higher education: the case of South Africa
Author(s) -
Bruce Kloot
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
journal of education
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 0259-479X
DOI - 10.17159/i60a05
Subject(s) - curriculum , context (archaeology) , higher education , power (physics) , narrative , political science , space (punctuation) , sociology , foundation (evidence) , pedagogy , geography , law , linguistics , philosophy , physics , archaeology , quantum mechanics
A recent proposal by the Council for Higher Education (CHE) outlines a solution to the persistently low and racially skewed completion rates in South African higher education. This involves lengthening the curricula of all qualifications through the insertion of 120 credits of ‘foundational provision’. This article provides a critique of this strategy by exploring its origins and placing South African efforts at improving student access and success in the international context. It draws on the narratives of two academics, one a top research professor and the other a foundation programme lecturer, employing the theoretical lens of Pierre Bourdieu to examine higher education as a social space or field. This analysis suggests that the power structure of higher education itself is likely to constrain the effectiveness of the CHE’s proposal and ultimately fail to shift the low and racially skewed completion rates that plague South African higher education.