Tuesday, 8 September 2015

Dr Lis Lange writes the epilogue for the new book "Student Politics in Africa: Representation and Activism"

Dr Lis Lange, Vice-Rector: Academic at the University of the Free State in South Africa is writing the epilogue for the forthcoming book Student Politics in Africa: Representation and Activism edited by  Thierry M. Luescher, Manja Klemenčič and James Otieno Jowi. 

Lange has decided to provide a reading of the manuscript from an intriguing "double perspective": that of a university manager and a progressive researcher on higher education. Her career in both respects promises a thought-provoking reading: Before joining the UFS, Lange was the Executive Director of the Higher Education Quality Committee of South Africa. As researcher, she has undertaken research on the philosophy and politics of education, on change in higher education and the meanings and possibilities of the notion of transformation, especially at curricular level. Her current work explores the vitality of Hannah Arendt’s thinking to understand higher education.

Here is a snippet from her epilogue, commenting on the relationship between the massification of higher education and changes in university governance:

"For all the democratisation heralded by mass higher education, it is not clear that a non-elite student population was followed by a more democratic or inclusive governance practice at the university. Actually, as observed in some of the chapters of this book, mass higher education seems to have introduced more a notion of consumer demands than a sense of political participation in the life of the university. From the point of view of a higher education manager keeping this trend at bay among managers, pragmatic academics, and the very same students is very difficult especially in places where the potential earning capacity of the prospective student constitutes the repayment for a family social investment." 

She concludes by recommending: "This book goes a good distance in bringing together the voices and experiences of students across very different universities on the African continent. [...] [It] provides important experiences, voices and suggestive theoretical ideas [...]."

The book is planned to be published in the course of October 2015. Its sister publication, the special issue on "Student Power in Africa" of the Journal of Student Affairs in Africa, will be published in September 2015.

Luescher, T.M., Klemenčič, M, and Jowi, O.J. (Eds.) (forthcoming 2015). Student Politics in Africa: Representation and Activism. Cape Town and Maputo: African Minds.



Saturday, 22 August 2015

Rethinking students: ideas and new research approaches

I am delighted to say that I will be attending the 6th International Conference on “Rethinking students: ideas and new research approaches" to be held in October at the National Research University - Higher School of Economics in Moscow.



I will present the paper "Methodological reflections on challenges of conducting student surveys in universities in developing countries". The paper deals with the manifold challenges that I encountered as principal investigator / research leader for the HERANA student surveys I conducted with colleagues from Botswana, Kenya, South Africa, Tanzania, and Uganda, between 2010-2014, at the premier universities in these countries.



I am the more looking forward to the conference as my dear colleague Manja Klemencic is one of the keynote speakers and the conference is hosted by the Centre for Institutional Studies of NRU-HSE which is the 'home base' of Igor Chirikov, who is now at UC Berkeley working on SERU-International at the CSHE there.

Thursday, 20 August 2015

South African universities and community based research partnerships


Fresh off the press: Community University Research Partnerships in South Africa; a new book published by the UNESCO Chair in Community Based Research and Social Responsibility in Higher Education.

My chapter with Judy Favish and Sonwabo Ngcelwane from UCT is out. It was a wonderful study conducted at UCT and Rhodes University from September - November 2014.

Loads of fun - and a most informative chapter for this great publication is the result.

And guess what: it is Open Access here.


Sunday, 16 August 2015

Get rankings right for Africa, university leaders urge - University World News

Get rankings right for Africa, university leaders urge - University World News

“Like everybody else I agree that rankings are here to stay. But it’s very important to our African community of universities that we don’t simply respond to what exists – that we use this opportunity to persuade the world about the bigger picture that faces us as a global community.”

Thursday, 6 August 2015

Finally published: Complete Research Report on "The Impact of Student Engagement on Citizenship Competences"

This report is based on original research conducted in 2013/2014 at Makerere University, Uganda, and the University of Cape Town, South Africa, as part of the HERANA studies.

The report provides a first and path-breaking analysis of the extent to which various forms of student engagement (e.g. academic engagement incl. active and collaborative learning, time on task etc., discursive engagement, political engagement e.g. in co-curricular programmes and the institutional culture of a university) contribute / or not / to the development of high-level citizenship competences such as critical thinking skills, civic skills, leadership skills, diversity and social skills etc.

Dr Igor Chirikov of UC Berkeley had this to say about the report:

"The study of student engagement has become mainstream in higher education research. In the last two decades there has been a sharp increase in the number of student surveys inspired by the idea that the more students are engaged in learning activities and participate in ‘effective’ or ‘high-impact’ educational practices, the greater their learning gains. But despite growing empirical evidence that there is a positive correlation between the level of student engagement and learning outcomes, we still know very little about wider implications of having more engaged students on campus. Are these students more successful in their careers? Do they make better citizens?
This report explores the latter question in a thorough and convincing manner. Drawing on the data on student experience collected in two African universities, University of Cape Town (South Africa) and Makerere University (Uganda), the project seeks to investigate a complex set of relations between student engagement and democratic citizenship. It is one of the fi rst empirically-driven attempts to approach such complicated question and to identify what universities realistically could do to develop values of democracy and citizenship among their students.
The relevancy goes far beyond African continent to many developing countries that struggle with civic engagement and establishing truly democratic governance system." (Dr Igor Chirikov, Senior Research Fellow at the Institute of Education, HSE-Moscow and SERU-I Managing Director, Center for Studies in Higher Education, UC Berkeley). 
Of course, it is OPEN ACCESS. Get the research report "The Impact of Student Engagement on Citizenship Competences" here.

Get the chapter "Student Engagement and Citizenship Competences in African Universities" in the 2015 book Knowledge Production and Contradictory Functions in African Higher Education (by Nico Cloete, Peter Maassen and Tracy Bailey)here.

Follow me on Academia.edu

Sunday, 2 August 2015

Proudly Kovsies / UFS made it into the top 20 of the new THES African University rankings

1. University of Cape Town (South Africa) 
2. University of the Witwatersrand (South Africa)
3. Makerere University (Uganda)
4. University of Stellenbosch (South Africa)  
5. University of KwaZulu-Natal (South Africa)
6. University of Port Harcourt (Nigeria)
7. University of the Western Cape (South  Africa)
8. University of Nairobi (Kenya)
9. University of Johannesburg (South  Africa)
10. Universite Cadi Ayyad (Morocco)
11. University of Pretoria (South Africa)
12. University of Ghana (Ghana)
13. University of South Africa (South Africa)
14. Suez Canal University (Egypt)
15. Universite Hassan II (Morocco)
16. Addis Ababa University (Ethiopia)
17. Rhodes University (South Africa)
18. University of The Free State (South Africa)
19. North West University (South Africa)
20. University of Tunis (Tunisia)
21. Ecole Nationale d'Ingenieurs de Sfax  (Tunisia)
22. Universite Mohammed V - Agdal (Morocco)
23. American University in Cairo (Egypt)
24. Nelson Mandela Metropolitan  University (South Africa)
25. South Valley University (Egypt)
26. Alexandria University (Egypt)
27. Assiut University (Egypt)
28. University of Sfax (Tunisia)
29. University of Yaounde (Cameroon)
30. Minia University 

Wednesday, 8 July 2015

Emeritus Professor Martin West of UCT has passed on



Emeritus Professor Martin West passed away this morning, 8 July 2015, (according to UCT News). May he rest in peace and may his beloved ones be consoled.

I got to know Martin as a respectable "opponent" DVC Student Affairs - always trying to 'outwit', 'outplay', 'outlast' SRC members - that was while I was as a SASCO member in the SRC of the University of Cape Town. Slogans like "West, look East!" and so on in student politics at UCT in the 1990s were common, indicating his liberal leanings which were typically seen by us comrades as too conservative and not supportive enough of a radical transformation agenda. He was seen as a staunch defender of the institution - UCT First! -  and thus highly critical of anything that came from "pretoria"; and he was always sure of being able to employ and invoke institutional processes to get his way; call on established values; insist on treasured traditions and rituals. He was, what in political science we would call an 'institutionaliser'; and that is perhaps why he never gained much of a national profile (nor seems to have been interested in that).

When in 2005 I started a PhD I learnt to respect Martin as an academic manager and Vice-Principal with all the complexities that this job entailed. He had the VC's back as far as the institution was concerned; perhaps a bit too much. For my thesis work, he was certainly supportive of my strange 'ethnography of UCT politics'; he was ready to share his wealth of knowledge (even if much of it was put into different light and perspective by documents in the adminstrative archives and interviews with others). He was certainly interested in the study I was doing: doctoral research into governance and student representation at UCT; he was after all a main player. Of course, we did not agree on a number of matters, but his critique was always fair even if he was captive to his institutional and personal location as a powerful 'UCT institutional apparatchik'.

His legacy is perhaps tainted by the rumor of his role in the second and third Mafeje affairs - those of the 1990s and 2000s. It would be Martin's most controversial doing  - and perhaps a conflation of his role as one of the most powerful UCT manager-academics of the 1990s and 2000s and his investment in Anthropology and the Centre for African Studies, if it is true. Martin had become a professor of Anthropology at UCT at the tender age of 30; the youngest ever at the time. He had studied Anthropology in the Department of Monica Wilson in the late 1960s and early 1970s, and may have known Archie Mafeje personally; he certainly knew of him... Perhaps there was some rivalry between Monica's two star students - even if Martin was several years Archie's junior?

It can be assumed that there was certainly no love lost by the 1990s when, according to research conducted for the Mafeje 1969 commemoration by a UCT academic, West is rumored to have been instrumental in denying Mafeje a dignified return to UCT in the mid-1990s, Remember: Mafeje is the black SA academic who, in 1969, was offered a post at UCT in Athropology (he had done is UG at UCT and his PG at Cambridge), and then under pressure from the apartheid government, this offer was withdrawn. This had led to the 9 day sit-in at UCT (in Bremner) which was the longest such protest at UCT until the recent 'Rhodes Must Fall' protests and sit-in (again at Bremner, including in the now renamed: Mafeje Room / i.e. Senate meeting room). When in the early 1990s the celebrated Prof Archibald Mafeje was supposed to return to SA from his exile and take up the Professorship and Chair in African Studies, Martin West, supposedly as chair of the Selection Committee, intervened in the last minute and Mafeje - the favorite and most qualified candidate  - was denied the opportunity (and never returned to an academic career in SA)ö the chair was not filled only until later when Prof Mamdani briefly joined UCT, and crossing swords with West. This is one  of the rumors that haunt Martin's legacy. If it is true, the question remains whether 1) the allegations that were leveled against Mafeje in the early 1990s were true and if so, 2) whether not offering him the professorship on this grounds was simply one of the various miscalculated, short-sighted "UCT First" policies or whether there was a personal element to it.

Anyway, truth be told, I assume it will all soon be clearer, hopefully. Until then, let rumor be rumor;  and in any case, let us be thankful for having known Martin - even if it was only in a very partial way - and for all the good he has done.

When I took this picture with him at my UCT PhD graduation in 2009, Martin was extremely happy. I will forever be grateful for his support during my studies.
  

Saturday, 30 May 2015

Student engagement in Europe: society, higher education and student governance

Book summary: Democratic institutions and laws are essential, but they cannot bring about democracy on their own. They will only function if they build on a culture of democracy, and our societies will not be able to develop and sustain such a culture unless education plays an essential role. Student engagement is crucial: democracy cannot be taught unless it is practised within institutions, among students and in relations between higher education and society in general.

This 20th volume of the Council of Europe Higher Education Series demonstrates the importance of student engagement for the development and maintenance of the democratic culture that enables democratic institutions and laws to function in practice. This volume covers three aspects of student engagement that are seldom explored: its role in society through political participation and civic involvement; its place in higher education policy processes and policy-making structures; and how student unions represent the most institutionalised form of student engagement. The authors are accomplished scholars, policy makers, students and student leaders.

Manja Klemenčič, Sjur Bergan and Rok Primožič (editors)
ISBN 978-92-871-7971-5
Type of document : Book
Format : Paper
Size : 16 x 24 cm
Language : English
Number of pages : 396

See book publisher for alters and copies: Council of Europe.

Contents

PREFACE

A WORD FROM THE EDITORS
Manja Klemenčič, Sjur Bergan and Rok Primožič

INTRODUCTION – WHAT IS STUDENT AGENCY? AN ONTOLOGICAL EXPLORATION IN THE CONTEXT OF RESEARCH ON STUDENT ENGAGEMENT
Manja Klemenčič

PART I – STUDENTS’ ROLE IN SOCIETY
          Chapter 1 – Theorising student activism in and beyond the 20th century: the contribution of Philip G. Altbach
          Thierry M. Luescher‑Mamashela
          Chapter 2 – “I am tired of reading history. Now I want to make it!” The rise and fall of the university campus as a space for social rebellion
          Rómulo Pinheiro and Dominik Antonowicz
          Chapter 3 – Student activism in times of individualisation: the case of Slovenia
          Mirjana Ule
          Chapter 4 – “A truly transformative experience”: the biographical legacy of student protest participation
          Bojana Ćulum and Karin Doolan
          Chapter 5 – Parliaments or streets?
          Milica Popović
          Chapter 6 – Student union resistance to tuition fees in Finland
          Leasa Weimer
          Chapter 7 – The role and capacity of youth organisations and student engagement: a comparative study of Serbia, Croatia and “the former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia”
          Martin Galevski
          Chapter 8 – A challenge for student engagement: the decline of the “normal” student
          Dominic Orr, Froukje Wartenbergh‑Cras and Christine Scholz
          Chapter 9 – Student engagement: the social dimension and role of quality assurance
          David Crosier

PART II – STUDENT INFLUENCE IN HIGHER EDUCATION
          Chapter 10 – Changing the shape and outcomes of student engagement
          Paul Trowler
          Chapter 11 – Towards student engagement as an organisational task? Some recent examples from Germany
          Marion Gut
          Chapter 12 – Student engagement: providing services or forging partnerships?
          Vicki Trowler
          Chapter 13 – Politics as process: Salford’s charter of student rights
          Martin Hall and Andrew Snowden
          Chapter 14 – Innovative forms of student engagement: how virtual co‑operative communities counterbalance the exclusion of students from active learning and governance
          Petr Pabian
          Chapter 15 – The evolution of public discourse on higher education financing in Europe: students’ unions and European processes
          George‑Konstantinos Charonis and Robert Santa
          Chapter 16 – ESU Student Experts’ Pool on Quality Assurance: a mechanism for involving students in quality assurance in Europe
          Asnate Kažoka

PART III – STUDENT GOVERNANCE
          Chapter 17 – We are one, but we’re not the same: explaining the emergence of hybrid national student unions
          Jens Jungblut and Regina Weber
          Chapter 18 – Student engagement in higher education policy making: a view from the Polish representative in the Bologna Follow‑Up Group
          Bartłomiej Banaszak
          Chapter 19 – Students’ rights: shaping the student movement at national and European level
          Gabriela Bergan
          Chapter 20 – The policy influence strategy of student representatives: a comparative, case‑based survey in Flemish University Colleges (Belgium)
          Michiel Horsten
          Chapter 21 – Belonging, social capital and representation: first‑generation students’ voices in Portuguese higher education
          Ana Sofia Ribeiro
          Chapter 22 – The quality of representation of international students in higher education governance: a case study of the German Federal State of Schleswig‑Holstein and its higher education institutions
          Laura Asarite and Sophie Wulk
          Chapter 23 – Student unions and British popular music culture
          Paul Long

CONCLUSION – DEMOCRATIC CULTURE, EDUCATION AND STUDENT ENGAGEMENT
Sjur Bergan

INDEX
NOTES ON THE CONTRIBUTORS
PUBLICATIONS IN THE COUNCIL OF EUROPE HIGHER EDUCATION SERIES

Thursday, 21 May 2015

AHELO: the myth of measurement and comparability - University World News

AHELO: the myth of measurement and comparability - University World News

A voice of reason: let's forget about AHELO and focus on improving teaching and learning at the chalk face. Phil Altbach in Universityworldnews.

Tuesday, 19 May 2015

Philip Altbach, Renowned International Higher Education Scholar, writes Preface to African Student Representation book


This is what Alma Maldonoado-Maldonado and Roberta Malee Bassett say about Prof Philip Altbach in the festschrift in his honour The Forefront of International Higher Education (2014): 
Image result for philip altbach"Quantitatively, he has authored and coauthored 21 books, edited and coedited 23 books, written 16 book chapters, and published more than  50 articles. He has written 92 articles in his influential newsletter International Higher Education and 32 blog posts in The World View,  and his works have been translated into more than a dozen languages. Finally, he has served as an editor of eight (8) journals and book series. But, discussing Phil's career quantitatively misses the real essence of Phil's contribution to the field of international higher education. Qualitatively, Phil's reach in this field is almost unparalleled. We believe it is fair to say that in his 47 years in this field, Philip Altbach has been everywhere in the world of international and comparative education and higher education, and no scholar or practitioner in this field has been untouched by his contributions"(p. 2).  

The festschrift covers a huge amount of ground of Phil's work: on the internationalization of higher education; academic mobility; regional perspectives and worldwide perspectives; and world-class universities. But there is one aspect of his huge contribution which is left uncovered in the festschrift: Philip Altbach's seminal contribution to our understanding of student politics and student activism in particular. 

It is my great honour to contribute a chapter on Philip Altbach's contribution to a theoretical understanding of student activism in the 20th century to a forthcoming book published by the Council of Europe.

It is an even greater honour that Philip Altbach has written a Preface to the forthcoming book Student Representation in Higher Education Governance in Africa which I co-edit with Manja Klemencic and James Otieno Jowi. As Manja wrote to Phil upon receipt of his Preface:

"Your writing never fails to impress. This preface is perfect; not a word to be changed as far as I am concerned. Thank you so much!"

Tuesday, 7 April 2015

Kofi Annan's Keynote at the Africa HE Summit 2015: Higher Education and Africa’s Social and Political Progress

Keynote podcast:

KA Remarks at the Summit: Revitalizing higher education for Africa’s Future.  
March 10-12, Dakar

Thank you ladies and gentlemen for your kind welcome.
It is a pleasure to join you for these important discussions; as Mr. Gregorian indicated in his message, I have long been a believer in the transformative power of education.
As Nelson Mandela used to say, “education is the most powerful weapon you can use to change the world.”
Education is one of the most effective forms of peacebuilding, a source of hope for each individual, and the premise of development and progress in every society. This makes our discussions all the more relevant and timely for Africa’s potential for progress has rarely been higher.
In recent years, Africa’s impressive economic growth has seen foreign investment and business flock to the continent, where an expanding middle class and a young, entrepreneurial population is helping to propel growth.
But as the commodities “super-cycle” that has afforded Africa close to fifteen years of strong economic growth comes to an end, we will have to rely more on our human resources than on our natural resources. The good news is that they are just as plentiful. 
Yet we cannot truly realise Africa’s potential, nor overcome its serious challenges, without increasing access to, improving the quality and diversity of skills taught, and deepening the research capacity of Africa’s higher education.
I serve as the Chancellor of the University of Ghana, and therefore see at first hand the scope and complexity of this challenge. I know too, that what works in Accra may not work in Cape Town, Nairobi, or indeed Dakar.
So I hesitate to be overly prescriptive in my remarks today.
Rather, I would like to identify three broad priorities which I believe should guide the revitalization of African higher education.
First, we must harness the power of partnerships. The diversity of the audience today suggests that I may be preaching to the choir. 
Nonetheless, allow to me highlight some specific benefits of effective partnerships between African universities, with governments and the private sector, and with universities and research institutions across the world.
Attention has long focused on achieving universal primary education, and to a lesser degree, on improving secondary enrollment. With youth illiteracy still at around 50%, and even higher for girls, we all agree this continues to be vital. 
But the time has come to also revitalize higher education in Africa. This will necessitate strategic alliances with, and investment from, international partners and donors. 
Partnerships with the private sector can overcome the mismatch between the needs of African employers and the skills of its young graduates. Otherwise, university degrees will not secure the jobs graduates expect, and that is a recipe for social and political, as well as economic trouble.
Africa is full of unemployed university graduates, even as our economies have grown by more than 5% for over a decade. Clearly they were not given the skills that our economies need.
One of the problems is that university courses were traditionally designed to train academics, civil servants and employees in the formal economy, whilst our countries have been shedding civil service jobs and our econonomies remain largely informal. 
Our institutions of higher learning have to reflect these changes and teach the technical and entrepreneurial skills needed to succeed in the real world. 
As you may know, Switzerland has one of the lowest unemployment rates in the world despite having a smaller proportion of university graduates than other developed countries. 
That is largely because Swiss tertiary education focuses more on high-level vocational schools in hotel management, engineering, IT, health and agriculture whose graduates are immediately employable.
This is a model other European countries are looking at now to address their own unemployment problems. Perhaps Africa should also consider its relevance. 
The shortage of funding is also hampering attempts by individual universities or research institutions to become globally recognized leaders in their field. 
However, through cooperation between African governments and universities, the continent can build regional centers of excellence that improve both the quality of research and education, and their impact throughout Africa. 
Many of the continent’s brightest young prospects feel they must leave Africa to further their studies, to publish or be mentored, and to develop personal expertise.
Reversing this tide is, I know, a significant concern for all of us here today. But we must also recognize, and take advantage of, the opportunities it presents in the short-term.
Closer ties with the universities and institutions abroad can increase capacity in African universities, and widen access to education in Africa and abroad. 
Africa has exported some of its brightest minds, as both professors and students. They can tomorrow benefit Africa as much as they benefit their host countries today.
To take advantage of these opportunities, the University of Ghana and University of Sussex recently agreed to collaborate on joint teaching and research programs, facilitate student and staff exchanges, and jointly train and develop doctoral students.
This is an approach many universities on the continent are developing, which I think could allow us to develop world class research-intensive universities, to generate the knowledge both governments and businesses need to succeed in Africa and globally.
My second priority is to improve the scope and quality of data from and on Africa.
This may seem like an obscure technical issue. However, evidence-based research is fundamental to sound policy-making. This research ought to be generated by Africa’s own institutions of higher learning and its burgeoning home-grown think tanks.
To grasp the importance of statistics for effective government it is useful to remember that the very word – statistics – comes from the German word for the state – der Staat. Governing without data is like driving without a dash board. 
Let me offer two personal examples to underline this need. When the Africa Progress Panel, which I chair, decided to study the impact of climate change on African agriculture for its 2015 Report, we had to turn to think tanks, development agencies, researchers and universities based mainly in Europe and North America.  
In a similar vein, the response to the Ebola outbreak revealed the lack of attention and resources dedicated to understanding potentially pandemic viruses in Africa, and how this significantly hampered our response. 
There is a very clear need for more, and improved, empirical understanding of how such challenges affect the continent and how its leaders can best react
I have no doubt that such targeted and applied research can have a wide impact, from better governance, to increased productivity and more jobs for our youth.  
Third and finally, ladies and gentlemen, I would like to highlight a less tangible, but profound, manner in which universities and institutions of higher learning can significantly impact Africa’s development. 
As important as the skills conferred or the knowledge generated at an institution of learning are, it is the outlook and attitude that higher education fosters in its students which is vital to national development and self-confidence.   
The demonstrations of angry young men and women across the continent reveal the frustration of our youth with the status-quo, and their willingness to assume the responsibilities of leadership. But it is clear too, that they are not always well  prepared
No one is born a good citizen or a good democrat or a good leader; it takes time and education. 
Our institutions should instill in Africa’s young citizens a mindset and understanding of the world that inspires visionary and positive citizenship and leadership.   
They must therefore be melting-pots of diversity and incubators of pluralism which produce responsible citizens. 
They can build bridges between communities of young people in Africa, eroding the ethnic and religious divides that still plague the continent.
And perhaps most importantly, they can promote the informed and peaceful confrontation of ideas, crucial to academic study and research, but also to deepening democratic governance, and building peace. 
Ladies and gentlemen, I have long maintained that healthy and sustainable societies are built on three pillars; peace and security, sustainable development, and respect for Human Rights and the rule of law. 
There can be no long-term security without development, no long term development with security, and no society can long remain prosperous without respect for human rights and the rule of law.  
But a well- educated, informed and engaged citizenry is the foundation on which these three pillars rest.  
I hope you agree that these principles can further strengthen that foundation. 
But I am sure too, that this expert audience will contribute many interesting and insightful ideas. 
I look forward therefore to the outcome of your discussions, and to seeing your vision of a revitalised higher education system that can drive Africa’s progress in the 21st century.