Personal Blog and Website with Links to Open Access Publications on Higher Education in Africa - Student Experience - Student Politics - Student Affairs - Institutional Research - Higher Education Policy and Politics Research
Wednesday, 13 June 2018
What does Student Governance mean?
Thursday, 17 May 2018
Understanding #FeesMustFall: Starting a qualitative data analysis
Just yesterday, my colleague Nkululeko Makhubu and I got an interesting lesson in social movement theory by Luc Chicoine, a visiting scholar from the University of Quebec, Montreal, Canada, - remember the Maple Spring? He introduced us to the concepts of 'framing' and different types of frame alignment, cycles of protests and contention (by Makhadam as he pronouces it), etc. all adding to the seminar he gave earlier this week at the HSRC on protest event analysis. Yes, it is acronymed to number 1.
Today now, Travis Noakes (nope, he is not banting at the moment I asked :), gave all of us, that's Prof Bosch, Makhubu and me, a workshop in using Nvivo 12 for analysing our data. It's a process - and it has it's own language... nodes, nodes, child nodes, parent nodes. Seems very time-consuming, but, as the wordcloud above shows, it may actually be worth it.
What's the point? Eventually, the close to 500k tweets we got as digital trace data from the net will be connected to a qualitative database, and all that feed into getting a better understanding of the amazingly creative way, student activists in 2015 invented a South African 'internet-age networked student movement' (yes, I coined that term :). Never mind the remarks about the 'anti-social media' by Prof Jonathan Jansen in his 2016 book. The point is, listen and you won't get burnt - as by fire. But it has always been difficult for principals to listen to the children in their care...
As we are starting to talk to student leaders at UCT about the use of social media during the 2015/16 South African Student Spring (as Ferial Haffajee calls it in her first excellent book What if there were no Whites in South Africa) we are getting a striking cloud of words. This is very, very rough. But I thought it is worth sharing... That students see their movement as a social movement first and foremost, linked with Twitter and Facebook, Rhodes, leadership, and so forth.
Follow our project @osphera #FeesMustFall
Sunday, 11 March 2018
Internet-age student movement research in the era of big data and social media

This Wednesday at the HSRC, Nkululeko Makhubu and I got really excited to receive the raw data of all tweets with hashtag #feesmustfall in an excel file from the period of 1 January 2015 to 31 December 2016 to analyse. It is extremely exciting to have such big data to work with - it is also a bit scary to think how much information about a person remains stored in the 'cloud'. Today it is almost exactly three years since the start of #RhodesMustFall, and two and a half years since that of #FeesMustFall. Yet, with the right extraction tools, it is possible to get information to the most miniscule datum.
For instance, in our dataset, we have for every one of the 576,000 tweets extracted so far the exact date and time when it was tweeted, location, language, user name of tweeter, twitter handle of tweeter, gender; mentions (handles of others mentioned in the tweet, the actual tweet content including links to pictures, videos, websites etc. in the tweet), other hashtags, and so forth.
Even though this is open, publicly accessible data, it still requires of the researchers to be extremely sensitive to the ethics of research. Thus, how one treats matters like the identity of a tweeter, is really an important question; after all, using certain data in ethically questionable ways may have very real-life implications for the tweeter. What I tweeted in the hype of activism in 2015 must be seen in that context... and such big data sets do not provide such context. As a young student being thrust into the midst of student activism and protest, I may have said (or rather: tweeted) things that I may very well want to disown now; the university experience - including participating in a student protest - is, after all, a learning experience and it is part of learning that one makes mistakes...
Pear factor, a media monitoring, research and analysis company, sent me last year a 'teaser' of their capabilities when it comes to doing social media data analysis and infographics (Thanks very much!). I included (above) two snips of those infographics.
We will be doing different kinds of analysis on our own data set, but this just illustrates how, in an aggregate fashion, much can be learnt about the 'virtual'/online dimension of the student movement. The timeline indicates here that tweeting using their keyword and hashtag spec 'exploded' mid October 2015 - coinciding with the national timeline of #FeesMustFall (i.e. March to Parliament on 21 October, March to Luthuli House on 22 October, March to Union Building on 23 October 2015). It also shows the geographic spread of tweeting centred on South Africa and the main metropolitan centres in particular, but spreading around the globe, including English-speaking Africa, Europe (especially UK) as well as the United States, India, Middle East and Australia.
I will be documenting the progress with this study in detail on the Osphera.net website and make regular updates via @osphera and on my own blog, facebook and twitter accounts.
Friday, 1 December 2017
The African Renaissance - and its Buildings
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The duomo cathedral in Florence |
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New houses in a typical township |
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Wits University in Johannesburg |
Tuesday, 31 October 2017
Student Politics and Protests: International Perspectives
Student Politics and Protests: International Perspectives
International in scope, with all chapters dealing with recent developments concerning student politics and protest, this book will be an invaluable guide for Higher Education professionals, masters and postgraduate students in education, sociology, social policy, politics and youth studies. The book includes the following chapters, including a chapter on student politics in Africa co-written by Manja Klemencic and me, based on our work and that of our authors published in the book Student Politics in Africa: Representation and Activism (2016) which can be purchased from ABC or downloaded for free from African Minds.
1. Student Politics and Protest: an Introduction.
2. Campaigning for a Movement
3. Student Struggles and Power Relations in Contemporary Universities.
4. Neoliberal Discourses and the Emergence of an Agentic Field: the Chilean Student Movement
5. Affinities and Barricades.
6. Student Politics and the Value(s) of Public Welfare
7. The Politics of Higher Education Funding in the UK Student Movement 1996-2010
8. Student Power in 21st Century Africa
9. Students’ Associations
10. ‘If Not Now, Then When? If Not Us, Who?’ Understanding the Student Protest Movement in Hong Kong
11. Student Mobilization during Turkey’s Gezi Resistance: From the Politics of Change to the Politics of Lifestyle
12. Network Formation in Student Political Worlds
13. Conclusion
Friday, 13 October 2017
Online / Blended Learning Postgraduate Diploma in Higher Education Management - from University of Stellenbosch
This post graduate diploma is the academic degree in the professionalization of the various functions that support HE in South Africa. Our modules focus on:
Higher Education Perspectives, Governance and Policy Frameworks, Human Development and Learning Theories, Diversity and Equity, Internationalization, Change Management and Transformation.
I will be lecturing the introductory "Higher Education Perspectives" course. :)
The qualification is relevant for colleagues in Student Affairs, International Offices, Registrars, Administration, Marketing and Alumni, Social Responsibility and Impact, Transformation and Institutional Research and Planning. It is also essential for anyone who seeks to make a career in supporting HE and student and institutional success.
We invite colleagues from the DHET, from the private sector as well as NGOs and Social Responsibility Foundation and we hope that we have a wonderfully vibrant and diverse group of students who make up our first cohort in 2018.
The PG Dip HEM is one year, offered in blended learning (can be done while you work), and you will be part of a small group of students who get supported by a dynamic set of experts who are specifically chosen to teach the modules.
Basically: every Tuesday from 4-8pm either online or if in Stellenbosch at the centre.
plus two teaching blocs of 1 week each - one in the first semester, one in the second.
For any information, you can either contact the USB directly for all the information (see link), or email the convenor Dr Birgit Schreiber.
Now this PG Dip is really interesting - but it is different from the PG Dip in Education (Higher Education) that I have been doing at the University of Free State, which is targeted more towards academics, teaching and learning managers, and all those who are less interested in the 'management' side and more interested in the teaching and learning side of higher education.
Tuesday, 26 September 2017
Reflections on the Student Experience and Student Life in Europe in the 20th Century - J Burkett Book is out!
Wednesday, 16 August 2017
Sol Plaatje University - a new diamond in Kimberley


In 2013 a new public university was established in Kimberley named after its most famous son: Sol Plaatje. In 2017, Sol Plaatje University (SPU) has over 1,000 students and at the end of the year, it will celebrate its first degree graduation. The SPU students are pioneers, indeed, who study in a stunning facility and with academics that are fully invested in their students' success.
We heard Prof Yunus Ballim, the first Vice-Chancellor of SPU; we were hosted by Jerome September, the Head of Student Affairs here, and we had great discussions with the SPU colleagues who were mostly from the School of Humanities.
Prof Crain Soudien, the CEO of HSRC gave a most engaging presentation on the long transition and struggles in SA higher education, pointing out some extraordinary data like the 260% increase in black student enrollment since the 1990s, and more generally, the massive expansion of the black South African middle class since the end of apartheid. Universities are doing there part. SPU wants to do more.
Saturday, 29 July 2017
Re-Thinking Student Politics through the Lens of Student Life Cycle Models?
Monday, 24 July 2017
Student Affairs Voices from Around the Globe
This is a special issue. JSAA has been seeking to provide an opportunity for Student Affairs professionals and higher education scholars from around the globe to share their research and experiences of student services and student affairs programmes from their respective regional and institutional contexts. This has been given a specific platform with the guest-edited issue “Voices from Around the Globe” which is the result of a collaboration with the International Association of Student Affairs and Services (IASAS), and particularly with the guest editors, Kathleen Callahan and Chinedu Mba.
Available free online at Stellenbosch University.
Saturday, 8 July 2017
I like the bookshelf rule! 10 rules of writing and some more
Here then are the 10 rules of Prof Amitava Kumar (full details at the bottom)
1. Write every day. This is a cliché, of course, but you will write more when you tell yourself that no day must pass without writing. At the back of a notebook I use in my writing class, I write down the date and then make a mark next to it after the day’s work is done. I show the page to my students often, partly to motivate them, and partly to remind myself that I can’t let my students down.
2. Have a modest goal. Aim to write 150 words each day. It is very difficult for me to find time on some days, and it is only this low demand that really makes it even possible to sit down and write. On better days, this goal is just a start; often, I end up writing more.
3. Try to write at the same time each day. I recently read a Toni Morrison interview in which she said: “I tell my students one of the most important things they need to know is when they are at their best, creatively.” It works best for me if I write at the same time each day—in my case, that hour or two that I get between the time I drop off my kids at school and go in to teach. I have my breakfast and walk up to my study with my coffee. In a wonderful little piece published on The New Yorker blog “Page-Turner”, writer Roxana Robinson writes how she drinks coffee quickly and sits down to write—no fooling around reading the paper, or checking the news, or making calls to friends, or trying to find out if the plumber is coming. “One call and I’m done for. Entering into the daily world, where everything is complicated and requires decisions and conversation, means the end of everything. It means not getting to write.” I read Robinson’s piece in January 2013, and alas, I have thought of it nearly every day since.
4. Turn off the Internet. The Web is a great resource and entirely unavoidable, but it will help you focus when you buy the Freedom app. Using a device like this not only rescues me from easy distraction, it also works as a timer. When you click on the icon, it asks you to choose the duration for which you want the computer to not have access to the Net. I choose 60 minutes and this also helps me keep count of how long I have sat at my computer.
5. Walk for ten minutes. Or better yet, go running. If you do not exercise regularly, you will not write regularly—or not for long. I haven’t been good at doing this and have paid a price with trouble in my back. I have encouraged my students to go walking too, and have sometimes thought that when I have to hold lengthy consultations with my writing class, I should go for walks with them on our beautiful campus.
6. A bookshelf of your own. Choose one book, or five, but no more than ten, to guide you, not with research necessarily, but with the critical matter of method or style. Another way to think about this is to ask yourself who are the writers, or scholars, or artists, that you are in conversation with. I use this question to help arrive at my own subject matter, but it also helps with voice.
7. Get rid of it if it sounds like grant talk. I don’t know about you, but I routinely produce dead prose when I’m applying for a grant. The language used in applications must be abhorred: stilted language, jargon, etc. I’m sure there is a psychological or sociological paper to be written about the syntax and tone common in such things—the appeal to power, lack of freedom—but in my case it might just be because, with the arrival of an application deadline, millions of my brain cells get busy committing mass suicide.
8. Learn to say no. This applies equally to the friendly editor who asks for a review or an essay, even to the friend who is editing an anthology. Say no if it takes you away from the writing you want to do. My children are small and don’t take no for an answer, but everyone who is older is pretty understanding. And if they’re understanding, they’ll know that for you occasional drinks or dinner together are more acceptable distractions.
9. Finish one thing before taking up another. Keep a notebook handy to jot down ideas for any future book, but complete the one you are working on first. This rule has been useful to me. I followed it after seeing it on top of the list of Henry Miller’s “Commandments”. It has been more difficult to follow another of Miller’s rules: “Don’t be nervous. Work calmly, joyously, recklessly on whatever is in hand.”
10. The above rule needs to be repeated. I have done shocking little work when I have tried to write two books at once. Half-finished projects seek company of their own and are bad for morale. Shut-off the inner editor and complete the task at hand.
http://indianquarterly.com/10-rules-of-writing/
Friday, 7 July 2017
African Research Universities need tech-savvy, ICT-enhanced African University Presses: The Report
Scholarly presses in general, and university presses (UPs) in particular, are in trouble. The old 'commercialised' model of scholarly book publishing is not really working anymore: open access has eaten into the revenue from scholarly book sales, and more and more UPs have had to adjust their production processes, gone digital, buy into the latest technologies to be able to produce e-books, enhance their visibility and marketing strategies by including social media, and drastically reduce print-runs. The cost of producing a top-notch scholarly book is high; while returns are low. New technologies such as print-on-demand (POD) as close as possible to the point of sale to minimise printing, warehousing and distribution costs are a must. Some large UPs have been able to make the transition; others have ceased to produce or become but an imprint of a larger publishing house.
Two contrary developments can be observed internationally: On the one hand, there are perceptions in academia of ‘robber capitalism’ on the part of the large commercial publishers as they protect their oligopoly in the face of dissolving spatial barriers and diminishing value add. On the other hand, we are witnessing a contrary trend: the emergence of the knowledge commons. However, this emergence takes place in an institutional context long dominated by an editorial logic and, in more recent times, by the logic of the market.
In the midst of these are African university presses (AUPs) - some over half a century old, others started in the last decade - who have an important mission and unique contribution to make to the African knowledge base. How are AUPs faring under the changed 'market' conditions and contradictory developments of 'robber capitalism' and hyper-marketisation on the one hand, and the emergence of 'social capitalism' and open access knowledge sharing on the other hand? What do they make of the challenges and opportunities presented in the scholarly publishing realm within their contexts? Are they deploying the technological changes in production, distribution and marketing made possible by digitisation and network effects of the internet? Are they surviving, dying or thriving?
A holistic way of approaching the question of how African university presses can reposition themselves in support of the broader shift of some African universities towards a greater focus on research, is to consider shifts in the dominant institutional logic in the academic publishing industry. Based on a baseline survey of university presses in Africa, in-depth case studies of selected university presses, and an analysis of the publishing choices made by African academics, this research project examined the opportunities and constraints faced by university presses in Africa. It provides an overview of the African university press landscape and shows that there is a small, active group of university presses. University presses in Africa are not yet making use of technological advances to reconfigure their production, distribution and marketing processes, nor are they experimenting with new publishing models such as open access. While case studies of selected university presses surfaced unsurprising challenges (such as scarce resources and limited capacity), they also show that university presses in Africa are constrained by institutional logics that are holding them back from experimenting with new ways of doing things. The research also reveals that an alarmingly high number of academic authors at one flagship research university in Africa are choosing to publish monographs with predatory publishers. The report concludes with a set of pragmatic recommendations; recommendations that are simultaneously attuned to the opportunities and to the realities of African university presses as revealed by the research conducted.
The African University Press Report is available for free download here.
Monday, 19 June 2017
Fresh off the Press: "Student Leaders and Political Parties at Makerere University in Uganda"
A fascinating story: the relationship between student leaders and political parties at Makerere University in Uganda.
From a South African perspective, it is perhaps an indication what may come, if competition between ANC, DA and EFF etc. or their respective student organisations on campus, such as the Progressive Youth Alliance (ANC YL, SASCO, YCL), the EFF-SB and DASO are starting to take this competition over SRCs a step further and monetise the electoral processes at universities the way it has happened at Makerere University.
The new article published in SAJHE 31(3), 2017, "Student Representation and the Relationship between Student Leaders and Political Parties: The Case of Makerere University" shows that the relationship is not all bad; indeed it is important for the renewal of political parties. The article concludes by recommending electoral rules for student elections that ensure that some of the excesses that Mugume and I observed at MAK can be contained. Enjoy open access :)