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The Doctorate: Policies and Statistics. Nico Cloete and Johann Mouton. NRF and Carnegie Convening Pretoria, 28-29 October 2013. Figure 1: The rise of doctorates (1998–2006). Growth in PhD graduates in South Africa: 1920 - 2011.
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The Doctorate: Policies and Statistics Nico Cloete and Johann Mouton NRF and Carnegie Convening Pretoria, 28-29 October 2013
Growth in PhD graduates in South Africa: 1920 - 2011 Source: Garbers (1960), DNO (1982), DoE (1999), DHET (2013)
Average annual growth rate of PhD graduates, for the period 1920 – 2011 Source: Garbers (1960), DNO (1982), DoE (1999), DHET (2013)
Policy Frameworks in SA • Policies: Implementation strategies – Symbolic (compensatory legitimation) • Incentives: direct – indirect • National – institutional (development- support- incentives) • Policy Moments in SA • 1996 – NCHE report, Green and White Paper (1997) • 2000 – CHE Differentiation report, NPHE (2001) • 2004 – mergers of intuitions and funding linked to enrolment planning • 2008 – new funning framework fully operational, end of Programme Qualification Mix reviews • 2011 – latest accredited HEMIS data, and start of Green Paper and NDP 2030 process.
Policy Goals to Strengthening the Doctorate Doctoral enrolment must grow – absent in NCHE, symbolic in White Paper, stronger in National Plan and strong funding from 2008 (ranging from $40 000 to $60 000 per student/graduate). Priority in NDP 2030 with graduate targets (from 1500 to 5000 in 2030. Focus on SET and business management. 2. Output efficiency must improve - from 1997 focus on efficiency in general, 2008 funding weak on efficiency, 2012 Green Paper and NDP much more explicit (throughput of 75%). CHET and CREST performance and efficiency indicators (symbolic) 3. Academic staff must have PhD - Financial and Fiscal Commission (2012) and NDP (increase from 35% to 75%) 4. Internationalisation - NPHE (2001) and Green Paper (2012) encourages post graduate recruitment, particularly SADC 5. Differentiation – policy covert/ambiguous, funding explicit
Comparison of enrolments and graduates, 1996 to 2011 Source: DoE (1999), SAPSE; DHET (2013), HEMIS data (2000-2013)
Average shares of the doctoral graduates in the various fields of study, 1996 to 2011 Source: DoE (1999), SAPSE; DHET (2013), HEMIS data (2000-2013)
Progress of 2004 intakes of new doctoral students after 7 years, according to bands of performance
Comparison of international PhD completion rates Completion Rate
Percentage of the academic staff with doctorates by institution, 2011 Source: DHET (2013), HEMIS data (2000-2013)
Ratios of doctoral graduates to academic staff with doctoral degrees by institution, 2011 Source: DHET (2013), HEMIS data (2000-2013
Comparison of PhD production in South Africa with a number of selected OECD countries, 2000 and 2011 Source: OECD (2013) Graduates by field of study, data extracted on 4 July 2013.
Doctoral enrolments by race, 1996 to 2011 Source: DoE (1999) & DHET (2013)
Progress of the 2004 cohort of new doctoral entrants by nationality, gender and race after 7 years Source: DHET (2013). PhD cohort studies.
Doctoral graduates according to nationality as percentage of total doctoral graduates, 2011 1040 406 233 208 68 99
Figure 2: Doctoral enrolments at 8 sub-Saharan African universities (2001, 2007, 2011)
Figure 3: Doctoral graduates at 8 sub-Saharan African universities (2001, 2007, 2011)
African Flagship Universities: Strengthening Knowledge Production Except for UCT and Makerere, there is an increasing pipeline problem between masters and the doctorate Doctorate output, with the exception of UCT, is very low and this will affect the ability of the institution to publish in international journals Apart from UCT, the flagship universities do not seem to have enough senior staff at the professoriate level to provide research leadership
Projects Ford Foundation project called ‘The Successful Cultivation of Social Science and Humanities Doctoral Scholarship in South Africa’ led by Professor Cheryl de La Rey. Funding to the Centre of Higher Education Transformation (CHET) from the Carnegie Corporation for a project titled ‘Transformation in South Africa Through a Collaborative Book Project’. (The book from this project to be titled Knowledge Production in South African Higher Education by Nico Cloete, Peter Maassen, Tebogo Moja and Johann Mouton, is scheduled for publication in mid-2014.) to provide research leadership
African Flagship Universities: Strengthening Knowledge Production Except for UCT and Makerere, there is an increasing pipeline problem between masters and the doctorate Doctorate output, with the exception of UCT, is very low and this will affect the ability of the institution to publish in international journals Apart from UCT, the flagship universities do not seem to have enough senior staff at the professoriate level to provide research leadership