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Student Support through Extended Programmes at South African Universities Prof AJM(Maritz) Snyders Director: Centre for Extended Studies. 23 rd First-year experience conference Hawaii. Presentation outline. South Africa South African Higher Education System Port Elizabeth
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Student Support through Extended Programmes at South African Universities Prof AJM(Maritz) Snyders Director: Centre for Extended Studies 23rd First-year experience conference Hawaii
Presentation outline • South Africa • South African Higher Education System • Port Elizabeth • Nelson Mandela Metropolitan University • Alternative Access programmes at NMMU • Foundation Programmes • Extended Programmes • Evaluation of programmes • Conclusion
South Africa • Population of SA about 50 million in 2009 • 80% African, divided in 8 major indigenous groups with Xhosa and Zulu the largest • 10% White • 9 Provinces • 11 Official languages – only 17% English home language • Capital Pretoria • Parliament in Cape Town • First Democratic election in 1994; ANC; President Nelson Mandela; Jacob Zuma
South African Higher Education • 39 Universities and Technikons before 1994 • Historically divided on racial grounds • Access to all opened after 1994 • Reduced though mergers in 2004/5 to 23, divided in 3 categories (political rather than educational reasons): • Traditional universities offering general formative and professional degrees up to Doctoral level • Universities of Technologies offering diplomas and certificates with a strong vocational focus • Comprehensive universities offering both degrees and diplomas
South African Higher Education • Typical Diploma structure: 3-year qualification including: • 2 years academic and practical work on campus • 1 year experiential learning in a workplace situation • Typical degree structure: • 3-year undergraduate formative Bachelors • 1-year specialized Honours • Or 4-year professional Bachelors eg Pharmacy, Engineering • Masters and Doctors • Current debates around extending the formal undergraduate time by 1 year by including foundational support to improve retention and graduation rates
Problems in SA HE • Unequal schooling system with learners from township and rural schools unprepared for Higher Education studies • Low participation rate of certain population groups – pressure on universities to increase access • High drop-out rates • Low retention and graduation rates • Skewed level of performance between different population groups
NATIONAL PARTICIPATION RATE IN HIGHER EDUCATION Gross participation rate: All HE participants as % of 20-24 age-group National HE participation rate was 17% in 2008
Graduation in regulation time • If we omit distance education students, only a minority of the intake (about a third or fewer) graduate in 4 years, even though most programmes are formally 3 years or less.
Graduation within 5 years (excl distance) • General academic first B-degrees (3-year programmes)
Attempted solutions • Variety of support programmes outside the curriculum since mid 1990’s, but no special financial support from government • Alternative access programmes • Earmarked foundational provision funding since 2004 in 3 year cycles for: • One-year Foundation Programmes (only until 2006), and • Extended Curriculum programmes • Debates about increasing minimum time of first qualifications
Port Elizabeth • Port Elizabeth the largest city in Eastern Cape • About R1.2m people • Major automotive industry • Part of larger Nelson Mandela Bay Metropolitan area • Host city for FIFA 2010 Soccer World Cup • Known as “Die Baai – The Bay”, “The Windy City” or “The Friendly City” • Only one university in the Metropolitan area, the Nelson Mandela Metropolitan University (NMMU), also known as the No More Money University
Nelson Mandela Metropolitan University • Comprehensive university formed in 2005 through the merger of: • University of Port Elizabeth • Port Elizabeth Technikon (University of Technology) • Port Elizabeth campus of Vista University • 22 000 students – 56% Black, 27% White, 52% Female • 5 campuses in Port Elizabeth and 1 in George • English used as Language of Teaching & Learning • About 26% with English as home language – 40% Xhosa; 15% Afrikaans – more than 30 diff home languages • Eastern Cape worst school performance of all provinces
NMMU • 7 Faculties (Colleges or Schools): • Sciences, Health Sciences, Arts, Business & Economic Sciences, Law and Engineering, the Built Environment and Information Technology • Higher Education Access and Development Services (HEADS) • Centre for Extended Studies (CES) • Centre for Teaching, Learning and Media • Student Counselling • Centre for Admission Assessment and Research
Alternative Access Programmes • Pre-merger: • One year foundation programmes at UPE (since 1999) & PET (since 1997) • 4-yr Science degree at UV (since 2001) • Post merger • One-year Foundation Programmes until end of 2006 • Replaced from 2007 by series of extended degree, diploma and certificate programmes • Decision to changed due to financial reasons and not educational reasons • Current debates about ownership and management
NMMU Foundation and extended ‘04 to ‘10 • Merger in 2005, but started to cooperate in this area in 2004 • 2004 to 2006: • Foundation for degrees in Science, Commerce, Pharmacy, Nursing, Liberal Arts and Law • Foundation for diplomas in Science, Engineering, Commerce, Art and Health • 2007 onwards: • 4-yr degrees in Science, Commerce, Liberal Arts • 5-yr degrees in Pharmacy, Law, Nursing • 4-yr diplomas in Chemistry, Accountancy, Art, Engineering, Management
Special support given in Found & Ext progs • Holistic approach • Academic and Life management programme • Language development • Career guidance • Mentoring – individual and group • Integration • Skills and content • Vertical between Foundational and mainstream • Horizontal between different components • Dedicated staff – teachers rather than lecturers • Small groups (25 to 30) & out of classroom consultations
Success of foundation and extended • Ultimate measure of success is the number of students obtaining a qualification • Formative impact on the lives of student, even if they do not qualify can unfortunately not be measured • Can only trace the performance of students staying at own university – often looses best students to other places, and are reflected as drop-outs • Too early to determine graduation rates of extended programme students as first intake of students in 2007 – first graduants end of 2010
Programme Evaluations • Quantitative evaluations: • Course pass rates • Annual reports to government • Comparison with mainstream students • Comparison of retention rates of Found & Ext • Graduation rates of Found • Qualitative evaluations: • Annual survey of student experiences while in programmes • Focus groups with students 2/3 years after leaving programmes • Survey of perceptions about extended programmes
Conclusion about access and retention • Include students continuing in same programme and change to other qualifications • Greater levels of access provided through Foundation (2061) than through Extended (1550) • Drop out much higher at end of first year in Foundation than in Extended • Retention as a percentage of those who “survived” first year similar in two types, although slightly higher for Foundation • Slightly larger numbers expected to graduate from Foundation than from Extended
Deductions from tables • Comparing apples with pears: group of high risk and underprepared learners is compared with a group including top performers • Retention rates in foundation programmes higher • A total of 1191 entered degrees and diplomas after doing foundation in 2004, 2005 and 2006: • 373 obtained degrees or diplomas • 495 still busy with 1st qualification • 20 also obtained post-graduate qualifications • 85 currently registered for post-graduate qualifications • Many individual success stories/anecdotes of top performance in academics and leadership
Perceptions and practices in Ext progs Survey done in 2009 to: • To determine practices followed by SA Universities and to compare these with what NMMU is doing • To determine the perceptions of various stakeholders about extended programmes
Research methodology • Survey questionnaire to lecturers teaching foundational modules at NMMU – 27/48 responses received • Survey questionnaire to managers of academic units at NMMU – 15/30 responses received • Survey questionnaire to selected extended programme administrators at universities – 7/9 responses received • Informal discussions with programme administrators at 7 other universities regarding management of programmes • Directed interviews with senior managers at NMMU: Deputy Vice-Chancellor (Academic); SD: HEADS (now Dean of Teaching and learning) and Executive Deans of Faculties
Why offer Extended Programmes • 100% agree that there is a need for extended programmes • Lecturers and managers: Social responsibility to address inequalities and need to improve throughput rates chosen as most important • Senior managers: Provision of access and increased throughput rates • Universities: Social responsibility towards learners and increased pass rates
Structure of programmes Is there still a place for one year foundation programmes and should it be funded: • 40% of lecturers and 47% of managers have no opinion • Most of remaining lecturers and managers believe there should be FP’s in addition to ext programmes • 4 of 7 universities believe FP’s should be funded and 3 not • All senior manager believe FP’s has a place along ext progs and should be funded • Reasons given: • For FP’s: One year foundation programmes are seen to target a different group of students • Against FP’s: Should be on FET level, not HE
Management of extended programmes Models: • Fully Centralized (0) • Matrix with central unit as primary driver (7) • Matrix with faculty or department as primary driver (2) • Fully Decentralized (4)
Conclusion • Extended Programmes can both make a contribution towards address issues of access, retention and graduation rates. • More inter-institutional cooperation is needed • A lot more research is needed • Current practices is probably too diverse to draw clear conclusions about best practices • All eyes on the national debate regarding the minimum period of undergraduate studies, to see if the extended format may become the norm
References • Scott, I et al. “A Case for Improving Teaching and Learning in Higher Education”, in the Higher Education Monitor of the CHE, 2007. • Sheppard, Charles. Presentation to NMMU management on cohort throughput, retention and graduation rates, May 2008 • Snyders, Maritz. Research report: Extended programmes: Practices and Perceptions, August 2009
THANK YOU!!!! maritz.snyders@nmmu.ac.za www.nmmu.ac.za/ces