This article investigates a general perception amongst academics that outcomes-based education and training (OBET), together with the prescriptions around the national qualifications framework, (NQF) have an inhibiting impact on academic freedom in higher education in South Africa. It proposes an alternative view, namely that academic freedom is, in fact, greatly enhanced by the architectural design of OBET. This argument is built around the distinction between educational inputs and outputs, which represent the domains of academics and quality assurance agencies respectively. It acknowledges that freedom should be exercised within the context of national imperatives, as long as these imperatives themselves are not educationally res...
The right to academic freedom is a contested one, often held to exist only in the context of tertiar...
This article argues that in post-apartheid South Africa, the discourse on academic freedom is conjoi...
In this article, we offer four arguments against excessive state involvement in, and regulation of, ...
This article investigates a general perception amongst academics that outcomes-based education and t...
Academic freedom can be invoked to index different claims. According to Moodie (1996), there are thr...
Invocations and defenses of academic freedom in South Africa should not necessarily be taken at face...
This Statement was published in the South African Journal of Science, 106(3/4), (2010). Academic Fre...
In the rush to generate and register standards and qualifications in terms of the National Qualifica...
The limits of academic freedom are disputed in South African contexts, as elsewhere. The recent Rhod...
This article reflects on the obligations that the principles of academic freedom places on a univers...
Higher Education transformation in South Africa requires a synergy of creative strategies to engage ...
In this commentary, we engage with Yunus Ballim's article in this issue that explores how academic f...
This article identifies some of the implications of corporate forms of higher education governance f...
The perception held by academic staff of programme re-accreditation has been a major problem in Sout...
The real point of democratic reform, what I have been calling institutional reform, is not just to c...
The right to academic freedom is a contested one, often held to exist only in the context of tertiar...
This article argues that in post-apartheid South Africa, the discourse on academic freedom is conjoi...
In this article, we offer four arguments against excessive state involvement in, and regulation of, ...
This article investigates a general perception amongst academics that outcomes-based education and t...
Academic freedom can be invoked to index different claims. According to Moodie (1996), there are thr...
Invocations and defenses of academic freedom in South Africa should not necessarily be taken at face...
This Statement was published in the South African Journal of Science, 106(3/4), (2010). Academic Fre...
In the rush to generate and register standards and qualifications in terms of the National Qualifica...
The limits of academic freedom are disputed in South African contexts, as elsewhere. The recent Rhod...
This article reflects on the obligations that the principles of academic freedom places on a univers...
Higher Education transformation in South Africa requires a synergy of creative strategies to engage ...
In this commentary, we engage with Yunus Ballim's article in this issue that explores how academic f...
This article identifies some of the implications of corporate forms of higher education governance f...
The perception held by academic staff of programme re-accreditation has been a major problem in Sout...
The real point of democratic reform, what I have been calling institutional reform, is not just to c...
The right to academic freedom is a contested one, often held to exist only in the context of tertiar...
This article argues that in post-apartheid South Africa, the discourse on academic freedom is conjoi...
In this article, we offer four arguments against excessive state involvement in, and regulation of, ...