Issues of intellectual and cultural hegemony have long been critical foci in education debates in South Africa. This is evidenced in present times by the call for an African Renaissance in education, as well as, a growing discourse that demands the acknowledgement and inclusion of indigenous knowledge systems in the South African education system. This article considers the epistemological question that centres around the debate of whether there is, in fact, an indigenous African way of knowing, and if so, what the implications for higher education research would be. South African Journal of Higher Education Vol. 21 (4) 2007: pp. 668-67
Even though the term curriculum has its origin in higher education it is neglected term in discourse...
This article discusses the manufactured absence of African epistemologies, what we refer to as ‘epis...
No Abstract Available South African Journal of Higher Education Vol.18(3) 2004: 65-8
AbstractIssues of intellectual and cultural hegemony have long been critical foci in education debat...
Higher education, and education generally, is a prime site for the transmission, facilitation, devel...
In this article we reflect critically on the call for the establishment of a program for Indigenous ...
‘Africanisation’ of higher education is generally understood to involve institutional transformation...
This paper explores some of the key elements or focal areas in the discourse(s) of transformation in...
Following the first democratic election in South Africa in 1994, there has been a strong drive towar...
The liberation of Africa and its peoples from centuries of racially discriminatory colonial rule and...
The importance of innovation in higher education is recognised in South African educational discours...
Higher education in South Africa is faced with an important challenge, how it will cope with the ten...
The struggle for valuing endogenous knowledge, decolonising methodologies, liberating education, and...
Aim. The purpose of this article is to challenge the notion that a largely Eurocentric education is ...
BACKGROUND : South Africa’s institutions of higher learning are currently experiencing a d...
Even though the term curriculum has its origin in higher education it is neglected term in discourse...
This article discusses the manufactured absence of African epistemologies, what we refer to as ‘epis...
No Abstract Available South African Journal of Higher Education Vol.18(3) 2004: 65-8
AbstractIssues of intellectual and cultural hegemony have long been critical foci in education debat...
Higher education, and education generally, is a prime site for the transmission, facilitation, devel...
In this article we reflect critically on the call for the establishment of a program for Indigenous ...
‘Africanisation’ of higher education is generally understood to involve institutional transformation...
This paper explores some of the key elements or focal areas in the discourse(s) of transformation in...
Following the first democratic election in South Africa in 1994, there has been a strong drive towar...
The liberation of Africa and its peoples from centuries of racially discriminatory colonial rule and...
The importance of innovation in higher education is recognised in South African educational discours...
Higher education in South Africa is faced with an important challenge, how it will cope with the ten...
The struggle for valuing endogenous knowledge, decolonising methodologies, liberating education, and...
Aim. The purpose of this article is to challenge the notion that a largely Eurocentric education is ...
BACKGROUND : South Africa’s institutions of higher learning are currently experiencing a d...
Even though the term curriculum has its origin in higher education it is neglected term in discourse...
This article discusses the manufactured absence of African epistemologies, what we refer to as ‘epis...
No Abstract Available South African Journal of Higher Education Vol.18(3) 2004: 65-8