Title: Presentation on Green Paper on
1Presentation on Green Paper on Post School
Education Training in South Africa
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2Reasons for the Green Paper
- Establishment of DHET and the bringing together
of - Higher Education (Universities and other higher
education institutions) - Colleges (Public and private FETs and other
public colleges/institutions e.g. nursing
colleges, agricultural colleges, and others
academies and colleges attached to various
government departments) - Levy grant institutions (SETAs and NSF)
- Regulatory frameworks and institutions (NQF,
SAQA, CHE, Umalusi, QCTO) - There is a need to conceptualise all these
components as a single, integrated, coherent and
well articulated post-school system.
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3Objectives of the Green Paper
The Green Paper represents emerging thinking in
the Ministry and Department of Higher Education
and Training. It is intended for publication for
the purpose of consulting stakeholders and the
public. Once the responses to the Green Paper are
received and considered, the Minister will
formulate a White Paper for Cabinet approval.
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4Imperatives for Transformation
- The Green Paper aims to set an agenda for the
DHET that has the following 7 key imperatives for
transformation - Combating discrimination and providing equal
opportunities for education and training and for
all irrespective of - - Socio-Economic Status
- - Race
- - Gender
- - HIV/AIDS status
- - Disability
- Expanding opportunities for people in
disadvantaged areas, particularly rural areas and
informal settlements - A particular focus on expanding opportunities
for youth
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5Challenges Facing the Post School System
- The Green Paper seeks to set out the challenges
facing the post school system and sets out broad
policy for - Expanding post school provision to improve access
- Strengthening the institutions to improve quality
- Setting out a vision and pathways for achieving a
coherent post school system with articulation,
collaboration, and coordination between the
different components, as well as alignment
between the various institutional types and
between education and training institutions and
the labour market.
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62007 CS Not Employed, Not in Education Not
severely disabled18 24 age cohort
18 19 20 21 22 23 24 Total
Unspecified 2,595 2,457 3,786 4,762 4,998 4,054 4,699 27,351
Primary or less 61,056 64,285 70,496 78,564 73,575 75,261 77,425 500,662
Secondary education less than Grade 10 51,192 59,643 73,194 79,050 83,367 81,502 80,649 508,597
Grade 10/Std 8 or higher but less than Grade 12 65,228 94,608 132,158 164,596 176,733 174,325 183,146 990,794
Grade 12/ NTCIII (no exemption) 47,447 65,190 89,292 99,797 100,711 96,139 100,080 598,657
Grade 12/Std 10 (with E) 10,226 13,526 14,778 14,259 16,910 13,869 14,766 98,335
Certificate with Gr 12 2,732 4,025 6,299 8,157 9,672 8,340 7,811 47,035
Diploma with Gr 12 388 1,151 2,464 3,461 6,103 5,733 5,995 25,294
Bachelors degree 188 322 430 1,774 1,460 2,831 2,347 9,352
BTech 6 126 192 312 78 654 414 1,780
Post grad diploma 244 405 400 581 867 2,498
Honours degree 60 220 383 694 337 1,695
Masters/PHD 48 77 110 135 50 420
Total 241,056 305,333 393,441 455,434 474,501 464,119 478,587 2,812,471
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7Categorization of Challenges
- Five Categories of challenges
- Historical burdens
- Inadequate quality, quantity and diversity of
provision - Inadequate and insufficient levels of research
and innovation - Lack of coherence and articulation within the
system - Challenges with regard to the regulatory system
-
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8Challenges Historical Burdens
- The imprint of apartheid is still clearly seen in
our post school institutions - Disadvantaged institutions, especially those in
rural areas of the former bantustans, still
disadvantaged in terms of infrastructure,
teaching facilities and staffing - Even in the advantaged institutions with a
significant number of black and women students,
these students face multiple disadvantages such
as racism, discrimination sexual harassment and
an alien university culture - The unequal schooling system disadvantages mainly
black students as reflected in the post school
system - Disabled students have few opportunities and face
discrimination -
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9Challenges Quality, Quantity and Diversity Issues
- Colleges are weak institutions, enrolments are
too low (359 000 headcount enrolments in 2011)
and campuses are unevenly distributed - In most colleges and a number of universities,
education quality is too low - Adult education has been neglected. Enrolment in
Public Adult Education Centres is only 312 000
students. Most centres do not have their own
premises or full-time staff - Workplace-based training is inadequate and the
apprenticeship system has deteriorated since
mid-80s - Funding models are biased towards institutions
that are already strong. Student funding is still
insufficient -
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10Challenges Research and Innovation
- Research output has increased markedly since 1994
but numbers of researchers have not increased
proportionately - This may be because the funding has encouraged
greater research productivity per researcher, but
there are insufficient post-graduates being
produced to replenish the researcher population.
The DSTs Ten-Year Innovation Plan states that
PhDs in Science, Engineering and Technology must
increase five-fold - Increased production of masters and doctoral
graduates is also essential in producing the next
generation of academics and researchers -
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11Challenges The Regulatory System
- The NQF is complex and not well understood
- There is not a clear demarcation between the
functions of the three quality councils - Decentralisation of quality assurance to the
SETAs has led to a lack of uniformity of
standards - Contractualisation of provision (especially by
SETAs) has led to unintended consequences such as
short-term thinking and a tendency towards a
contract compliance culture which reinforces
the focus on quantity and throughput rather than
on learning and impact. -
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12FET Colleges Main Campuses
13FET Colleges Satellite Campuses
14FET Colleges Main and Satellite Campuses
15Universities and FET Colleges
16Expansion
- By 2030, we aim for university enrolments of
1.5m, a projected participation rate of 23, and
4 000 000 enrolments (approximately 60) in
colleges or other post-school institutions - These other institutions would include a new
institutional type, provisionally called
Community Education and Training Centres - There will be at least one institution offering
FET programmes in every district in the country.
Some of these will be in multi-purpose education
centres - Expansion will pay particular attention to rural
areas - Distance education must be expanded across the
system -
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17Colleges
- Focussed attention will be given to improving
quality of FET Colleges through appropriate
programmes, upgrading of lecturers, capacity
building for management and governance, improved
learners support, IT systems, partnerships with
employers - Other public colleges (e.g. nursing, agricultural
colleges, PALAMA, various departmental colleges
and academies) need to be brought into a single,
coherent system with quality assurance and
systems of articulation with the rest of the
education and training system. The DHET will need
to improve coordination with other departments
which have colleges/academies OR possibly take
over some or all of the functions of these
institutions. -
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18Higher Education, Research and Innovation
- Expansion will include two new universities
- We must develop a differentiated university
system. The Green Paper outlines principles for
differentiation - Major policy thrusts for universities aim to
achieve - - Improved success and throughput rates
- - More and better research and innovation
- - Improved access for students (expansion
NSFAS) - - Expanded African language teaching and
developing them into languages of science and the
academy - - Expanding post graduate outputs and developing
the next generation of academics - - An improved funding formula and reversal of
backlogs in HDIs -
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19The Levy Grant Institutions
- The SETAs and the NSF must be strengthened as
institutions in governance, management and
effectiveness - SETAs must become experts on the labour market in
their sectors and share their information with
all stakeholders, including government
departments - The SETAs must allocate more of their resources
on full occupational training programmes and not
only on short courses - They must build bridges between employers and
colleges or universities, promote partnerships
and assist with workplace placements for students - The NSF must provide funding for national
priority training not covered by the SETAs -
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20The NQF, Quality Councils Professional Bodies
- The NQF must be streamlined, simplified and made
easier for users to understand - The NQF must tackle unintended consequences, with
regard to qualifications which do not articulate
easily with the rest of the system (e.g. NC(V),
B. Tech.) - There is a need to rationalise the Quality
Councils to ensure that their functions do not
overlap and sometimes work at cross purposes. A
number of options are offered for public
discussion - Regulatory role of professional bodies. They
should safeguard professional standards without
being gate-keepers who seek to restrict the
supply of professionals -
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21Articulation, Collaboration and Co-ordination
- The creation of a system in which all
institutions reinforce one another in mutually
supportive ways is one of the key principles
underlying the Green Paper - For example, universities should step up their
research on the labour market and the skills
development institutions (including the SETAs,
FET colleges and community education and training
centres) - Universities should train college staff
- SETAs must fund and support public institutions,
helping to build relationships between education
and employers. -
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22Every Workplace a Training Space
- The essence of successful vocational and
professional training system is the combination
of theory with practice and therefore the
combination of classroom based training with
workplace training - The Green Paper emphasises the need to build on
the National Skills Accord to ensure that all
employers provide workplace experience in the
form of apprenticeships, learnerships and
internships - It is our aim that the private sector,
state-owned enterprises, the public service,
municipalities and other organs of state (police,
defence force, etc) all ensure that their
workplaces are also training spaces
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23Improving Skills Planning
- The foundation of any planning process is the
existence of comprehensive, accurate, integrated
and effectively analysed data - Data systems are weak throughout the higher
education and training system including the DHET
- Strengthening these systems and the data
available on labour market skills needs must be a
priority
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24Way forward
- Publication of Green Paper for public comment
- Development of a White Paper on the basis of
public comment - Submission of the draft White Paper to Cabinet
for final approval as government policy - Alignment of legislation, regulations and
departmental practice with the White Paper - Efficient, effective and vigorous implementation
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25Thank You