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A Linguistic Evaluation of the South African Higher Education Sector: A Reflection on 30 Years of Democracy (1994-2024)
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- Author(s): Tebogo J. Rakgogo (ORCID Tebogo J. Rakgogo (ORCID 0000-0002-8693-2559)
- Language:
English
- Source:
Transformation in Higher Education. 2024 9.
- Publication Date:
2024
- Document Type:
Journal Articles
Information Analyses
- Additional Information
- Availability:
AOSIS. 15 Oxford Street, Durbanville, Cape Town, 7550 South Africa. Tel: +27-21-975-2602; Fax: +27-21-975-4635; e-mail:
[email protected]; Web site: https://thejournal.org.za/index.php/thejournal
- Peer Reviewed:
Y
- Source:
14
- Education Level:
Higher Education
Postsecondary Education
- Subject Terms:
- Subject Terms:
- ISSN:
2415-0991
2519-5638
- Abstract:
The core objective of this article is to evaluate the progress made in linguistic development over the past three decades, with a specific focus on the role of language and its philosophical underpinnings in reshaping and decolonising South African higher education landscape. Linguistic imperialism as a conceptual framework alongside the Framework for Policy Analysis were employed to inform, guide and support the author's contention that linguistic hegemony is still dominating the discourse within the higher education sector. The research adopts a qualitative approach, utilising content analysis for data analysis purposes. The findings of the article reveal that despite 30 years of democracy, the influence of colonial-era language philosophy and western epistemologies persists. It is suggested that comprehensive implementation of language policies could effectively address the transformation and decolonisation agenda. It further advocates for alignment between policy and practice through pragmatic, intentional and transformative initiatives aimed at identifying, interrogating and disrupting the coloniality of power and its western epistemologies, as far as language policy and practice are concerned. In conclusion, the article emphasises the urgent need to counteract existing linguistic imperialism and hegemony embedded within colonial knowledge systems by enacting transformative policies that will prioritise student access, success, linguistic diversity, linguistic justice, epistemic justice and social cohesion within the framework of higher education. Contribution: The aim is to provide guidance to language policy implementers in South African universities by offering an overview of the linguistic advancements achieved between 1994 to 2024.
- Abstract:
As Provided
- Publication Date:
2024
- Accession Number:
EJ1425866
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