[lg policy] new Vice-Chancellor of the University of Pretoria

Harold Schiffman haroldfs at gmail.com
Wed Mar 27 14:56:55 UTC 2019


Professor Tawana Kupe is the new Vice-Chancellor of the University of
Pretoria. With a student population of 53,000 and a rise in student
activism over fees and access to accommodation, Kupe has high aims to
rebrand Tukkies as a Pan-African university that provides quality education
that inspires students to help solve the continent’s complex problems.

Within his five-year contract as Vice-Chancellor (VC) of the University of
Pretoria (UP), Tawana Kupe plans to leave a legacy of “an institution that
can be counted on with a changing context” and “provoke students” to think
about the situations around them as agents of change.

Kupe was appointed VC to succeed Prof Cheryl de la Rey, who has taken up
Vice-Chancellorship of the University of Canterbury in New Zealand.

Kupe started his more than 30 years in academia as a tutor and in 1988,
became a lecturer at the University of Zimbabwe. In 1999 he was appointed
lecturer of Media studies at Rhodes University where he founded a new
course called African Media. He holds a BA Honours degree and Masters in
English from the University of Zimbabwe, as well as a DPhil in Media
Studies from the University of Oslo in Norway.

He was interested in what kinds of media could speak to Africans, as the
models and techniques he had learnt were Western-based: “Education is not
about what I read, but how does what I read provoke my thoughts on an
issue?”

He went to become the founding head of the Media Studies Department at the
University of the Witwatersrand. Before his appointment as VC of UP, he
served as Executive Dean of the Wits Faculty of Humanities for six years,
from January 2007 to December 2012, after serving as the head of the then
Wits School of Literature and Language Studies.

>From his experience at the University of Zimbabwe, Rhodes and then Wits, he
says he has learnt that universities thrive or fail depending on their
funding models, and the ability of the management to have a
“well-articulated” educational system in place.

The “African university is rising in a changing society” and “poor
management and inefficient skills” pose a risk in the ability of
universities to create a supportive environment for students to own their
education, says Kupe.

UP has South Africa’s second largest student population after Unisa and he
plans to have 75,000 students admitted to the university by 2025, with a
special focus on continental students and lecturers, but without losing
focus on local students.

Kupe wants to encourage “curiosity-driven research that matters” where
students provide solutions to “poverty, unemployment and sustainability
challenges” in Africa.

“We are a growing and young population and also the poorest in the human
development index, not because of a lack of human and natural resources,”
says Kupe.

According to Kupe, Africa lacks a “critical mass” and a “well of knowledge
and skills” which makes it easier for “others to take advantage of the
human and natural resources” of the continent.

And although news on politics and development on the continent is mostly
bad, he says he is always looking for a “breakthrough moment” in the media
regarding some progress in Africa that might be a “teachable moment”.

“Some things are moving but are imperceptible to your view,” said Kupe.

As a literature major, he learnt early on that reading can “illuminate and
expand your mind” with the “use of imagery and symbolism” to allow someone
to “see the world in a grain of sand”. And this mindset is what he hopes
his students will embrace in his tenure as VC.

Authors like *Ng <https://ngugiwathiongo.com/>ũ
<https://ngugiwathiongo.com/>g <https://ngugiwathiongo.com/>ĩ
<https://ngugiwathiongo.com/> wa Thiong’o <https://ngugiwathiongo.com/>*
 and *Ousmane Semb <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ousmane_Semb%C3%A8ne>è
<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ousmane_Semb%C3%A8ne>ne
<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ousmane_Semb%C3%A8ne>* have inspired Kupe in
their ability to “demonstrate the frustration of the liberation movement”
even way back in the 1960s. Issues that Kupe says South Africa is grappling
with today.

In his honours dissertation, Kupe chose Ngũgĩ as a subject to analyse how
“education and class consciousness” became a “route to a class elite in
Africa”. These authors, says Kupe, predicted the post-colonial situation of
“Big Man” politics, corruption and State Capture.

And since human beings like narratives, literature provides a critique not
only of the self, but also of the social condition, says Kupe.

Kupe has already received criticism for the recent implementation of the
language policy at UP that has removed Afrikaans as a medium of
instruction. And although he says the decision was taken in 2016, he stands
behind it as English has become a “currency” used across the academic world.

To develop the other indigenous languages to use in academia will take “a
lot of political will” to “mobilise resources to develop an African
language to challenge the currency of English”, Kupe says.

Former Tanzanian President Julius Nyerere made KiSwahili the official
language in schools, but did not have the material and technology to
adequately teach it at higher education levels, Kupe says. In the 1980s,
they had to change back to English.

We can’t ignore the historical hegemony of English and we do not challenge
it by declaration, it involves marshalling factors, says Kupe.

However, the new VC must still count on the National Student Financial Aid
System (NSFAS) to fund students who are not able to afford fees. This has
been a contentious issue within universities as protests flared up at the
beginning of the year at Wits and the Durban University of Technology (DUT).

UP has been holding fund-raising initiatives to assist students who are
part of the “missing middle” (families earning between R350,000 and
R600,000 a year) and who cannot afford to pay the full fees.

“A large number of students are committed to their studies, but the lack of
funds and housing can create alienation and frustrations that make students
not take advantage of these opportunities,” said Kupe.

According to Kupe, the Student Representative Council (SRC) brings a list
of students who need help and through a “combination of funding schemes”
the finance office “looks at a bespoke solution for the student”, depending
on their circumstances.

“It is in the best interest of the university to help students pay their
fees.” If students are not able to pay fees and not come back to the
university, it is a “lose-lose situation” as the university depends on a
government subsidy depending on how many students are admitted, he said.

The University of Pretoria has over the past years been in the spotlight
regarding rape allegations and students have held silent protests to raise
awareness of safety on campus.

For Kupe, there needs to be “a lot of advocacy on what is appropriate
behaviour” as the university is “serious about gender-based violence”. He
plans to host a number of programmes to “inculcate a new set of values” to
tackle this systemic issue.

“It is incumbent on all of us to protect the ideal that being human is not
to violate others,” says Kupe. *DM*

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 Harold F. Schiffman

Professor Emeritus of
 Dravidian Linguistics and Culture
Dept. of South Asia Studies
University of Pennsylvania
Philadelphia, PA 19104-6305

Phone:  (215) 898-7475
Fax:  (215) 573-2138

Email:  haroldfs at gmail.com
http://ccat.sas.upenn.edu/~haroldfs/

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