Bearding the Capability Deprivation Machine: The Pedagogical Deal for Post-apartheid Young South Africa

The purpose of this essay is to reflect on how we in South Africa are managing the task of higher education in an environment marked by poverty. The paper makes the argument that the question of how to proceed when considering the relationship between the phenomenon of poverty and the experience of...

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Main Author: Crain Soudien
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of the Western Cape 2013-11-01
Series:Critical Studies in Teaching and Learning
Subjects:
Online Access:http://cristal.epubs.ac.za/index.php/cristal/article/view/8
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spelling doaj-cf3f4dd35d974618ae85df808917fb962020-11-24T23:42:19ZengUniversity of the Western CapeCritical Studies in Teaching and Learning2310-71032013-11-01118Bearding the Capability Deprivation Machine: The Pedagogical Deal for Post-apartheid Young South AfricaCrain Soudien0University of Cape TownThe purpose of this essay is to reflect on how we in South Africa are managing the task of higher education in an environment marked by poverty. The paper makes the argument that the question of how to proceed when considering the relationship between the phenomenon of poverty and the experience of education is regularly resolved through invoking the syllogism that increased levels of education will bring about increased levels of income. Drawing on Sen and his ideas of capability deprivation, it is contended here that income-deprivation ideas by themselves do not adequately encompass the full complexity of how deprivation works. The approach taken here, therefore, is different. It works with the proposition that education needs to respond to the full range of social, cultural and other inhibiting factors with respect to the development of capabilities. Positing, therefore, the contention that human beings need to flourish in all the areas of their social lives and not just the space of work, the paper argues for the need to develop an education system that works with capabilities that are valuable in the full range of social spaces young South Africans inhabit. Using this introduction as a point of departure, the paper begins with an attempt at characterising the phenomenon of poverty and then moves on to look at the challenges the sector faces in teaching and learning with respect to it. Thereafter it provides an overview of the sector’s responses to these challenges and finally, drawing on the idea of capability deprivation, makes a critical assessment of these responses.http://cristal.epubs.ac.za/index.php/cristal/article/view/8Higher education, teaching and learning, equality, race and class
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language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Crain Soudien
spellingShingle Crain Soudien
Bearding the Capability Deprivation Machine: The Pedagogical Deal for Post-apartheid Young South Africa
Critical Studies in Teaching and Learning
Higher education, teaching and learning, equality, race and class
author_facet Crain Soudien
author_sort Crain Soudien
title Bearding the Capability Deprivation Machine: The Pedagogical Deal for Post-apartheid Young South Africa
title_short Bearding the Capability Deprivation Machine: The Pedagogical Deal for Post-apartheid Young South Africa
title_full Bearding the Capability Deprivation Machine: The Pedagogical Deal for Post-apartheid Young South Africa
title_fullStr Bearding the Capability Deprivation Machine: The Pedagogical Deal for Post-apartheid Young South Africa
title_full_unstemmed Bearding the Capability Deprivation Machine: The Pedagogical Deal for Post-apartheid Young South Africa
title_sort bearding the capability deprivation machine: the pedagogical deal for post-apartheid young south africa
publisher University of the Western Cape
series Critical Studies in Teaching and Learning
issn 2310-7103
publishDate 2013-11-01
description The purpose of this essay is to reflect on how we in South Africa are managing the task of higher education in an environment marked by poverty. The paper makes the argument that the question of how to proceed when considering the relationship between the phenomenon of poverty and the experience of education is regularly resolved through invoking the syllogism that increased levels of education will bring about increased levels of income. Drawing on Sen and his ideas of capability deprivation, it is contended here that income-deprivation ideas by themselves do not adequately encompass the full complexity of how deprivation works. The approach taken here, therefore, is different. It works with the proposition that education needs to respond to the full range of social, cultural and other inhibiting factors with respect to the development of capabilities. Positing, therefore, the contention that human beings need to flourish in all the areas of their social lives and not just the space of work, the paper argues for the need to develop an education system that works with capabilities that are valuable in the full range of social spaces young South Africans inhabit. Using this introduction as a point of departure, the paper begins with an attempt at characterising the phenomenon of poverty and then moves on to look at the challenges the sector faces in teaching and learning with respect to it. Thereafter it provides an overview of the sector’s responses to these challenges and finally, drawing on the idea of capability deprivation, makes a critical assessment of these responses.
topic Higher education, teaching and learning, equality, race and class
url http://cristal.epubs.ac.za/index.php/cristal/article/view/8
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