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04 February 2020 | Story Leonie Bollleurs | Photo Supplied
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From left; Dr Alice Brink; Dr Oliver Nyambi and Dr Sandy-Lynn Steenhuisen.

The UFS is committed to continuing its support to ensure that they develop their potential excellence to become future world leaders in their respective disciplines. These were the words of Vice-Rector: Research, Prof Corli Witthuhn, in support of three of the University of the Free State’s (UFS) young scholars selected for the prestigious DHET Future Professors Programme.

Drs Sandy-Lynn Steenhuisen, Senior Lecturer in the Department of Plant Sciences (UFS Qwaqwa Campus); Oliver Nyambi, Senior Lecturer in the Department of English (UFS Qwaqwa Campus); and Alice Brink, Senior Lecturer in the Department of Chemistry (UFS Bloemfontein Campus), were selected for the first cohort in the programme. 

Prof Witthuhn states: “The university is very proud to have three of our young academics selected for the national Future Professors Programme. All three of these outstanding researchers have Y1 ratings from the National Research Foundation (NRF), reflecting the quality of their research and the significant international recognition they enjoy. Being part of the programme presents these three colleagues with a fantastic opportunity for further professional development.”

Investment in future SA professoriate

This prestige programme is an initiative of the Department of Higher Education and Training (DHET) to invest in the future South African professoriate. According to Prof Jonathan Jansen, Project Leader: DHET Future Professors Programme, the selection process was both rigorous and highly competitive in producing the cohort for this programme. 

Nominations were received from 26 universities and only 29 candidates were selected for what Prof Jansen describes as “a strong and cohesive college of future South African scholars”.

Knowing how few academics were chosen, Dr Steenhuisen describes her selection as both scary and exciting, and a complete surprise. 

“I am hoping to learn from others’ experiences and academic journeys, and that the programme will give me focus and direction in a strong promotional track. I never thought one of my ambitions would be to become a professor, but through mentorship and other initiatives like this programme, I can see it becoming a reality with the right guidance.”

She also dreams of seeing young academics discover the most awesome phenomena in nature under her guidance. Dr Steenhuisen hopes to inspire undergraduate students to see the world through different eyes, letting the wonder of the natural diversity around them give them hope.

Opportunity for international exposure

Dr Nyambi, currently an Alexander von Humboldt Fellow in Germany since 2018, says he cherishes the international placement part of this programme. “I know what an opportunity like this means in terms of the quality of engagements, collaborations, and even funding that comes with such international exposure. The programme also presents an exciting opportunity for networking, sharing, learning, and peer-reviewing with some of South Africa’s best scholars.”

Dr Nyambi believes that the UFS is investing much in the development of its scholars. He states: “I see the selection as attesting to the immense potential of the campus to produce highly rated scholars who can improve the quality of both research and graduates at the UFS. I have benefited a lot from various efforts by the university to enhance the research capacity and profile of the campus, and I believe that more such prestigious accolades are in store for researchers on the campus.

As an academic, he believes that teaching, motivating, and instilling a zeal in students on the Qwaqwa Campus to reach beyond their previously disadvantaged backgrounds, comes with a huge challenge. “Becoming what I want my students to aspire to, puts me in a good stead to influence them,” he says. 

Dr Brink feels it is a great honour to be selected for this competitive programme. “The inputs and advice from the academic leaders in this fellowship will be valued, particularly as researchers such as myself need to obtain a balance between research excellence, finding solutions for current world problems, while also striving to explore uncharted waters within my field of chemistry,” she says.



News Archive

Teachers should deal with diversity in education - Prof. Francis
2010-10-08

At the occasion were, from the left: Prof. Jonathan Jansen, Rector and Vice-Chancellor of the University of the Free State (UFS); Prof. Francis; and Prof. Driekie Hay, Vice-Rector: Teaching and Learning at the UFS.
Photo: Jaco van der Merwe

Prof. Dennis Francis, the Dean of the Faculty of Education at the University of the Free State (UFS), recently delivered his inaugural lecture on Troubling Diversity in South African Education on the Main Campus in Bloemfontein.

He urged teachers to be open to what “diversity” might mean in a particular context and how diversity relates to either inclusion or exclusion.

“An approach that promotes the inclusion of all must be based on an understanding of how exclusion operates in ways that may have typical patterns of oppression, but differ in the specific ways that exclusion is expressed and becomes normalised in that context,” he said.

“The good teacher thus seeks to understand how these forms of exclusion may develop in the school’s context and respond through taking thoughtful action to challenge them. It may require creating a climate that enables the silent to speak and recognising that not all groups communicate in exactly the same ways.”

He said teachers also had to affirm the experiential base of learners and students. He said there was an assumption that students would be more effective practitioners if their own experience were validated and explored.

“It is crucial that the students’ own history is treated as valuable and is a critical part of the data that are reflected,” he said. “Equally important is that such stories and similar activities are intentionally processed to enable students to make the connections between personal experience and relevant theory.”

He also urged them to challenge the ways in which knowledge had been framed through oppression.

“Schools are often characterised by messages that draw on one or another form of oppression. Thus, expectations are subtly or in some cases unsubtly communicated, e.g. that girls are not good at physics, or that, while white learners are strong in abstract thought, African learners have untapped creativity, and so on,” he continued.

“For someone to integrate into their role as educators a commitment against oppression means confronting obstacles that one may previously have shied away from, such as challenging authority, naming privilege, emphasising the power relations that exist between social groups, listening to people one has previously ignored, and risking being seen as deviant, troublesome or unpopular.”

Furthermore, Prof. Francis said dealing with diversity in education was always affectively loaded for both students and teachers. He said in South Africa one injunction from educators was to be “sensitive” and thus avoid risking engagement with the contentious issues around imbalances of power.

“If both students and teachers are to confront issues of oppression and power in any meaningful way, we need to design more purposely for the difficulties they will encounter, for example, creating a classroom environment that promotes safety and trust so that all students are able to confront and deal with prejudice and discrimination. Classroom environments will need to balance the affective and cognitive in addressing issues of diversity and social justice,” he added.

He also said that teachers should recognise the need to complement changing attitudes with attempts to change the structural aspects of oppressions.

“To prevent superficial commitments to change, it is important for students to explore barriers that prevent them from confronting oppressive attitudes and behaviours. In this way students are able to learn and see the structural aspects of oppression,” he said.

“Equally important, however, is to get students to examine the benefits associated with challenging oppression. A fair amount of time must therefore be spent on developing strategies with students which they will be able to use practically in challenging oppression.”

He also advised educators to affirm the capacity of staff and learners to act and learn in ways that do not replicate patterns of oppression.

“Many South African schools have survived both the harsh repression of apartheid and the continuing legacy of oppression of various kinds. Despite that, we are often as educators made aware of the ways in which young people in particular affirm themselves and each other in creative and confident ways,” he concluded.

Media Release
Issued by: Lacea Loader
Director: Strategic Communication (acg)
Tel: 051 401 2584
Cell: 083 645 2454
E-mail: loaderl@ufs.ac.za  
7 October 2010
 

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