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22 March 2023 | Story Samkelo Fetile | Photo Supplied
Prof Corli Witthuhn
Professor Corli Witthuhn, Vice Rector: Research and Internationalisation, applauding the LIS for the strides taken over the years.

The University of the Free State (UFS) Library and Information Services (LIS) recently hosted the Undergraduate and Honours Research Seminar (UHLIS) at the Albert Wessels Auditorium, Bloemfontein campus. LIS in line with the teaching and learning goals informing the Universities’ strategy called ‘Vision 130’, is committed in its mission to play an active role in equipping and supporting Undergraduate and Honours students with the tools, skills, and knowledge needed to achieve academic excellence and promoting life-long learning. 

The seminar showcased the best assignments by students from the faculties of Natural and Agricultural Sciences, Humanities, and Health Sciences. The selected assignments were converted to a presentation for the seminar. In her opening address, Ms Jeannete Molopyane, Director of LIS, commended the efforts of academics and faculty librarians, “This collaborative effort between the academics and the faculty librarians is a step in the right direction to embedded librarianship,” she said. Guest speaker Professor Corli Witthuhn, Vice Rector: Research and Internationalisation, applauded the LIS for the strides taken over the years. “The submissions were exceptional and of a very high standard, it only proves how much the LIS has been working over the years.”

Professor Pearl Sithole, Campus Vice Principal: Academic & Research, presented the keynote address and enthralled the audience with her presentation “Grasp the fundamental logic of Research”. She shared her concerns about the intentions of researchers on the African continent regarding the process of knowledge production. She cautioned students against “minimalistic tendencies”. She said that research study must go beyond narrow interests, for example, focusing or relying on visual illustration or presentation (e.g., bar graphs, pie charts) or merely in pursuit of a job.
Professor Sithole encouraged LISHURS participants to adopt a holistic approach in their research by engaging various perspectives to address and provide solutions to solve pressing societal issues on the African continent.” Decolonial thinking in scholarly research is a must”, she concluded.

All presentations were adjudicated, and the first placed in each of the following categories were presented with trophies and all participants received certificates: Undergraduate individual; Group assignment; and Honours submissions.  
The winners in the categories below are: 

Undergraduate Individual Assignments: 

1st place - Basic Training in Police Brutality: Exploring the Effects of SAPS Academies’ Basic Police
Development Learning Programmes on the Prevalence of Police Brutality in South Africa, by Chandre Boonzaaie (Humanities)

2nd place - Research Field Work Report on Visitors’ experiences of the National Museum in Bloemfontein, by Zandile Tapileno (Humanities)

3rd place - The processes of photosynthesis and photorespiration their energy output, by Jafta Ramathibe (Natural and Agricultural Sciences)

Group Assignments: 
1st place - MSSM: Prevalence of sleep deprivation among medical students at the University of the Free State by Morgan du Toit, Bianca van der Vyver, Omphemetse Matshediso, Angelo Uys, Carolyn van der Merwe, Hanno Geldenhuys, Renemari Human, Ruben Rodriguez (Group 3 – Health Sciences)

2nd place - A decade of filing: what can you learn from kidney biopsies received at the Universitas Academic Laboratory in the Free State, South Africa? by Avisha Sewpersad, Reabetswe Maleka, Thato Kelebogile Majoe, Bokang Mokoatsi, Amkelwa Mgogodlana, Lesego Serero, Lionell Katlego Kere (Group 1 – Health Sciences)

Honours: 

1st place - Urban Agriculture in poor neighbourhoods: The case of Ekangala, Bronkhorstspruit, Pretoria, South Africa, by Erica Mashanye (Natural and Agricultural Sciences)

2nd place - Time and Trees: An Eco-Critical Analysis of Temporality in Richard Powers' (2018) The Overstory, by Ananke Meintjies (Humanities)

3rd place - Elucidating the defensive role of Cell wall modifying and hexaose producing enzymes induced in wheat infected by Puccinia triticina, by Ninkoe Lebusa (Natural and Agricultural Sciences)

The Floating Trophy was won by the Faculty of Humanities for the most number of assignments submitted. “The LIS would like to acknowledge all the faculties for their continued support of the LIS. Ms Jeannette Molopyane said that this initiative is one among many other initiatives undertaken by LIS that endorses the tenets of Vision 130; striving for academic excellence, quality, and impact”.

News Archive

UFS in forefront with ASGI-SA initiative
2006-05-10

At the conceptualisation colloquium and stakeholder dialogue were from the left Dr Aldo Stroebel (senior researcher at the UFS Research Development Directorate), Dr Edith Vries (acting Chief Executive Officer of the Independent Development Trust) and Prof Frans Swanepoel (Director: UFS Research Development Directorate).

UFS in forefront with ASGI-SA initiative

Two staff members of the University of the Free State (UFS) have been appointed as members of the advisory board of the national programme for the creation of small enterprises and jobs in the second economy.  This programme forms part of government’s Accelerated and Shared Growth Initiative of South Africa (ASGI-SA).

Prof Frans Swanepoel, Director of the UFS Research Development Directorate and Dr Aldo Stroebel, senior researcher at the UFS Research Development Directorate, are working with a team of experts from the UFS on a draft implementation strategy for the national programme.  Both Prof Swanepoel and Dr Stroebel are also associated to the UFS Centre for Sustainable Agriculture.
 
“The strategy is being developed in collaboration with institutions like the Independent Development Trust, the Department of Agriculture, the National Development Agency and the Department of Trade and Industry,” says Prof  Swanepoel.  

The other team members of the UFS are Prof Basie Wessels, Director of the  Mangaung-University Community Partnership Programme (MUCPP) and Mr  Benedict Mokoena, project manager at the MUCPP.

Dr Stroebel was also member of the organising committee of a conceptualisation colloquium and stakeholder dialogue that was recently presented in Johannesburg.  The conference was attended by more than 400 delegates from government departments, higher-education institutions and civil society, including Dr Kobus Laubscher, member of the UFS Council.

The conference was facilitated by Ms Vuyo Mahlati, previously from the WK Kellogg Foundation’s Africa programme and opened by Ms Thoko Didiza, Minister of Agriculture and Land Affairs.   

“The colloquium formed the basis of an induction workshop during which a group of 150 individuals (50 teams of three) from all nine provinces, identified to initiate the implementation of the national programme, was trained and orientated towards an induction manual in collaboration with Hand-in-Hand, an Indian counterpart,” says Prof Swanepoel.

Dr Stroebel and Mr Benedict Mokoena formed part of the team to conceptualise and finalise this training manual.  The induction training includes a case study of a successful community self-help partnership model, namely the MUCPP at the UFS. Prof Wessels and Mr Mokoena are both playing a leading role in the further development of subsequent training initiatives throughout South Africa, in partnership with the relevant provincial departments.

“The involvement of the UFS in the programme is a compliment to us.  It reflects the value government sees in the use of academics and experts in the management of the ASGI-SA initiative.  It is also an indication of one of the aims of the UFS to play a role in South Africa and Africa and in the transformation and change that is taking place in our country,” says Prof Swanepoel.  

Media release
Issued by: Lacea Loader
Media Representative
Tel:   (051) 401-2584
Cell:  083 645 2454
E-mail:  loaderl.stg@mail.uovs.ac.za
10 May 2006

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