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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

Weideman focuses on misconceptions with regard to survival of Afrikaans
2006-05-19

From the left are Prof Magda Fourie (Vice-Rector: Academic Planning), Prof Gerhardt de Klerk (Dean: Faculty of the Humanities), George Weideman and Prof Bernard  Odendaal (acting head of the UFS  Department of Afrikaans and Dutch, German and French). 
Photo (Stephen Collett):

Weideman focuses on misconceptions with regard to survival of Afrikaans

On the survival of a language a persistent and widespread misconception exists that a “language will survive as long as people speak the language”. This argument ignores the higher functions of a language and leaves no room for the personal and historic meaning of a language, said the writer George Weideman.

He delivered the D.F. Malherbe Memorial Lecture organised by the Department Afrikaans at the University of the Free State (UFS). Dr. Weideman is a retired lecturer and now full-time writer. In his lecture on the writer’s role and responsibility with regard to language, he also focused on the language debate at the University of Stellenbosch (US).

He said the “as-long-as-it-is spoken” misconception ignores the characteristics and growth of literature and other cultural phenomena. Constitutional protection is also not a guarantee. It will not stop a language of being reduced to a colloquial language in which the non-standard form will be elevated to the norm. A language only grows when it standard form is enriched by non-standard forms; not when its standard form withers. The growth or deterioration of a language is seen in the growth or decline in its use in higher functions. The less functions a language has, the smaller its chance to survive.

He said Afrikaans speaking people are credulous and have misplaced trust. It shows in their uncritical attitude with regard to the shifts in university policies, university management and teaching practices. Afrikaners have this credulity perhaps because they were spoilt by white supremacy, or because the political liberation process did not free them from a naïve and slavish trust in government.

If we accept that a university is a kind of barometer for the position of a language, then the institutionalised second placing of Afrikaans at most tertiary institutions is not a good sign for the language, he said.

An additional problem is the multiplying effect with, for instance, education students. If there is no need for Afrikaans in schools, there will also be no  need for Afrikaans at universities, and visa versa.

The tolerance factor of Afrikaans speaking people is for some reasons remarkably high with regard to other languages – and more specifically English. With many Afrikaans speaking people in the post-apartheid era it can be ascribed to their guilt about Afrikaans. With some coloured and mostly black Afrikaans speaking people it can be ascribed to the continued rejection of Afrikaans because of its negative connotation with apartheid – even when Afrikaans is the home language of a large segment of the previously oppressed population.

He said no one disputes the fact that universities play a changing role in a transformed society. The principle of “friendliness” towards other languages does not apply the other way round. It is general knowledge that Afrikaans is, besides isiZulu and isiXhosa, the language most spoken by South Africans.

It is typical of an imperialistic approach that the campaigners for a language will be accused of emotional involvement, of sentimentality, of longing for bygone days, of an unwillingness to focus on the future, he said.

He said whoever ignores the emotional aspect of a language, knows nothing about a language. To ignore the emotional connection with a language, leads to another misconception: That the world will be a better place without conflict if the so-called “small languages” disappear because “nationalism” and “language nationalism” often move closely together. This is one of the main reasons why Afrikaans speaking people are still very passive with regard to the Anglicising process: They are not “immune” to the broad influence that promotes English.

It is left to those who use Afrikaans to fight for the language. This must not take place in isolation. Writers and publishers must find more ways to promote Afrikaans.

Some universities took the road to Anglicision: the US and University of Pretoria need to be referred to, while there is still a future for Afrikaans at the Northwest University and the UFS with its parallel-medium policies. Continued debate is necessary.

It is unpreventable that the protest over what is happening to Afrikaans and the broad Afrikaans speaking community must take on a stronger form, he said.

 

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