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07 January 2020 | Story Lacea Loader

Dear Prospective UFS Student,

Please note this important information regarding 2020 admission and registration:
  • Matric results will only be released on 8 January 2020. The UFS will then evaluate all applications for admission.
  • Therefore, admission offers will be made from 9 January 2020 onwards.
  • Final decisions are made subject to the availability of space, academic results, and other entry requirements where applicable.
  • Communication to inform you of your admission status for each programme that you have applied for will be sent from 9 January 2020.

Registration:
  • Registration information will be sent once you have accepted the admission offer.
  • Bloemfontein Campus first-year students must report for registration from 20 to 24 January 2020.
  • No assistance is available before this time.
  • Qwaqwa Campus first-year students must report for registration on 9 January 2020.


Released by:

Lacea Loader (Director: Communication and Marketing)
Telephone: +27 51 401 2584 | +27 83 645 2454
Email: news@ufs.ac.za | loaderl@ufs.ac.za

News Archive

Community project teaches students psychology behind training
2009-05-13

 
Aaron Li and Marisa Smit busy teaching pre-school children how to bake biscuits at the Welpies Pre-primary School of Free State Care in Action in Bloemfontein.
Photo: Supplied


A community project of the third-year industrial psychology students at the University of the Free State (UFS) is helping students to gain a better understanding of the psychology behind training so as to facilitate a higher success rate with regard to their programme. Since 2004 the Faculty of Economic and Management Sciences and the Community Service Learning Office at the UFS have been involved in a very unique community project. The third-year industrial psychology students are required to conduct their own needs analysis to determine the needs of the community allocated to them, after which they must address this need in a viable, sustainable manner. Key to this project is training and development that often involve the unemployed and entrepreneurs. Some training is also focused on smaller children. The 340 students involved in the project this year were responsible for presenting projects at various communities in Mangaung, amongst others: The Life Cycle of a Butterfly; Small-Group Facilitation; Bake and Decorate a Cookie; Sustainable Chicken Project; How to use the Library; Fire Prevention; Peer Pressure; Team Development; Preparation for Interviews and Writing of CVs; and Early Childhood Development.

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