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Educ. Res.  Rev.


Vol. 4 No. 6



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Educational Research and Reviews Vol. 4 (6), pp. 310-315,  June 2009          
ISSN 1990-3839 © 2009 Academic Journals

 

 

Full Length Research Paper

 

Africanisation of education and the search for relevance and context

 

Vuyisile Msila

 

Faculty of Education, University of Johannesburg, P.O. Box 524, Auckland Park, South Africa. E-mail: vmsila@hotmail.com, vmsila@uj.ac.za. Tel: 011 5594318.

 

Accepted 25 June, 2009

Abstract

As the 21st century dawned, some African intellectuals were already contemplating an education system based on African philosophy and African values. These intellectuals were motioning for an education system that would uphold the indigenous knowledge systems (Makgoba, 1996; Seepe, 2004; Higgs and Van Wyk, 2007). This group also contends that through education, African societies will be enhanced if education reflects the local indigenous knowledge systems. Other critics though, believe that africanising education institutions, will not only lower standards, but that it will also be incongruent to globalisation as indigenous knowledge systems will not be compatible with modernisation. The article comprises of a literature study focusing on the challenges arising as a result of several stakeholders, whose proposals include the africanisation of knowledge in formal education institutions in Africa. The article also examines whether formal (africanised) education has the potential to democratise and transform society. As South Africa is gradually changing socially and politically, many see education as a vehicle for improving the political, social and economic landscape.

 

Key words: Africanisation, African renaissance, African philosophy, indigenous, Indigenous knowledge systems (IKS).

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