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The transition of Public Adult Learning Centres (PALCs) to Community Education and Training Colleges (CETCs): Perspectives and experiences of a selection of management and lecturer staff in the greater Cape Town area

In 2013, the Department of Higher Education established a new institutional form for the provision of adult education, the Community Education and Training Colleges (CETCs). The growing number of unemployed youths that are not in learning institutions as well as the limited opportunities provided by...

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Main Author: Mginywa, Nondumiso
Other Authors: Cooper, Linda
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: School of Education 2021
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access_status_str Open Access
author Mginywa, Nondumiso
author2 Cooper, Linda
author_browse Cooper, Linda
Mginywa, Nondumiso
author_facet Cooper, Linda
Mginywa, Nondumiso
author_sort Mginywa, Nondumiso
collection Thesis
description In 2013, the Department of Higher Education established a new institutional form for the provision of adult education, the Community Education and Training Colleges (CETCs). The growing number of unemployed youths that are not in learning institutions as well as the limited opportunities provided by the pre-existing Public Adult Learning Centres (PALCs), set the context for the transitioning of PALCs into CETCs. This transition marks one of the biggest changes to the adult education landscape historically in South Africa but has thus far been the subject of limited research. This study focuses on the experiences and perspectives of a selection of role players of this transition, in particular, those of managers and lecturers within the greater Cape Town area. The study was situated within an interpretive research paradigm with its emphasis on experience and interpretation and adopted a case study approach. A range of documents provided background data, while the main body of data was collected via semi-structured interviews. Adopting a thematic approach, the analysis focuses on how the policy changes have affected governance, experiences of the new institutional context and perspectives on lecturer qualifications. A further focus is on the views of key role players on the purposes of the CETCs and locating these within different theoretical traditions. The analysis also explored views on the professionalization of adult education and training, and how these compare with broader conceptual approaches to professionalisation in the literature. The study concludes that centralization of governance has had negative consequences for the management and lecturers represented in the sample and seems to be at odds with the ethos of institutional autonomy that usually characterises higher education. At the same time, the transition has presented opportunities for the CETCs to collaborate with different organisations to create skills development opportunities for their constituencies, especially for the increasing number of younger students in the CLCs. The evidence also suggests that while policies talk of CETCs continuing South Africa's historical traditions of transformative adult education, the respondents hold a more humanist view of their purpose, combined with some elements of a human capital approach. Respondents' views on professionalisation were largely instrumental, relating perhaps to continuing poor conditions of employment and scarcity of resources. However, the passion for and deep commitment of lecturers to their work is notable and seems to offer a basis not only for a future occupational identity, but also possibly for a more transformative education to take root in the CLCs.
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:32:39.476Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2021
publishDateRange 2021
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publisher School of Education
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spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/33806 The transition of Public Adult Learning Centres (PALCs) to Community Education and Training Colleges (CETCs): Perspectives and experiences of a selection of management and lecturer staff in the greater Cape Town area Mginywa, Nondumiso Cooper, Linda Education In 2013, the Department of Higher Education established a new institutional form for the provision of adult education, the Community Education and Training Colleges (CETCs). The growing number of unemployed youths that are not in learning institutions as well as the limited opportunities provided by the pre-existing Public Adult Learning Centres (PALCs), set the context for the transitioning of PALCs into CETCs. This transition marks one of the biggest changes to the adult education landscape historically in South Africa but has thus far been the subject of limited research. This study focuses on the experiences and perspectives of a selection of role players of this transition, in particular, those of managers and lecturers within the greater Cape Town area. The study was situated within an interpretive research paradigm with its emphasis on experience and interpretation and adopted a case study approach. A range of documents provided background data, while the main body of data was collected via semi-structured interviews. Adopting a thematic approach, the analysis focuses on how the policy changes have affected governance, experiences of the new institutional context and perspectives on lecturer qualifications. A further focus is on the views of key role players on the purposes of the CETCs and locating these within different theoretical traditions. The analysis also explored views on the professionalization of adult education and training, and how these compare with broader conceptual approaches to professionalisation in the literature. The study concludes that centralization of governance has had negative consequences for the management and lecturers represented in the sample and seems to be at odds with the ethos of institutional autonomy that usually characterises higher education. At the same time, the transition has presented opportunities for the CETCs to collaborate with different organisations to create skills development opportunities for their constituencies, especially for the increasing number of younger students in the CLCs. The evidence also suggests that while policies talk of CETCs continuing South Africa's historical traditions of transformative adult education, the respondents hold a more humanist view of their purpose, combined with some elements of a human capital approach. Respondents' views on professionalisation were largely instrumental, relating perhaps to continuing poor conditions of employment and scarcity of resources. However, the passion for and deep commitment of lecturers to their work is notable and seems to offer a basis not only for a future occupational identity, but also possibly for a more transformative education to take root in the CLCs. 2021-08-19T10:17:48Z 2021-08-19T10:17:48Z 2021 2021-08-19T10:17:07Z Master Thesis Masters MEd http://hdl.handle.net/11427/33806 eng application/pdf School of Education Faculty of Humanities
spellingShingle Education
Mginywa, Nondumiso
The transition of Public Adult Learning Centres (PALCs) to Community Education and Training Colleges (CETCs): Perspectives and experiences of a selection of management and lecturer staff in the greater Cape Town area
thesis_degree_str Master's
title The transition of Public Adult Learning Centres (PALCs) to Community Education and Training Colleges (CETCs): Perspectives and experiences of a selection of management and lecturer staff in the greater Cape Town area
title_full The transition of Public Adult Learning Centres (PALCs) to Community Education and Training Colleges (CETCs): Perspectives and experiences of a selection of management and lecturer staff in the greater Cape Town area
title_fullStr The transition of Public Adult Learning Centres (PALCs) to Community Education and Training Colleges (CETCs): Perspectives and experiences of a selection of management and lecturer staff in the greater Cape Town area
title_full_unstemmed The transition of Public Adult Learning Centres (PALCs) to Community Education and Training Colleges (CETCs): Perspectives and experiences of a selection of management and lecturer staff in the greater Cape Town area
title_short The transition of Public Adult Learning Centres (PALCs) to Community Education and Training Colleges (CETCs): Perspectives and experiences of a selection of management and lecturer staff in the greater Cape Town area
title_sort transition of public adult learning centres palcs to community education and training colleges cetcs perspectives and experiences of a selection of management and lecturer staff in the greater cape town area
topic Education
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/33806
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