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Public university education : an analysis of capability expansion among students in Uganda

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dc.contributor.advisor De Beer, Frik
dc.contributor.author Bigabwenkya, Sebastian
dc.date.accessioned 2013-08-01T06:08:16Z
dc.date.available 2013-08-01T06:08:16Z
dc.date.issued 2013-06
dc.identifier.citation Bigabwenkya, Sebastian (2013) Public university education : an analysis of capability expansion among students in Uganda, University of South Africa, Pretoria, <http://hdl.handle.net/10500/10332> en
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/10500/10332
dc.description.abstract University education is ideally expected to significantly expand higher education capabilities among students. Yet, if left unchecked, university education processes can under-equip students in terms of higher education capabilities. In the last one and a half decades, public university education in Uganda has been rapidly growing in terms of student enrolment and course completion. However, the higher education capability levels among students and consequently new graduates (2001-2010) have apparently been declining, especially in terms of practical reason, sociality and participation, learning dispositions, and science and technology. The current study analyses why the new graduates of public universities in Uganda are seemingly deficient in higher education capabilities. Data for analysis were mainly collected from 221 stakeholders of two public universities, namely Makerere University and Mbarara University. The analysis focused on respondents’ perceptions of the three sub-variables of university education, namely curriculum content, teaching processes, and learning processes. Through regression analysis, it was established that these sub-variables jointly predict higher education capability expansion among students in Uganda by 81.2%. Meanwhile, results from qualitative analyses suggest that the curriculum content of public university education is at an acceptable standard and, therefore, a minor cause of higher education capability deficiency among students. However, the teaching processes are perceived as ineffective since lecturers mainly use non-participatory approaches, teach fewer sessions than timetabled, and engage ‘liberal’ quality assurance measures that are open to abuse. Moreover, the learning approaches of some students seem to be surface in nature and the students’ levels of research learning and practice are low. Hence, the study conclusions suggest that low levels of higher education capabilities among students or new graduates in Uganda are largely due to ineffective teaching and learning processes at the two public universities studied. Consequently, the study recommends that, in a bid to enhance higher education capability expansion among students, public universities should focus on improving teaching processes and learning processes, particularly on staff pedagogical skills, commitment, quality controls, and reducing the number of students enrolled in most university courses. en
dc.format.extent 1 online resource (xv, 333 leaves) : illustrations
dc.language.iso en en
dc.rights University of South Africa
dc.subject University education en
dc.subject Public university education en
dc.subject Capability approach en
dc.subject Higher education capabilities en
dc.subject Higher education capability expansion en
dc.subject Curriculum content en
dc.subject Teaching processes en
dc.subject Learning processes en
dc.subject Uganda en
dc.subject.ddc 379.118096761
dc.subject.lcsh Public universities and colleges -- Uganda -- Evaluation en
dc.subject.lcsh Employability -- Uganda -- Evaluation en
dc.subject.lcsh College graduates -- Employment -- Uganda -- Evaluation en
dc.subject.lcsh Education, Higher -- Uganda -- Evaluation en
dc.title Public university education : an analysis of capability expansion among students in Uganda en
dc.type Thesis en
dc.description.department Development Studies en
dc.description.degree D. Litt et Phil. (Development Studies)


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