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Africanisation of the South African archival curriculum: A preliminary study of undergraduate courses in an open distance e-learning environment

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dc.contributor.author Saurombe, Nampombe
dc.contributor.author Ngoepe, Mpho
dc.date.accessioned 2021-06-07T12:34:11Z
dc.date.available 2021-06-07T12:34:11Z
dc.date.issued 2021
dc.identifier.citation Ngoepe, Mpho & Mnkeni-Saurombe, Nampombe. (2020). Africanisation of the South African archival curriculum: A preliminary study of undergraduate courses in an open distance e-learning environment. Education for Information, vol. 37, no. 1, pp. 53-68, 2021 en
dc.identifier.uri https://content.iospress.com/articles/education-for-information/efi190358
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/10500/27439
dc.description.abstract Educators and archivists in Africa have repeatedly raised the need for redeveloping university curricula to reflect local and global best practice. An African education curriculum case study by the InterPARES project (2013–2018) that covered 38 countries out of 54 revealed the existence of few available archival training programmes in the continent. Literature further reveals that where educational programmes are available, the curriculum is mostly Eurocentric and thereby addresses archival issues from a Western perspective. As a result, the infinite problems facing archivists on the continent such as resources, skills, technology, infrastructure, advocacy, holdings, collaboration, displaced archives and many more (the list is endless) are not fully engaged. The archival programmes at the institution of higher learning appear not to address grand societal challenges such as unaccountability, poor governance, service delivery, as well as the low usage of archives repositories in the continent. In South Africa, there has been a call to use African epistemologies such as Ubuntu, a philosophy that provides an African reverview of societal relations or the Batho Pele, principles adopted by the post-apartheid South African government to guide and direct its public service and address imbalances of the apartheid regime. This study utilised the Africanisation pillar of Sibanda (2016)’s model to analyse the infusion of curriculum transformation into the ten modules for archives and records management in an open distance e-learning (ODeL) environment. In this regard, the content of ten archives and records management modules for a bachelor’s degree in an ODeL environment is analysed to explore the transformation of archival curriculum. Only one university in South Africa offers a fully-fledged bachelor’s degree with a major in archives and records management. The study established that an attempt was made to transform the archival curriculum at study material development and module delivery level. This resulted in a missed opportunity to transform archival curriculum in the development of the new bachelor’s degree being implemented in 2017. The study concludes by arguing that failure to decolonise the archival curriculum will result in archivists being highly unlikely to contribute to solutions to societal problems that are difficult to solve confronting South Africa using local solutions. It is recommended that transformation of the curriculum should start at a programme level rather than module level. en
dc.format.extent 1 online resource (16 pages)
dc.language.iso en en
dc.publisher Education for Information en
dc.subject Archives en
dc.subject Curriculum en
dc.subject Education en
dc.subject Decolonisation en
dc.subject Open distance e-learning en
dc.subject.ddc 371.350968
dc.subject.lcsh Information services -- User education -- South Africa en
dc.subject.lcsh Distance education -- South Africa en
dc.subject.lcsh Open learning -- South Africa en
dc.title Africanisation of the South African archival curriculum: A preliminary study of undergraduate courses in an open distance e-learning environment en
dc.title.alternative A preliminary study of undergraduate courses in an open distance e-learning environment en
dc.type Article en
dc.description.department Information Science en


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