The University of Stellenbosch's racial transformation programme
leaves much to be desired, chairman of the National Assembly's
higher education portfolio committee Marius Fransman said on
Tuesday.
Fransman was speaking in Stellenbosch following a university
presentation to the committee on issues including language and the
numbers and pass rates of black students.
Rector Russel Botman told the MPs that the university had
adopted a policy which would allow undergraduate students to be
taught in either English or the university?s traditional language
Afrikaans, but with the proviso that they would be exposed to the
other language.
He said that in 2008, 48 percent of the university's
postgraduate students were black, but only 24 percent of
undergraduates.
This figure, which had grown only slightly over the past 14
years, was "the sad story of Stellenbosch", and the university
wanted to increase it to 34 percent by 2015.
This would be quite a challenge and also very expensive, as
Stellenbosch, unlike the University of Cape Town, did not attract
middle and upper class black students.
Eighty four percent of this year?s black students at
Stellenbosch needed financial assistance.
Botman said the university was also seeking to improve the
academic performance of its black students.
It had set up a special academy to track first year students
throughout that year, monitoring their progress and offering
support.
Research had shown that students living in residences performed
better than those who had to travel to the university every day,
and with black students in mind, 1056 beds would be added to the
approximately 6000 already available in residences.
The number of black African academic staff stood currently at
four percent, most of them at junior levels, but the university had
plans to raise this by 15 percent by 2015.
Coloured staff made up 34 percent of the total, and whites 62
percent.
The university would next year announce a major fundraising
drive for infrastructure, which would open up more spaces for
students and staff of colour.
Fransman said after Botman?s presentation that he was concerned
that the university's transformation vision was "too mediocre".
He had a view, which could be wrong, that the university left
very much to be desired in terms of a non-racial agenda.
The reality was that there was a complete racial
under-representation, he said.
Other members of the committee echoed his views, with African
National Congress MP Sbusiso Radebe saying 2015 was too long to
wait.
The university had to be able to show achievements this year and
in 2010, he said.
Speaking to journalists afterwards, Fransman said the committee
broadly agreed with the thrust of the university 2015 vision.
"However I do believe that the issues around the implementation,
around the language policy, we need to rev up its implementation in
the shortest space of time."
Botman had to be supported in his efforts to achieve greater
integration, and to move away from Stellenbosch's historic
Afrikaans-only language policy.
"We must get everyone, in particular black students, to feel
that they can actually access this institution, that they can be
involved in this institution and that they can excel in this
institution.
"So there is an issue around in a sense the culture and the
environment at this institution that needs to in a sense radically
change."