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Exploring an alternative access route to higher education in South Africa: A human development and social justice analysis

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Exploring an alternative access route to higher education in South Africa: A human development and social justice analysis. / Mkwananzi, F.; Martinez-Vargas, C.
In: Critical Studies in Teaching and Learning, Vol. 12, No. 1, 30.06.2024, p. 22-39.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

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Mkwananzi F, Martinez-Vargas C. Exploring an alternative access route to higher education in South Africa: A human development and social justice analysis. Critical Studies in Teaching and Learning. 2024 Jun 30;12(1):22-39. doi: 10.14426/cristal.v12i1.2120

Author

Mkwananzi, F. ; Martinez-Vargas, C. / Exploring an alternative access route to higher education in South Africa : A human development and social justice analysis. In: Critical Studies in Teaching and Learning. 2024 ; Vol. 12, No. 1. pp. 22-39.

Bibtex

@article{9ae2b076f8934a00a58f3f915d7ba860,
title = "Exploring an alternative access route to higher education in South Africa: A human development and social justice analysis",
abstract = "Widening access to higher education is one of the key policy priorities for many countries and institutions globally. While the concern has been to increase the number of young people entering university, there has also been interest in the diversity of people entering university, such as women, working students, and those from rural communities. This paper builds on that body of knowledge by combining ideas from the capability approach and social justice to understand what widening access may mean through a human development lens in contexts of historical injustice and inequality. It draws on the University Preparation Programme (UPP) and the Extended Programme (EP) provided by one of the universities in South Africa as a route to expand access and participation for students who might otherwise not access university. In doing so, it presents empirical and theoretical contributions to the multidimensionality of inequalities and how these influence higher education opportunities.",
keywords = "access, capabilities, higher education, human development, inequalities, social justice",
author = "F. Mkwananzi and C. Martinez-Vargas",
year = "2024",
month = jun,
day = "30",
doi = "10.14426/cristal.v12i1.2120",
language = "English",
volume = "12",
pages = "22--39",
journal = "Critical Studies in Teaching and Learning",
number = "1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Exploring an alternative access route to higher education in South Africa

T2 - A human development and social justice analysis

AU - Mkwananzi, F.

AU - Martinez-Vargas, C.

PY - 2024/6/30

Y1 - 2024/6/30

N2 - Widening access to higher education is one of the key policy priorities for many countries and institutions globally. While the concern has been to increase the number of young people entering university, there has also been interest in the diversity of people entering university, such as women, working students, and those from rural communities. This paper builds on that body of knowledge by combining ideas from the capability approach and social justice to understand what widening access may mean through a human development lens in contexts of historical injustice and inequality. It draws on the University Preparation Programme (UPP) and the Extended Programme (EP) provided by one of the universities in South Africa as a route to expand access and participation for students who might otherwise not access university. In doing so, it presents empirical and theoretical contributions to the multidimensionality of inequalities and how these influence higher education opportunities.

AB - Widening access to higher education is one of the key policy priorities for many countries and institutions globally. While the concern has been to increase the number of young people entering university, there has also been interest in the diversity of people entering university, such as women, working students, and those from rural communities. This paper builds on that body of knowledge by combining ideas from the capability approach and social justice to understand what widening access may mean through a human development lens in contexts of historical injustice and inequality. It draws on the University Preparation Programme (UPP) and the Extended Programme (EP) provided by one of the universities in South Africa as a route to expand access and participation for students who might otherwise not access university. In doing so, it presents empirical and theoretical contributions to the multidimensionality of inequalities and how these influence higher education opportunities.

KW - access

KW - capabilities

KW - higher education

KW - human development

KW - inequalities

KW - social justice

U2 - 10.14426/cristal.v12i1.2120

DO - 10.14426/cristal.v12i1.2120

M3 - Journal article

VL - 12

SP - 22

EP - 39

JO - Critical Studies in Teaching and Learning

JF - Critical Studies in Teaching and Learning

IS - 1

ER -