A systems approach to the production and retention of academic staff with PhD : a case study of a University of Technology
Date
2021-05
Authors
Kotelana, Ethel
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Abstract
Compared to most countries with similar economies, South Africa presents figures that reflect
that per million there is a critical shortage of doctorate holders. Doctoral education has been
linked to economic growth and global competitiveness; however, several scholars have
bemoaned the country’s extremely small doctoral output in relation to its economic and social
development needs. The higher education (HE) system has set a throughput rate of 20% per
annum but higher education institutions have, to date, only achieved 11%. This should come as
no surprise as decades into democracy the South Africa HE system is still reliant upon the top
10 traditional universities for its doctoral graduate output. This anomaly can be attributed to
how these higher educational institutions were established during apartheid and their approved
programme qualification mix (PQM) mandates. During this period in South African history,
only traditional white universities located in urban areas had the required research infrastructure
and were permitted to offer doctoral degrees.
This lack of access to further postgraduate training left South Africa with a dearth in highly
skilled academics (professoriate), of which an estimated 20% will retire within a decade leaving
a vacuum in the higher education system. Efforts to fill this vacuum are hampered by the
following factors: i) there is a global demand for the limited available academic talent, ii) the
current South African doctoral output is inadequate to replace its ageing professoriate at an
equivalent rate, iii) programmes aimed at developing the next generation of academics (nGAP)
have not been fully implemented, further, the posts complement constitutes a mere 25% of the
country’s needs.
The nGAP programme had envisaged the allocation of 15 posts per institution to meet the
annual demand for academics however to date it has only managed 5 posts on average since
inception in 2016. This study thus seeks to explore the challenges of producing and retaining
academic staff with PhDs within and from outside the nGAP programme in the UoT sector and,
in particular, at one institution through a systems lens. The study focusses then on XYZ
institution and adopts a systems lens approach.
From data analysis it has emerged that the profiles of PhD candidates in the country and the
production and retention of academic staff with PhDs are the key determinants of the percentage of academic staff with PhDs. A qualitative system dynamics causal loop diagram (QCLD)
conceptual model that illustrates the dynamics between these variables is presented and
discussed. CLDs were chosen as they are powerful tools that visually illustrate the
interdependence and interrelationships between variables embedded in any system under review
and assist in the identification of leverage points for effective policy intervention.
Description
Submitted in fulfillment of the requirements of the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in Leadership and Complexity, Durban University of Technology, Durban, South Africa, 2021.
Keywords
Doctoral education, Supervision, academic staff workload, Postgraduate funding, Academic staff retention, Academic staff remuneration, Academic staff promotion, Systems thinking, System Dynamics, Causal loop diagrams, System archetypes
Citation
DOI
https://doi.org/10.51415/10321/4239