Theorizing international postgraduate student lecturers' experiences in South Africa
Date
2021-06-01
Authors
Kehdinga, George Fomunyam
Noluthando, Matola
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
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Abstract
The internationalisation and globalisation of
our current world has led to the mobility of students across
borders in the pursuit of quality education. South Africa
has become a popular choice destination for some of these
students who intend to further their studies by undertaking
postgraduate programs in different fields. For variety of
reasons, these students take up part time jobs whilst
studying, and some continue to tow the education line by
becoming part time lecturers. This paper explores the
experiences of postgraduate student lecturers in South
Africa. Using a qualitative case study research approach,
this paper adopts a purposeful sampling strategy to
generate data from participants who were pursuing their
postgraduate degrees at masters and PhD levels. Findings
reveal that the major challenges faced by postgraduate
student lecturers in South Africa include culture shock,
technological barrier, inadequate academic resources to
work with, and the struggle to create a study-work-life
balance. This paper recommends that international
postgraduate students lecturing be trained and taught the
basics of some South African cultures before they are
allowed to handle students in the classroom. The learning
environment should be made conducive enough to
facilitate effective teaching and learning because,
overcrowded classrooms affect both lecturers and students.
Lastly, these student lecturers should be offered training in
the use of technologies used for delivering their lectures,
and all learning resources needed to ensure a seamless
teaching and learning process should be made available
Description
Keywords
1301 Education Systems, 2005 Literary Studies, Postgraduate, International Students, Lecturer, South Africa, Learning, Education
Citation
Kehdinga, G.F. and Noluthando, M. 2021. Theorizing international postgraduate student lecturers' experiences in South Africa. Universal Journal of Educational Research. 9(6): 1274-1283 (10).
DOI
10.13189/ujer.2021.090616