Investigating the imperatives of research transformation at a University of Technology in South Africa
Date
2022
Authors
Jinabhai, Chandrakala Daya
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Abstract
This case study investigated the imperative of research transformation amongst
academics at the selected Mangosuthu University of Technology (MUT) in South
Africa, considering its low ranking of research output amongst 26 public higher
education institutions (HEIs) by the South African Department of Higher Education and
Training.
The research problem for this case study was designed to investigate the main
mitigating factors and barriers that inhibited academic careers of staff at this institution
to transform to become productive researchers from a system dynamics perspective.
Hence, the significance of this study was to address one of the three pillars of HEIs in
terms of its research transformation and research productivity at this institution.
Furthermore, this case study established how environmental dynamics holistically
influenced academic staff to engage or not engage in research transformation. This
was despite lucrative financial benefits offered, namely, research funding and study
leave including other concrete incentives associated with research transformation.
This was initiated for academic staff to inter alia, improving staff qualifications towards
Master’s and Doctoral qualifications, conference presentations, technology transfer
and knowledge production, and publications in accredited journals to produce the
anticipated measured research output. Whilst there are a few prolific researchers
within a few departments, it is alarmingly short in its endeavour towards attaining
DHET research output goals and research transformation holistically at MUT.
The aim of this study was to explore and develop an original system dynamics causal
loop model with various components underscored by critical systems thinking and its
impact of the holistic study per se. The research design for this study adopted a
qualitative interpretative paradigm linked to system dynamics and the variables of the
Causal Loop Diagram Model with an Interviewing Schedule. Thus, data was collected
using a semi-structured interviewing schedule with open-ended questions in sync with
a qualitative research design. Individual interviews were conducted with five academic
staff members from each of the three faculties. Additionally, interviews with a focus
group of six participants with similar interests were also included for the interviews.
The key variables of the Causal Loop Model were tabulated and linked to research transformation from the participants at MUT. The data analysis collected from the
interviews and policy documents were analysed under each of the research questions.
Both participants’ reflections and institutional factors were also assimilated for the data
analysis, vis-à-vis, research transformation at MUT.
The findings revealed several individual and institutional factors contributing to low
research transformation at this institution, namely, a small number of academic staff
with PhDs, an uneven staff to student ratio, heavy workloads on teaching staff with
limited time to engage in research productivity, unawareness of available incentives,
lack of retention strategies of talented staff, poaching of academic staff, the
interpretation of sabbatical leave and mentoring and supervision support initiatives.
Furthermore, the study found several enablers aligned to research capacity building
initiatives and critical factors to support a research culture at this institution. The main
recommendations suggested were, inter-alia a buy-into research transformation by
Executive Management and academic staff, improvement of vertical qualifications,
supplementing academic support staff and tutors, employment of additional retired
research professors, offering of structured mentoring and supervision assistance,
specific training related to research productivity, review of the teaching workloads,
implementation of sabbatical leave and retention policies. Finally, this case study has
shown empirical evidence for further research opportunities related to research
transformation in the higher education sector that could interface with the perceptions
of research productivity and accelerate research outputs in peer reviewed accredited
journals.
Description
Submitted in fulfillment for the requirements of the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in Management Sciences: Leadership and Complexity, Durban University of Technology, Durban South Africa, 2022.
Keywords
Research transformation, Research productivity, Research-led universities, Research informed UoTs, Systems thinking, System Dynamics, Causal loop feedback
Citation
DOI
https://doi.org/10.51415/10321/4732