Preface
Liberating Education
Vuyisile Msila
Context
The complex discourses of decolonising education in Africa continue in as many conscientious citizens
still lay their hopes on the doors of educational institutions to solve the ills of the African societies.
Since the advent of colonisation, African education has been in search of relevance and meaning even
though colonial damage has grown immensely over decades; this makes it challenging to obliterate
colonialism. With the epistemic violence, that has been a sine qua non of colonial and apartheid
education – African education was always accompanied by deAfricanisation, deculturalisation,
dehumanisation and distortions to misrepresent the truth. All these are concepts discussed in a
number of ways in this volume. To redress many anomalies that came up because of colonisation,
progressive educators speak of a dialogic education to confront cognitive injustice in learning sites.
In his seminal work, Pedagogy of the Oppressed, Paulo Freire (1970) emphasises the need for
education to be a dialogue rather than follow a banking model or approach where teachers’ sole
viewpoint is fact. Freire’s dialogic teaching reduces learner withdrawal and teacher talk in the
classroom; dialogue calls for a teacher’s skill of intervention and tact of restraint “so that the verbal
density of a trained intellectual does not silence the verbal styles of unscholastic students” (Shor,
1987:23). Shih (2018) explicates the premise of Freire’s dialogue under a few themes that include; (i)
each person having the right to speak, (ii) the fact that dialogue cannot be an act of one person, (iii)
the idea that dialogue is not hostile and polemical argument, (iv) humility, (v) love, (vi) hope, critical
thinking, and (vii) faith. The search for a decolonised system of education is a search for critical
education that is not only dialogic but relevant to the entire continent of Africa as well. Various
chapters in this book demonstrate revolutionary forms of introducing decolonised models that should
transform traditional learning sites that use the West as the sole benchmark for knowledge
generation. Additionally, decolonised education is opposed to the unbending methodological
paradigms of traditional learning sites that use the West as the exclusive vessel for knowledge or the
centre. Decolonised systems seek to decentre the Western knowledges without marginalising them.
In his book, Moving the Centre, Ngugi Wa Thiongo (1993) argues a need to move the centre in two
ways – between nations as well as within nations. Wa Thiongo maintains that this is the basis of
liberating world cultures from aspects such as class, race, and gender. Moving the centre between
nations implies that the centre will be moved from its assumed position in the West to a multiplicity
of spheres in all the cultures of the world. Furthermore, moving the centre within nation means
moving away from all minority groupings to a centre situated among the working-class people and
where equality is supreme.
Teacher education needs to be conscious of the needs of today’s classrooms to be able to experiment
with anti-method pedagogy that decolonises knowledge and de-Europeanise the vision of education,
as we know it. This volume of essays challenges us to rethink thinking behind teaching as well as
learning and explicate what is meant by a decolonised system of education and which knowledges
are relevant. On the subject of rethinking knowledge, NdlovuGatsheni (2018:24) argues:
Rethinking thinking is fundamentally a decolonial move that requires the cultivation of a
decolonial attitude in knowledge production. It is informed by a strong conviction that all human
beings are not only born into a knowledge system but are legitimate knowers and producers of
legitimate knowledge. Rethinking thinking is also a painstaking decolonial process of
‘learning to unlearn in order to re-learn’ …
Eurocentric and apartheid education have necessitated that teacher education and schools should
constantly and consciously address the miseducation and dehumanisation aspects of education in the
past as well as in the present. Thomas (1998:84) cites Mazrui (1967) who contends that African and
third world people ought to be co-workers in the revival of culture:
“To escape death and isolation, and to nurture the latent African genius”. African societies have
to pose several questions when it comes to the goals of education in post-colonial Africa. Among
these are the questions on language, on attainment of a national spirit, on magnification of
African cultures and on education that acknowledges the noble idea of an African Renaissance.”
As a Change Management practitioner at the University of South Africa from 2017 to 2020, I have
come across several colleagues in conferences from a few institutions of higher learning where
decolonisation has been a subject of discussion. I have observed two extremes in the various debates
as South African institutions endeavour to manage transformation and decolonisation paths. On the
one hand, are pedantic demagogues who refuse to move until concepts are clarified – many critics
have said that academics easily fall into this trap. This group is meticulous about explication of terms
and delineation of processes in higher education transformation. The explication of terms is very vital,
for we cannot continue with debates without a common understanding. However, this demand can
be a delaying mechanism to derail transformation and decolonisation process as we continue an
unending intellectual exercise of semantics while we experience inertia and un-transforming
environments.
On the other extreme are those who are impatient about the sluggish transformation and
decolonisation of education institutions. The latter group maintains that the long-winded
development of theory is stalling the process of change hence we need to see the actual changes
effected at all education institutions. However, ideally, we should demand a middle ground where
there is an understanding of theory for practice. No one can develop any curriculum models without
the necessary theory. Kwame Nkrumah spoke of the need to apply the weapon of theory when he
stated, “Action without thought is empty. Thought without action is blind”. Nkrumah postulated this
maxim as he articulated his consciencism philosophy, pointing out that in the process of developing
decolonisation thinkers, we need both thinkers and implementers, the doers (Nkrumah, 1969).
The creation and sustenance of responsive campuses for example, need thought as we redesign and
reincarnate the higher education institutions, thus enamouring Africa’s future. Children need schools
that would prepare them for the building of their communities and their country in an age when Africa
is faced with insurmountable challenges. The chapters in this book focus on the challenges facing
teacher education programmes, teachers, learners and schools at a time of volatile changes. The book
examines how we may need to think about redesigning teaching in basic education, adult education
and in institutions of higher learning as we contemplate decolonisation of knowledge. In this preface,
I explore a few sub-topics, which include the development of teaching in Africa. Secondly, the focus
is on why enacting cultural decolonisation can transform institutional cultures embedded in
education institutions. Finally, the focus is on the complexity of decolonising institutions and what
constitutes this process. Among other factors, there is much need to examine teacher education
programmes whenever people discuss decolonisation and transformation in education.
Developing Teaching in Africa: What about Teacher Education?
Stokes (1997:217) argues that teacher education needs to be consistent with a “progressive,
democratic vision” and that teachers should ensure that in their classrooms, they constantly examine
their cultural identities as they enhance critical consciousness among learners. Stokes (1997:217)
adds:
A critical teacher education should problematize the lived experience of children, women, and
men throughout this society, and simultaneous positions of domination and subordination –
contradictory experiences of oppression and complicity with privilege. At the intersections of
race, class, and gender, each participates in multiple positions of power and powerlessness.
Decolonising teacher education is an imperative step towards the attainment of the objectives of a
decolonised system of education. Teachers should be part of rethinking the curriculum and ensuring
that it will be meaningful to the lives of all learners in their classrooms. Furthermore, decolonisation
requires teachers who would be able to educate themselves about domination and subordination
especially if they are to be able to avoid the reproduction of present conditions (Stokes, 1997).
Teachers should also be able to draw a balance between theory and practice. Therefore, when we
speak about Ubuntu in the classroom, what do we mean? What do we mean when we speak of
education as a political act? What does it mean to reframe the pedagogical practices? Why should
educators enhance community links with their classrooms? These and many other questions are key
when we examine the decolonisation of teacher education in Africa. Teachers need to constantly selfreflect as they question their own identities, posing questions as to what they are teaching and why
they are teaching it. Furthermore, how the content is taught is very vital for decolonisation of
knowledge is not about transforming content only, but about pedagogy itself – the way teachers teach
and learners learn matter. Teachers should no longer be passive but must ask questions about the
knowledge they facilitate in the classroom at all times. Some of the questions to pose continuously
are:
o
Whose knowledge am I teaching? o
How would it change the
colonial or traditional practices? o How will the curriculum benefit my learners and
me? o Does the curriculum have an effect on power relations and culture? o
What is my role in curriculum planning?
Numerous other pertinent questions that can be posed are not answered in this preface but in the
various chapters in this book. We need active teachers who are activists for transformation and
leaders in new pedagogical practices that embrace democracy, social justice and cognitive justice. It
is crucial for teachers to use education in helping learners understand the links between education
and the learners’ communities. The idea of relevant education can never be over emphasised, and it
is important for education to enable learners to establish their own identities. It is also of utmost
importance for teachers to see education as embracing all rather than alienating – constant revision
of content is central here.
The current education system presents challenges for teachers to change what they teach and how
they teach, especially when one understands how many teachers were taught as learners, then as
teachers in initial teacher education programmes. Many may struggle to integrate indigenous and
Western knowledges. In fact, Heleta (2016) argues that there is a need to transform the Eurocentric
curriculum that bolsters Western dominance and white privilege. I am certain that teacher education
programmes, teachers and most importantly teacher unions can all play a vital role in this regard. The
union is a critical stakeholder and needs to be in the forefront of education transformation with other
stakeholders.
(South) Africa must tackle and dismantle the epistemic violence and hegemony of Eurocentrism,
completely rethink, reframe and reconstruct the curriculum and place South Africa, Southern
Africa and Africa at the centre of teaching, learning and research.
Heleta, 2016:1
Teachers need to be proactive and as they examine their practice and posing essential questions
about their pedagogical practices. They ought to understand the humanising aspect of progressive
education as well as its conscientising role. Paulo Freire (1970) used both these concepts to illustrate
the imperatives of liberating education. Yet, transformative teaching must also work with ways of
transforming culture.
Culture Impact on Knowledge
At the centre of colonial and apartheid education is culture, which has always been manipulated to
reflect the empire or die volk’s might. The British were always clear about their intentions hidden in
education whilst apartheid education was very open about education’s intentions and that was to
create children who would reinforce the master-servant relationship (Kallaway, 1988). Decolonisation
ought to play a huge role in examining, understanding and transforming the culture reflected by
African education. In understanding the basic tenets of decolonisation, cultural decolonisation should
help demystify our quest for a liberating education. Relevant pedagogy and meaningful learning will
be guided by cultural decolonisation. Colonial and apartheid education has denigrated African
cultures over the years whilst demeaning indigenous knowledges. Ndlovu-Gatsheni (2018) writes
about ways in which colonisation led to culturecides, historicides, linguicides and epistemicides:
“Africa is one of those epistemic sites that experienced not only colonial genocides but also ‘theft of
history’ (see Goody, 2006), epistemicides (killing of indigenous people’s knowledges) and linguicides
(killing of indigenous people’s languages)” (Ndlovu-Gatsheni, 2018:3). In addition, culturecides refer
to the killing of the indigenous peoples’ cultural practices and historicides, which is the killing of the
indigenous peoples’ history.
Cultural decolonisation changes thinking and enhances the belief in African cultures and identities
rather than cultural dominance of Europe. Cultural decolonisation in education will also help
rehumanise those who were dispossessed and oppressed. Decolonised scholarship, curriculum and
teaching will be able to magnify this role of culture in the classroom. The language debates have
become very critical in the cultural decolonisation debates.
As people rebuild education, institutions need to plan their cultural reconstruction. New cultures need
to inform scholarship, curriculum as well as ways of teaching. As pointed out above, generally, the
current university in Africa is based on culture and values of Western education. Nkrumah perceived
African culture as the basis of African-centred education and was despondent to see the University of
Ghana a resemblance of Oxford and Cambridge (Botwe-Asamoah, 2005). Furthermore, BotweAsamoah (2005) argues that Nkrumah maintained that an African university could not serve the
society unless it is rooted in the indigenous social structures and cultural institutions. The experiences
of the African people mattered to Nkrumah and he struggled because when he emphasised
Africanisation of education and claimed that English should no longer be a determinant for promotion
in secondary school, he was accused of lowering the education standards. It is however striking that
Nkrumah’s observation in 1960 Ghana could be the truth in numerous African education institutions
six decades later. The struggles that Nkrumah observed were also experienced by his contemporaries
such as Julius Nyerere. Nyerere (1970:130) highlighted the need for a relevant Africa focused
Tanzanian education when he stated in October 1961:
We are in the process of building up a Tanganyika nation. Valuable as is the contribution which
overseas education can give us, in the end, is we are to build up a sturdy sense of nationhood;
we must nurture our own educated citizens. Our young men and women must have an
Africaorientated education. That is an education, which is not only given in Africa but also
directed at meeting the present needs of Africa.
The application of education to suit the local circumstances is crucial to Africa and that is why Nyerere
talks about education meeting the needs of the African continent. Epistemic violence means that
colonial and apartheid education brought education that alienated the African from his/her
environment. When we talk of epistemic violence, we refer to the cultural hegemony that dominated
over the decades of colonial and apartheid domination. The colonial invasion was a conscious
reproduction of the imperial culture upon students as we magnified the Western culture in all aspects
of education institutions. We cannot forget the fact that the universities in Africa were built to nurture
new colonisers. Much of the epistemic deafness we find today among academics and society is due
to the internalisation of the culture of domination that is rooted in our institutions. Today, the
cynicism we witness in the society is mainly due to internalised aspects of Western culture. It is
because of our beliefs in Western science and Western scholarship that we tend to neglect the local
as we frequently underscore globalisation, perceiving the decolonial project an antithesis of progress.
I believe that the first priority for the decolonisation of knowledge is cultural decolonisation.
Over the past decade, decolonisation has filled our society’s agenda. Various role players have seen
it necessary to search for answers of how we can reshape the African society. This is not new although
the recent student upheavals in South Africa in the form of Fallist Movements have made many to
reopen the debate and investigate the questions around decolonisation and Africanisation of
knowledge. The university has been entangled in this on-going debate about a decolonised society.
Green (1998) points out that post-apartheid South Africa needs to restructure its entire education
system to meet the needs of the previously excluded and drastically under-educated majority. A new
form of academic culture is also needed to build new and meaningful norms for creating fecund basis
for a decolonised system. Shared governance is necessary in institutions – bring together various
academic committees to make necessary decisions in transforming what happens in lecture halls.
Empowered faculty will be able to build relevant curricula that address how education should be.
However, the dilemma for institutional leaders this time is serving the interest of all role players.
Leadership in higher education institutions in South Africa has shifted, being less about power and
more about comprehending the ambiguity that binds higher education institutions. In fact, the
current South African higher education institution has become more complex and many are not
simply hierarchical structures. Madeleine Green (1997:46) argues:
Because organisations are complex webs of seemingly chaotic interrelationships, patterns and
connections can be discerned only over long periods. Organisations are networks of people and
problems; webs of culture, habits, myths, and formal and informal authority. The predominant
image is one of overlapping circles rather than a pyramid. Furthermore, organisations (including
institutions of higher education) are part of a complex network of other institutions and entities:
depending on the country, they may include ministries, other government agencies,
intermediary bodies and voluntary organisations.
Because universities have multiple centres of power, they need meticulous, progressive leaders to
lead the decolonisation project. Leaders need to spread a shared agenda as the institutions transform
its operations. Higher education leaders need to understand the super-complexity of the institutions
of higher learning to be able to shape new cultures. It takes wise leaders to lead the process of change.
Others argue that even when academic leaders are not change agents, higher education can change
without strong leadership because some leaders consciously or unconsciously maintain the status
quo. Irresistible pressure from inside and outside may change the institution. However, it is better to
have a guided change that will not be traumatic and messy.
There is no adequate theorisation on the decolonisation of schools and other basic education
institutions in South Africa. This leaves a gap in the debates for transformation of higher education
institutions. We cannot discuss decolonisation at higher education institutions without any reference
to basic education otherwise many initiatives to transform education will falter. With the high failure
rate and low levels of literacy and numeracy in a country like South Africa, experts need to revisit
research in language of teaching and ways in which to decolonise the curriculum including learning
areas such as mathematics, natural sciences and technology education. Decolonisation goes a step
further to just focusing on pass percentage; it examines and transforms the content of education.
How Do We Decolonise?
Decolonisation will not happen without a huge necessary disruption. Without this disruption, we will
always find ourselves where we have been over the years. The problem we have today in stalling
education transformation is created by the fact that we are not ready to confront the meaningful
overhaul of education. In seeking education for liberation, there is no way we can avoid education as
well as revolutionary consciousness. Revolutionary consciousness is linked to critical consciousness
that people such as Paulo Freire espoused. Education should challenge the status quo and enable the
people to take charge of their lives. The call for a decolonised education is to challenge the status quo
as the way we teach children is gradually transformed. Education should be conscious raising in the
context of decolonisation both the teacher and the learner should understand the role of African
epistemologies in the process.
It is after the attainment of this critical consciousness that we can be able to find and pursue the role
of social justice education. In pursuing the principles of social justice, the youth should drive the
society’s agenda for revolutionary education. For many families, education has never addressed the
consequences of oppression hence some may talk about the need for a relevant socially just
education. Many young people still ought to see education as that which encompasses a humanising
pedagogy and a liberating practice. Given our background in South Africa, we should have thought
more about the role of education in responding to social ills. In Africa, we need education that would
respond to not only to poverty but also to various other ills left by colonialism. Socially just education
should be compulsory for all classrooms and classrooms should reflect a free society. President Zuma
addressed the Pan African Youth Congress on 28 November 2014. In his address, he acknowledged
that, although there are African countries that have made some progress in socio-economic
development, the majority of African youth still face unemployment, underemployment, inadequate
access to education, health care, and housing. Furthermore, Zuma added:
Agenda 2063 is premised on Pan-Africanism and the rebirth of the African Continent. It promotes
restoration of values of human solidarity, Ubuntu, self-pride, self-determination, non-sexism,
non-tribalism and the celebration of our diversity. Youth programmes must consider these
values both in content and in form. You must individually and collectively espouse these values
in your conduct in order to propel the African continent onto a higher development trajectory.
This is even more important because you, the African youth, represent the future of Africa.
Donaldo Macedo (1993) portrays the Pedagogy of Big Lies, in which he explains what schools do; that
is to promote a pedagogy that propagates the inability to think critically. This is literacy for
stupidification; stupidification results to education for domestication. Macedo (2000) (in Chomsky)
writes about teaching tasks which lead to dumbness; where teachers treat learners as tabula rasas.
The latter is an education alienated from the learners’ realities. Colonial and apartheid education
entrenched this kind of education, a pedagogy of lies where education was manipulated by colonial
governments. Furthermore, Macedo (1993) argues that we all need an education system that
conscientises because it will be conscientisation that will be an antidote to education for barbarism
as Tabata (1980) referred to apartheid and colonial education. We need to ask ourselves a perennial
question of how we can ensure that education serves the historically disadvantaged, and how can it
conscientise perpetually, thus ensuring that learners become lifelong learners who are critical in their
approach to living. Learners who are made to internalise big lies in education are always inward
looking for they are made to believe that there is only one rigid reality. Education based on big lies
incarcerates instead of liberating the mind, it obscures instead of unmasking knowledge. When
people use concepts such as African Renaissance, one sees their hope in bringing meaningful
education that heralds new ideas and intellectual revival especially among young people.
President Thabo Mbeki maintained that real African Renaissance would be attained when there is
conscious move to end greed, dehumanising poverty, obscene opulence and corruption, all factors
which give rise to coups d’état and instability (Mbeki, 1998). Mbeki pointed out that African
Renaissance is the hope of a decolonised Africa. This means that decolonisation gives Africa a face, a
vision and hope.
The progress of the country’s success should start with the transformation in education. The youth in
Africa will change their societies through different forms of education. Education needs to disengage
with its colonial and apartheid past. In his inauguration as Chancellor of the University of South Africa,
Mbeki (2017) underscored the need for relevant, emancipatory curriculum. To this end, we cannot
disregard the Indigenous Knowledge Systems, which will be critical inembedding social justice in
education. For several decades, education in Africa tended to overlook the traditional experiences
that can make the learners to be adept in life.
A socially just education from schools can be the basis, a foundation of education that demonstrates
Africa’s renewal for youth development and the future. The call for a decolonised system is
synonymous to the call for a rehumanising education that caters for the local African contexts. As we
talk of decolonisation, we require an education revolution that would change schools. These schools
would enhance the African identity Eskia Mphahlele (1974) talked about. Our schools for example,
need to learn to speak the indigenous languages. Cheik Anta Diop (2000) argued that African
Renaissance could be attained through the African indigenous languages. This is an idea that is
supported by Wiredu (1987) who writes about the need to develop the African indigenous languages.
He goes on to point out that, the weakness of African philosophies is that they are communicated in
colonial languages. The latter weakens their cause and commitment. Ali Mazrui (1980) also examines
the technological superiority of Europe and explicates how English and French were in the forefront
in the development of black political thought. Like Wa Thiongo and several other African thinkers, the
colonial languages marginalised the indigenous cultures as they entrenched colonialism. In
Anglophone, Francophone and Lusophone Africa, the Africans’ education shunted the Africans away
from their identities and cultures. In addition, in seeking to be global the African is moving away from
these swayed by Western hegemony and there is a tendency for education to be formulated by
experts who are captives of the Western knowledges. Africa should also be the centre; it should also
be the point of reference in Africa. The Africans need to master the local, the regional the Continental
before they can gain control of the world. Thomas (1998:83), writing about Ali Mazrui contends:
In order to combat Western cultural hegemony and the Third World’s growing cultural
dependency, he makes a strong case for regional autonomy. He postulates that Africans […] have
as much to offer to world culture and global peace as did their English, French or Italian
counterparts. On this point, Mazrui (2005) reaffirms the clarion call by Du Bois for African and
Third World peoples to become co-workers in the kingdom of culture; to escape death and
isolation, and to nurture the latent African genius.
Our schools can create a planetary system by employing a variety of knowledges. It is the argument
of several chapters in this book that we need an Africa that uses a variety of knowledges as it
decentres the exclusive use of Western epistemologies. This implies that there should be epistemic
justice that would combat epistemic violence of yore as knowledges compete on an equal pedestal
without using the West only as a measure of knowledges. However, decolonisation needs disruption,
for without an overhaul, we cannot speak of true decolonisation.
As we disrupt the education, system we need to answer the question of relevance, for decolonisation
of knowledge without bringing in the debate of relevance is futile. We should be able to answer the
questions of what we do, how we do it and when we do it. Up to now for example, Africanisation has
been more of a political project where we have looked at street name changes and re-examination of
the colonial and apartheid symbols. We need a system of education that would embrace the following
four factors rooted in conscientisation for a decolonised system:
1. Critical pedagogy refers to a progressive philosophy of teaching that focuses on contexts, histories and
power relations.
2. Indigenisation refers to bringing the marginalised indigenous cultures, histories and people to the centre.
3. Relearning is about the conscious effort to disengage with colonisation and learn the implications of
decolonisation. It goes with unlearning the past as part of the decolonising process.
4. Disruption calls for acknowledging the urgency of transformation. It seeks the upheaval of the status quo to
lead to social justice and cognitive justice.
Each of these needs to talk to the idea of relevance and empowerment of the learners and teachers.
We do not want to continue producing learners who have a cognitive dissonance. We need to
continue asking ourselves as to what it means to be educated. Are learners who do not know
themselves educated? Education in Africa should not be congruent to exclusive Western knowledge.
How do we achieve relevant education that would eschew cognitive dissonance? We need a system
where the learners start with their own before they expand their knowledge. This is the idea that Wa
Thiongo (1993) discusses that a decolonised education starts with own languages before one can use
other languages and knowledges to enrich one. In one of his most recent works, Ngugi Wa Thiongo
(2014) writes about globalectics – an area that embraces interconnectedness and equality. This
concept refers to a way of thinking and relating to the world, particularly in the current era of
globalism and globalisation. Furthermore, Wa Thiongo opines about the ideal of building a better
understanding of humanity between the global North and South – he explores a question of how we
should ensure that the world has a meeting point. Many African thinkers have expressed this in
several ways. Mwesirige (nd) cites Mazrui who contends that there are five strategies of taming
Western-oriented imperialism disguised as globalisation and he referred to globalisation as simply
villagisation of the globe. The five strategies are indigenisation, domestication, diversification,
horizontal interpenetration and vertical counter-penetration. The African institutions of learning
should respond to these in a move to better Africa. A decolonised curriculum encompasses a number
of critical strategies and these may include; re-education of faculty/staff, relooking at prescribed
works, privileging African ways of knowing as well as bias towards African pedagogies e.g. language,
folktales, praise poetry, African worldviews. Furthermore, decolonisation needs to come with
rethinking of culture, relooking at systems and strong leading of relevant change. We need to examine
models past and present, successful and not to explore what we can glean from such. However, there
are many challenges on the path towards decolonisation of education. One of the most critical
challenge when it comes to institutions of learning and decolonisation is preparing teaching staff to
unlearn knowledges that they might have embraced as unbending truth. True decolonisation needs
solid plan and vision and there are several lessons South Africans can learn from the experiences of
other African states.
As intimated above, the decolonisation project needs to seriously explore the rethinking of teacher
education. In fact, without visionary teachers at higher education institutions and in schools, there
can be no renewal of education and African education’s future will continue to be blurry. As attempts
are made to build responsive campuses, the initiatives will come to naught without empowered
facilitators who understand their role in decolonising education. There are serious concerns though;
that in institutions that purport transformation, faculty is still made up of individuals who are not
ready to change or are not even keen to change. We also know the disastrous results of Curriculum
2005 in South Africa, which tended to deskill the first group of post-apartheid teachers. Amongst the
pitfalls of this ambitious system was that teachers were not given time to understand and embrace
this with understanding. On the eve of introducing a decolonised system in schools, we need
educators who will not only understand decolonisation but also believe in it. Conscientious teachers
will have to look at history and understand how African knowledges were severed to be able to remember them with a decolonised, relevant system. This collection of chapters focuses on three vital
aspects; developing ways of knowing, ways of teaching and ways of learning en route to decolonising
education.
This volume’s title is Developing Teaching and Learning in Africa, and it underscores the equal
importance of both learning and teaching in decolonising learning sites. The Education transformation
is futile if we enhance one without deepening the other. Education institutions that overhaul the
curriculum and scholarship without inspiring teaching and learning are unlikely to attain successful
transformation. In addition, what this book wants to achieve is to heighten the need to debate
practical alternatives on the path towards the decolonisation of knowledge. The book is divided into
three sections, Basic Education, Higher Education and New Epistemologies and Society.
In the first chapter, Basic Education and Decolonisation in South Africa, Msila focuses on how and why
basic education in South Africa needs to be decolonised. Moving from roots of mission education and
apartheid education the discussion explicates the reasons for moving the learners and their teachers
away from the barbarism inherent in past education systems. Msila acknowledges the varied
meanings of a decolonised system; some have referred to decolonised systems of education as forms
of service-learning, implying that true decolonisation will integrate meaningful community service
with instruction and reflection to enrich the learning experience. Others see the huge responsibility
of decolonisation as negation to epistemic violence and colonial or Western knowledge domination
in education. Although the society has haggled in defining the concepts, there have been several
instances where consensus has been achieved. In concluding the chapter, Msila looks at Eskia
Mphahlele’s work at Funda Centre in Soweto and arguably his work here was the first breakthrough
as to how people could practically decolonise education in South Africa.
Bhuda and Pudi’s second chapter deals with the integration of ethnomathematics into school
curriculum. The chapter, Indigenising Mathematics in Schools: Why Ethnomathematics Matters
examines how mathematics has been utilised over decades in Africa as part of everyday life. However,
the Western knowledges may not recognise the existence of mathematics in African cultures hence
like many other areas there might have been the marginalisation of mathematics used by traditional
societies. The authors claim that it is essential to use diverse ethnomathematical ideas in order to
construct a curriculum that accommodates African indigenous learners of diverse cultures. Thus,
teachers as agents of change ought to embrace and implement this policy by contextualising
mathematics learning to the learners’ cultural ways of life, learning, being and doing. In their
argument, they demonstrate that there are contradictions and paradoxes in ethnomathematics
although the school systems have to accommodate ethnomathematics. In South Africa, there are
current reforms in mathematics education, which emphasise the need to empower learners
mathematically, socially, and epistemologically.
Chapter 3, Decolonising Science: Challenging the South African Classroom through Indigenous
Knowledge Systems, Ramadikela, Pudi and Mokiwa explore debates on ways in which Indigenous
Knowledge Systems can enhance science classrooms. They argue that Western knowledges have
always dominated in science classrooms because generally few people have really argued for
indigenous knowledge systems’ usefulness in these classrooms. The authors argue that it would be
improper for African learning sites to exclude either Western Science or ‘African’ science supported
by Indigenous Knowledge Systems. Progressive, conscientious educators who promote social justice
and critical pedagogy among their learners will bring the two together for the benefit of all learners.
Opoku and J-F in chapter 4 also pose critical questions in the chapter entitled, Inclusive Education
Without Resources, among these questions are whether inclusive education can provide equal
opportunity to students with disabilities to access education at all levels of schooling without
resources. These authors maintain that the question is relevant to sub-Saharan African countries
because they have numerous challenges, which range from lack of funds to shortages in facilities and
resources. These counties have few special schools. The chapter highlights various deficient processes
and practices utilised in Sub-Saharan Africa in implementing Inclusive Education.
Ntombela’s The Dislocated Rural Student: Calls for Decolonisation (chapter 5) focuses on the South
African students’ struggles for a decolonised education in 2015 and 2016. However, the author also
looks at how these struggles have been usurped by other role players as the students are relegated
towards the back. Ntombela explores how this has happened. Furthermore, the chapter interrogates
the multiplicity of academically colonised subjects. It does so by profiling a typical student in a ‘rural’
university and shows how the university dubbed ‘rural’ dislocates such a student by way of appealing
to universal discourses of academia. Although the notion of a rural university appears straightforward
when viewed from geographical location, there are nuances that disturb such a label. It remains,
nonetheless, that geographical location all by itself cannot absolutely measure the state of rurality of
a university; students on the contrary, even though they may not absolutely take the label of rural,
have among them those whose lineages and rootedness is rural. These lineages can be linguistically
and rhetorically explained. The dominant Western thought continues to view Africa as an expanse of
rural landscape whose preservation is for the gaze of the inquisitive tourist. Therefore, the
reconstruction of rurality is hardly for the betterment and humanisation of rural residents than a
curious traveller enticement move meant to commodify the people and their lived experiences.
Ntombela argues here that decolonisation is essential for students in institutions, especially those
located in rural communities.
In chapter 6 Humanising and Decolonising Adult Basic Education and Training (ABET) in South Africa,
Lalendle, Msila and Matlabe examine the role of a decolonised adult education in South Africa. They
trace the history of adult education in South Africa from its inception to the present and explore how
this has evolved over the decades. These authors apply Paulo Freire’s theory of critical pedagogy as
they examine the gaps in the current models of adult education.
Bulti in chapter 7, Fostering Collective Teacher Efficacy Through Values-Based and Ubuntu Inspired
Leadesrhip:Implications for Decolonisation, skilfully demonstrates in practice how decolonisation can
utilise both Western and African knowledges in running excellent institutions. He reveals values that
are critical for building Collective Teacher Efficacy in well run schools. The discussion demonstrates
the importance of values such as servant leadership, integrity, humility, selflessness, compassion, and
respect as utilised in ‘Western’ literature. Yet, the same concepts are reflected when one examines
African models of leadership such as Ubuntu. Therefore, Bulti demonstrates why eclectic approaches
in decolonising leadership would be critical in Africa institutions. He does this as he explores the
invaluable nature of Values-Based Leadership (VBL); he explicates VBL as a leadership model meant
to contribute to institutional success, particularly in terms of establishing a desired relationship
among the working staff, and between leaders and followers. Values-Based Leadership is defined as
“a relationship between a leader and followers that is based on shared strongly internalised
ideological values adopted by the leader and strong followers’ identification with those values”.
Hlela’s chapter 8 entitled, Reflections on Programming in an Afrocentric Distance Education Certificate
Programme: A Case Study, raises the argument that frequently programming or curriculum
formulation in the African context is too often drawn uncritically from Western theoretical
frameworks such as humanism, andragogy, constructivism is usually problematic. All these
frameworks are informed by individualistic conceptions of learners and learning, shaped by industrial
and postindustrial political economy, liberal democratic politics and consumerist culture. Hlela argues
that common among these curriculum designing is how knowledge is portrayed as universal and
applicable in all contexts. However, this knowledge tends to overlook local socio-cultural context or
local histories. Such programmes (Western thoughts and knowledge) are thus imposed to African
‘territories’ of learning (supposedly undeveloped African thoughts and knowledge) just like the
colonial template only this time Africans impose the template upon themselves through disciplinary
power. The chapter presents and documents history of the certificate programming since its first
offering; it also explores the extent to which a distance education Certificate Programme locates itself
within Afrocentrism in relation to content and programming and concludes that it remains at infusion
phase. The chapter presents five tenets of an Afrocentric programme.
In Heutagogy, Decolonisation and Rethinking Knowledge: Voices of University Teachers (chapter 9),
Lalendle and Msila commence their discussion from the 2015/2016 student uprisings in South Africa,
which initiated debates that enveloped, and conscientised the entire society on the ills of the past
hegemonic system of education. The students were organised under the banner of what was to be
referred to as the ‘Must Fall Movements’; #FeesMustFall and #RhodesMustFall whose effects spread
across the country as students demanded liberatory education as well as open access to institutions
of higher learning. These authors state that these calls for a transformed system of education soon
led to the calls for a decolonised system that would end epistemic violence in institutions of higher
learning. Apart from access, there was also exploration of student success which also enabled role
players including students, to initiate debates on the formulation of innovative teaching and learning
strategies that would serve the society with meaningful and relevant education. This chapter uses a
case study to examine the effect of the self-determined nature of heutagogy congruent to what some
referred to as liberatory, decolonised methods. In doing this, university teachers are interviewed on
their experiences on Heutagogy as a liberatory method of teaching.
In chapter 10, Decolonising Epistemologies: The Paradoxes of a Self-Colonised State, Ramadikela,
Msila and Abera explore the interesting case of Ethiopia, a country that was never colonised by the
European powers but became complicit in its own colonisation. The Ethiopian traditional education
was based on a rich history, which could be traced to the Solomonic dynasty, and was highly
supported by the Ethiopian Orthodox Church. The school was then religiously based provided in not
only churches but also monasteries as well ancient. After the Second World War, the Ethiopians
intensified attempts to modernise their education using external advisors from Britain and the United
States of America and that is when major changes were introduced including the English language as
medium of teaching and learning.
This chapter explores the path followed by a state that colonised itself thus creating several
complexities as Eurocentric view minimised the importance of language, culture and epistemologies.
The arguments in the chapter support a need for a dynamic model where the traditional educations
system should not be marginalised instead it should be developed and combined with the Western
models of education. The present system is a burden to learners who have to struggle with not only
language of learning and teaching but a system that disregards Ethiopian.
Afolabi in Lost in Translation: Revisiting Decolonisation Project in Nigerian Education (chapter 11)
examines the mantra on decolonising Nigerian education. Scholars have carried out several projects
on how to decolonise teaching, such as the Fafunwa Education Project, and learning in Nigerian
Education System, yet nothing has changed. Afolabi questions the paradox of using a colonial
language, English, to debate decolonisation. He says this has posed a huge challenge to Nigerian
languages in which students are taught and learn through a colonial language. He also examines the
lack of an enabling environment to teaching, learning, and the political will that compounds the
challenges of Nigerian education. The chapter raises questions, which include what prospects are
there for African languages in teaching and learning? What challenges colonial languages pose on
Nigerian education? Finally, the chapter examines the reasons behind the failure of the call for
decolonisation and how the English language can be decolonised.
In Transforming Leadership: Towards the Advancement of Decolonisation and Social Justice (chapter
12), Setlhodi and Ramadikela focus on leadership and decolonisation. These authors write about the
need to undo the teachings and learning of education as they pose pertinent questions: (i) how does
one erase or unlearn what one has learnt and internalised over time? (ii) Why is it imperative to
decolonise – what can be done to reconfigure acquired knowledge, skills, values, beliefs as well as
habits) and (iii) does unlearning imply total negation of colonial teachings? Whilst raising these
probing questions, these authors emphasise that decolonisation and transformation are not
synonymous. The authors claim that decolonising implies freeing selves from imperialist ideologies
and imposition, and it underscores the reclaiming identity and following our distinct makeup to bring
about social justice.
In the final chapter, Agbogun focuses on the Western Thought and African Presence in Biblical
Interpretation (chapter 13). The Bible has over the epochs been explained in particular ways that
appears to suit the Western narrators. Agbogun argues that the exegesis from the original Bible was
drawn from a text what was originally written in Greek or Hebrew languages. The Bible then has this
complexity of being drawn from particular cultures with antiquated expressions. The synoptic gospels
have similarities in most of the narratives of Jesus’ life and ministry. The cumulative result and
conclusion of the life and ministry of Jesus are suffering, death and resurrection, which translated into
the completion of salvation and redemption for humankind according to the Bible. Decolonising the
interpretation of the Bible means imagining the African perspectives within the stories of the Bible.
Agbogun pushes for the contextualisation and highlighting the Bible’s relevance. This chapter also
demonstrates how Western knowledge has misled people in biblical interpretation as it defines Africa
and Africans in the New Testament.
References
Botwe-Asamoah, K. 2005. Kwame Nkrumah’s Politico-Cultural Thought and policies: An African-Centered
Paradigm for the Second Phase of the African Revolution. New York: Routledge.
Diop, C.A. 2000. Towards the African Renaissance: Essays in African Culture and Development, 1946-1960. New Jersey: Red
Sea Press.
Freire, P. 1970. Pedagogy of the Oppressed. New York: Continuum.
Green, M. 1998. Transforming Higher Education: Views from Leaders Around the World. Phoenix: American Council on
Education/ORYX Press.
Heleta, S. 2016. Decolonisation of Higher Education: Dismantling Epistemic Violence and Eurocentrism in South Africa.
Transformation in Higher Education, 1(1):1-9. http://dx.doi.org/10.4102/the.v1i1.9
Macedo, D. 1993. Literacy for Stupidification: The Pedagogy of Big Lies. Harvard Educational Review, 63(2):183-207.
Macedo, D. 2000. Introduction to N. Chomsky’s Chomsky on Miseducation. Lanham: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers.
https://doi.org/10.17763/haer.63.2.c626327827177714 Mazrui, A. 1980. The African Condition: A Political Diagnosis.
London: Heinemann.
Mazrui, A. 2005. Pan Africanism and the Intellectuals: Rise, Decline and Revival. In:
T. Mkandawire (ed.), African Intellectuals: Rethinking Politics, Language, Gender and Development. London: Zed Books.
Mbeki, T. 1998. Africa – The Time Has Come. Cape Town: Tafelberg.
Mbeki, T. 2017. Speech of the TMF patron Thabo Mbeki, on the occasion of his installation as Chancellor of the University of
South Africa. Unisa Campus, Pretoria, 27 February 2017.
Mphahlele, E. 1974. The African Image. New York: Praeger Publishers.
Mwesigire, B. 5 strategies for de-Westernising globalisation by Ali Mazrui. [Online]. Available: https://bit.ly/2Avseil
Ndlovu-Gatsheni, S.J. 2018. Epistemic Freedom in Africa: Deprovincialization and Decolonization.
London: Routledge. https://doi.org/10.4324/9780429492204
Nkrumah, K. 1964. Consciencism: Philosophy and Ideology for De-colonization. London: Heinemann.
Nyerere, J.K. 1970. Nyerere: Freedom and Unity/Uhuru na Umoja. Dar es Salaam: Oxford.
Shih, Y. 2018. Rethinking Paulo Freire’s Dialogic Pedagogy and Its Implications for Teachers’ Teaching. Journal of Education
and Learning, 7(4):230-235. https://doi.org/10.5539/jel. v7n4p230
Shor, I. 1987. Educating the Educators: A Freirean Approach to the Crisis in Teacher
Education. In: I. Shor (ed.), Freire for the Classroom: A Sourcebook for Liberatory Teaching. Portsmouth: Heinemann.
Stoke, W.T. 1997. Progressive Teacher Education: Consciousness, Identity and Knowledge. In: P. Freire, J.W. Fraser, D.
Macedo, T. McKinnon & W.T. Stokes (eds.), Mentoring the Mentor: