Abstract

Background:Although there is evidence that education is a social weapon in the fight against HIV/AIDS, there is also evidence that, to date, HIV/AIDS is not fully integrated into all the disciplines in Higher Education Institutions (HEIs). Therefore, most of the university students in South Africa are not well prepared to be HIV/AIDS-competent graduates who can live and work in a society ravaged by AIDS.Objective:This study sought to analyse the extent of HIV/AIDS integration into the curricula in various departments at a selected university in the Limpopo Province, South Africa.Materials and Methods:The study used quantitative and qualitative approaches to analyse the extent of HIV/AIDS integration into the curricula. The curriculum calendars were retrieved from the university website. An audit tool guided retrieval of HIV/AIDS content and was analysed using SPSS V 25. The qualitative content analysis was used to describe the nature of HIV/AIDS content.Results:Out of eight schools, about 68 modules had HIV/AIDS content. The majority of the modules (53; 78%) were offered at the undergraduate level. Furthermore, the majority of the HIV/AIDS content (62; 91%) was integrated into undergraduate compulsory modules. Most (34; 51%) of the HIV/AIDS content were located in health sciences disciplines. HIV/AIDS content was mostly integrated into existing carrier modules. Time allocation for the teaching of HIV/AIDS was not indicated. Most of the modules did have information about teaching and assessment strategies.Conclusion:It is recommended that discipline-specific HIV/AIDS content be integrated into all disciplines.

Highlights

  • The results show that the School of Health Sciences led with 34 modules (50%) with HIV/AIDS content, followed by Human and Social Sciences with ten modules (15%)

  • This corroborates a recent systematic review conducted by [7], which indicated that worldwide that HIV/AIDS content is not fully integrated into curricula. These findings show that little progress has been made regarding the integration of HIV/AIDS content into curricula since previous studies in 2005 and 2010, which indicated that integration of HIV/AIDS content was neglected by most higher education institutions in South Africa [7]

  • The study concludes that HIV/AIDS content is taught in all schools at University of Venda (UNIVEN)

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Summary

Introduction

Higher Education Institutions (HEIs) in South Africa decided to integrate HIV/AIDS into the curriculum to produce HIV/AIDS competent graduates [7]. Authors [11 - 13] observed that “increased knowledge about HIV/IDS may not necessarily lead to positive behaviour change, yet knowledge about a disease may be an initial step towards behavioral risk change”. It is acknowledged as the first stage in the behaviour change process [14]. Most of the university students in South Africa are not well prepared to be HIV/AIDS-competent graduates who can live and work in a society ravaged by AIDS

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Conclusion

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