Abstract

The coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) crisis posed new challenges in higher education, which compounded the existing challenges. The South African higher education sector responded with plans to secure the learning and teaching mandates and bolster support services for students. An emergency remote learning and teaching plan was launched to mitigate the impact of the pandemic in the 2020 academic year. This article reports on the reflections of lecturers who were teaching psychometric assessment and supervising student psychologists on the clinical master’s programme during the pandemic. The Master’s Clinical Psychology Programme at the University of the Western Cape was the case study. The focus on the psychological assessment module was the unit of analysis. Course documents and reflective notes, generated during the adaptation of psychological assessment training, were used as the data source. Thematic analysis generated five themes, namely, (1) the importance of statutory guidelines for clinical training, (2) adapting content, (3) pedagogy and modalities, (4) management of test libraries and (5) lecturer experience. The management of changes to the module in response to the COVID-19 crisis was challenging. Lecturers had to balance competency training and assessment with revised work and adapted teaching conditions. Emergency teaching interventions took place in the framework of ethics and professional requirement, and the learning outcomes articulated within the scope of practice for clinical psychologists.

Highlights

  • Continuous changes in the academic landscape and student protests have been the realities of higher education in South Africa over the past two decades

  • President Ramaphosa issued a state of national disaster (Ramaphosa, 2020a), calling for a national lockdown from 23 March 2020 (Ramaphosa, 2020b). This containment response comprised five increasing levels of restriction and prohibition to curb the spread of the virus (South African Government, 2021)

  • The higher education sector appealed to the South African government to save the 2020 academic year, and institutions developed business continuity plans to this end

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Summary

Introduction

Continuous changes in the academic landscape and student protests have been the realities of higher education in South Africa over the past two decades. President Ramaphosa issued a state of national disaster (Ramaphosa, 2020a), calling for a national lockdown from 23 March 2020 (Ramaphosa, 2020b). This containment response comprised five increasing levels of restriction and prohibition to curb the spread of the virus (South African Government, 2021). The higher education sector appealed to the South African government to save the 2020 academic year, and institutions developed business continuity plans to this end. It was important to reflect on responses at an institutional level

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