Abstract

This article arises out of a broader study into the contextual influences on the professional development of academics as teachers in higher education in South Africa. Using Fairclough’s critical discourse analysis we examine the website of a ‘research-led’ South African university. We examine the choices made in the use of website space and the presence and absence of texts which refer to teaching or the development of teaching. We compare these choices with those made about portraying other aspects of the university’s self-described mission on the website as a proxy for the valuing of teaching. We recognise that marketing spaces cannot be seen to equate to the commitment of institutions, departments or individual academics, but our concern in this project was to understand what publicly accessible claims the university makes about teaching, and whether such claims are borne out by its own self-description. With regard to teaching we found that absences are more frequent than presences, especially in comparison with the way other ‘core functions’ of the university are presented. Taken together it is difficult to find support for the rhetoric of the valuing of teaching that is conveyed in the university’s self-description. We suggest that this lack of valuing of teaching may have an effect on the choices academics make in responding to calls to invest time in developing their teaching.

Highlights

  • This paper reports on a project intended to examine how both teaching and the development of teaching are framed within the self-description of one South African university that represents itself as research-led

  • In an attempt to locate the public valuing of teaching by the institution, we selected only publically accessible texts that we considered the potential student, parent or non-University of Cape Town (UCT) academic may access2

  • The order of discourse that emerges appears to be one of ‘economic calculation’, serving to place different priorities before academics in their role as knowledge professionals: research driven by utilitarian impulses, and teaching driven by efficiency

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Summary

Introduction

This paper reports on a project intended to examine how both teaching and the development of teaching are framed within the self-description of one South African university that represents itself as research-led. In a form of internal critique our concern was to understand whether and in what way the University of Cape Town (UCT) makes claims about teaching and its development, and how such rhetoric is borne out within its own publically accessible self-description, the UCT website. In an attempt to locate the public valuing of teaching by the institution, we selected only publically accessible texts that we considered the potential student, parent or non-UCT academic may access

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