Democratising the Music Curriculum: Integrating Ubuntugogy for the Africanisation of South African Higher Education

Authors

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.25159/2312-3540/17017

Keywords:

Africanisation, decolonisation, music edcuation, Ubuntugogy, Western perspective

Abstract

In recent years, there has been an ongoing debate about the need for redress in South African higher education which is largely informed by Western perspectives, and the music curriculum is no exception. Even though there is growing progress, music education continues to be dominated by the Western classical canon. Therefore, the purpose of this article was to provide a comprehensive investigation of how ubuntugogy can be successfully and effectively merged into the South African higher education music curriculum. The researcher used ubuntugogy as a theoretical framework to advocate for the integration of ubuntugogy—a teaching philosophy rooted in African values and communal learning—to democratise and Africanise the music curriculum in South African higher education. This article used a qualitative content analysis grounded in examining existing literature on a similar subject under the guidance of the research questions developed earlier. The findings of this study show that ubuntugogy provides an approach that can Africanise the curriculum and pedagogy by incorporating indigenous musical practices, oral traditions, and cultural values into the teaching and learning process. The results of this article revealed that applying ubuntugogy as a method of teaching and learning can help in preparing music education students to engage with the world from a culturally informed and empowered perspective. This article concludes by affirming that ubuntugogy as a method of teaching and learning provides a transformative framework for Africanising music education in South African higher education.

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Author Biography

Sakhiseni Joseph Yende, University of Western Cape

Mr. Sakhiseni J. Yende is presently affiliated with the University of Cape Town in South Africa as a doctoral candidate. Yende’s research sits at the cutting edge and patient in the field of performing arts, especially in opera. From 2014 to 2015, Yende was appointed as a Library Assistant at the Tshwane University of Technology (The Faculty of the Arts) the Department of Performing Arts. In 2016, was appointed as a Junior Researcher at the Jive Media Africa, where he worked closely with young people who are socially and financially marginalised in rural areas such as Carnarvon (Northern Cape), Rustenburg (North-West), Pietermaritzburg (KZN). In the same year (2016), Yende joined J.D Mosiah primary school where he served as head of music and a teacher. Shortly after that, Mr. Yende joined the Tshwane University of Technology (The Faculty of the Arts) from the year 2017 to 2019, where he served under the Department of Performing Arts as an Assistant Lecturer, Research Assistant, as well as Curriculum Development Assistant. Yende has acquired extensive research skills, as he has also taught research methods course and has researched and supervised both honours and master’s students in a range of Performing Arts fields such as Dance, Vocal Arts (Opera), and Musical Theatre. His research interests are quite diverse but follow six lines: music education, African music, opera, music in political sciences, and education.

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Published

2024-10-16

How to Cite

Yende, Sakhiseni Joseph. “Democratising the Music Curriculum: Integrating Ubuntugogy for the Africanisation of South African Higher Education”. International Journal of Educational Development in Africa, 14 pages . https://doi.org/10.25159/2312-3540/17017.

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