Abstract
Higher education is understood to play a critical role in ongoing processes of social transformation in post-apartheid South Africa through the production of graduates who are critical and engaged citizens. A key challenge is that institutions of higher education are themselves implicated in reproducing the very hierarchies they hope to transform. In this paper, I reflect critically on my experiences of a course aimed at transforming teaching through transforming teachers. In this paper, I foreground my own positionality as a white female educator as I draw on feminist theorising to reflect on my experiences as a learner in the Community, Self and Identity course. I suggest that we need to teach in ways that are more cognisant of the complexities of the constraints on personal freedom in the past if we are to contribute to the development of social justice in the future.
Acknowledgements
This work is based upon research supported by the National Research Foundation. Thanks to ES, Patricia van der Spuy, Viv Bozalek and Brenda Liebowitz and anonymous reviewers for helpful comments on earlier incarnations of this paper. Thanks also to Anthea Lesch (University of Stellenbosch), Linda Smith (University of the Witwatersrand), Jeff Jawitz (University of Cape Town), Melanie Petersen (University of Stellenbosch) and Sandra Johnson (Cape Peninsula University of Technology) for giving me permission to share some of their experiences of this course.
Notes
1. Using inverted commas to signal our discomfort and a footnote to articulate our reservation.