ABSTRACT
This article sets out to understand what the views of Ruvimbo, a Black female student teacher, are on the role of the university, and how and why these views emerged. The social philosophy of higher education of Ronald Barnett was used as a theoretical framework, and arts-informed methods such as drawings and photovoice, were used for data construction. The student teacher recognised the university–knowledge relationship but foregrounded her appreciation of having a safe and pleasant environment, developing cultural tolerance, and developing herself as a human being. Her view contradicts the predominant concern about the transformation and decolonisation of the curriculum in South Africa as a way of attaining epistemic justice, and claim for a more ecological approach to university education.
KEYWORDS
Student teachers; teacher education; student voice; university role; arts-informed methods
Student teachers; teacher education; student voice; university role; arts-informed methods
Tirado Taipe, C. A., & Wassermann, J. (2020). ‘Being at the university is a retreat!’: a Black female student teacher’s views on the role of the university. International Journal of Lifelong Education, 1-16. doi:10.1080/02601370.2020.1812127.
Reference of photograft: https://africacheck.org/wp-content/uploads/2016/12/000_Par6260573.jpg
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