Rural students’ transition in and through a semi-urban university: Experiences from the National University of Lesotho

This paper reports on the findings of a study carried out at the National University of Lesotho (NUL). The paper explored the influence of ‘rurality’ on students who originate from the rural areas of Lesotho and analysed their transition at the NUL. The spatial geographic theory and narrative inqui...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Pulane Lefoka, Tebello Tlali
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Johannesburg 2021-09-01
Series:SOTL in the South
Online Access:https://sotl-south-journal.net/index.php/sotls/article/view/195
id doaj-ed2f2c1516f64634b19a71d90c5babe0
record_format Article
spelling doaj-ed2f2c1516f64634b19a71d90c5babe02021-10-01T09:22:12ZengUniversity of JohannesburgSOTL in the South2523-11542021-09-015210.36615/sotls.v5i2.195277Rural students’ transition in and through a semi-urban university: Experiences from the National University of LesothoPulane Lefoka0Tebello Tlali1National University of Lesotho, LesothoNational University of Lesotho, Lesotho This paper reports on the findings of a study carried out at the National University of Lesotho (NUL). The paper explored the influence of ‘rurality’ on students who originate from the rural areas of Lesotho and analysed their transition at the NUL. The spatial geographic theory and narrative inquiry were adopted, and qualitative focus groups were utilised to collect data. The students were given an opportunity to conceptualise ‘rurality’ and narrate their stories about growing up and earlier schooling, as well as their learning experiences at the NUL. The findings revealed that rural students’ educational trajectories are indeed filled with numerous challenges, mainly due to deprivation and limited exposure to technology in their earlier lives. The main recommendation made by the paper is that the concerned stakeholders ought to be mindful of the needs of all prospective higher education students, including those from rural backgrounds, and intervene accordingly.   https://sotl-south-journal.net/index.php/sotls/article/view/195
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Pulane Lefoka
Tebello Tlali
spellingShingle Pulane Lefoka
Tebello Tlali
Rural students’ transition in and through a semi-urban university: Experiences from the National University of Lesotho
SOTL in the South
author_facet Pulane Lefoka
Tebello Tlali
author_sort Pulane Lefoka
title Rural students’ transition in and through a semi-urban university: Experiences from the National University of Lesotho
title_short Rural students’ transition in and through a semi-urban university: Experiences from the National University of Lesotho
title_full Rural students’ transition in and through a semi-urban university: Experiences from the National University of Lesotho
title_fullStr Rural students’ transition in and through a semi-urban university: Experiences from the National University of Lesotho
title_full_unstemmed Rural students’ transition in and through a semi-urban university: Experiences from the National University of Lesotho
title_sort rural students’ transition in and through a semi-urban university: experiences from the national university of lesotho
publisher University of Johannesburg
series SOTL in the South
issn 2523-1154
publishDate 2021-09-01
description This paper reports on the findings of a study carried out at the National University of Lesotho (NUL). The paper explored the influence of ‘rurality’ on students who originate from the rural areas of Lesotho and analysed their transition at the NUL. The spatial geographic theory and narrative inquiry were adopted, and qualitative focus groups were utilised to collect data. The students were given an opportunity to conceptualise ‘rurality’ and narrate their stories about growing up and earlier schooling, as well as their learning experiences at the NUL. The findings revealed that rural students’ educational trajectories are indeed filled with numerous challenges, mainly due to deprivation and limited exposure to technology in their earlier lives. The main recommendation made by the paper is that the concerned stakeholders ought to be mindful of the needs of all prospective higher education students, including those from rural backgrounds, and intervene accordingly.  
url https://sotl-south-journal.net/index.php/sotls/article/view/195
work_keys_str_mv AT pulanelefoka ruralstudentstransitioninandthroughasemiurbanuniversityexperiencesfromthenationaluniversityoflesotho
AT tebellotlali ruralstudentstransitioninandthroughasemiurbanuniversityexperiencesfromthenationaluniversityoflesotho
_version_ 1716861898703503360