Accessing Powerful Knowledge: A Comparative Study of Two First Year Sociology Courses in a South African University
This paper presents a case study of two first year sociology courses run at an elite South African university in order to speak to student perspectives on the sociology curriculum. The paper provides a comparative analysis of the academic experiences of extended degree (ED) students registered on tw...
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University of the Western Cape
2017-12-01
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doaj-f896c1b07b6e4735a81e965ce39fccb82020-11-24T21:18:36ZengUniversity of the Western CapeCritical Studies in Teaching and Learning2310-71032017-12-0152335010.14426/cristal.v5i2.8787Accessing Powerful Knowledge: A Comparative Study of Two First Year Sociology Courses in a South African UniversityKgaugelo Sebidi0Shannon Morreira1University of OxfordUniversity of Cape TownThis paper presents a case study of two first year sociology courses run at an elite South African university in order to speak to student perspectives on the sociology curriculum. The paper provides a comparative analysis of the academic experiences of extended degree (ED) students registered on two first year courses, one of which drew on literature and sociological theory which was mainly Euro-American in origin, and the other of which attempted to situate sociological theory within local contexts. In so doing, it contributes to debates on the role of identity in teaching sociology. We highlight the tension that occurs between the need to make content accessible and relevant for students – particularly for first generation students – and the need to also give students access to the powerful knowledge (Young, 2009) that comes with familiarity with the theory-dense sociological canon.http://cristal.epubs.ac.za/index.php/cristal/article/view/87Curriculumdecolonizationsociologyfirst yearextended degree |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Kgaugelo Sebidi Shannon Morreira |
spellingShingle |
Kgaugelo Sebidi Shannon Morreira Accessing Powerful Knowledge: A Comparative Study of Two First Year Sociology Courses in a South African University Critical Studies in Teaching and Learning Curriculum decolonization sociology first year extended degree |
author_facet |
Kgaugelo Sebidi Shannon Morreira |
author_sort |
Kgaugelo Sebidi |
title |
Accessing Powerful Knowledge: A Comparative Study of Two First Year Sociology Courses in a South African University |
title_short |
Accessing Powerful Knowledge: A Comparative Study of Two First Year Sociology Courses in a South African University |
title_full |
Accessing Powerful Knowledge: A Comparative Study of Two First Year Sociology Courses in a South African University |
title_fullStr |
Accessing Powerful Knowledge: A Comparative Study of Two First Year Sociology Courses in a South African University |
title_full_unstemmed |
Accessing Powerful Knowledge: A Comparative Study of Two First Year Sociology Courses in a South African University |
title_sort |
accessing powerful knowledge: a comparative study of two first year sociology courses in a south african university |
publisher |
University of the Western Cape |
series |
Critical Studies in Teaching and Learning |
issn |
2310-7103 |
publishDate |
2017-12-01 |
description |
This paper presents a case study of two first year sociology courses run at an elite South African university in order to speak to student perspectives on the sociology curriculum. The paper provides a comparative analysis of the academic experiences of extended degree (ED) students registered on two first year courses, one of which drew on literature and sociological theory which was mainly Euro-American in origin, and the other of which attempted to situate sociological theory within local contexts. In so doing, it contributes to debates on the role of identity in teaching sociology. We highlight the tension that occurs between the need to make content accessible and relevant for students – particularly for first generation students – and the need to also give students access to the powerful knowledge (Young, 2009) that comes with familiarity with the theory-dense sociological canon. |
topic |
Curriculum decolonization sociology first year extended degree |
url |
http://cristal.epubs.ac.za/index.php/cristal/article/view/87 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT kgaugelosebidi accessingpowerfulknowledgeacomparativestudyoftwofirstyearsociologycoursesinasouthafricanuniversity AT shannonmorreira accessingpowerfulknowledgeacomparativestudyoftwofirstyearsociologycoursesinasouthafricanuniversity |
_version_ |
1726008343601872896 |