A critique of andragogy in the South African TVET context

Authors

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.14426/jovacet.v6i1.318

Keywords:

Adult education; andragogy; apartheid; cultural bias; fundamental pedagogics; gender; race; TVET

Abstract

Andragogy, the ‘art and science of helping adults learn’ (Knowles, 1980:43), had some purchase in the South African technical and vocational education and training (TVET) sector, where writers and lecturers have been attracted to the idea that adult education has its own theoretical and epistemological principles. Recently, a notable number of writings in African countries, including South Africa, have advocated the adoption of andragogic methods to overcome the inadequate provision of workplace (procedural) learning in relation to formal (propositional) learning in TVET institutions. However, this article argues that andragogy is culturally biased because it is based on white, male, middle-class norms of the 1960s. Its assumptions about adult learning tend to marginalise others on the basis of race, gender, and cultural difference. This tendency is given a peculiar form in South Africa owing to the historical relationship between andragogy and fundamental pedagogics in the academic theorisation of apartheid ideology. On the strength of these historical, political, and cultural levels of criticism, it is suggested that andragogy has little veracity or credibility for TVET.

Author Biography

Dr Ian Moll, University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, South Africa

Ian Moll is a research fellow at the Centre for Researching Education and Labour (REAL) at the University of the Witwatersrand, having retired from the Division of Educational Technology at the university in 2021. With a PhD in cognitive science and education from the University of Geneva, his interests lie in theoretical psychology; knowledge, work and skill; the networked society; learning and pedagogy; and educational technology.

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Published

26-10-2023

How to Cite

Moll, I. (2023). A critique of andragogy in the South African TVET context . Journal of Vocational, Adult and Continuing Education and Training, 6(1). https://doi.org/10.14426/jovacet.v6i1.318

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Articles