The unbundled university: Researching emerging models in an unequal landscape 2016-2018

DOI

The data consists of interview and focus group transcripts, survey results and desk research. Interviews and focus groups took place in two phases. Phase one (March-November 2017) included senior managers and education developers within universities in South Africa and England and senior managers from private companies and other organisations in South Africa and England. Phase two (February-May 2018) included universities’ academic staff in South Africa and England. Surveys were conducted with 200 students at four South African universities during February and March 2018. Surveys were also conducted with 200 students at four English universities during May and June 2018. Desk research was conducted pertaining to the partnerships between public universities and private companies in the UK and South Africa from December 2017 to March 2018, and updated in August 2018. It involved iterative searches of publicly-available databases using search terms identified through the conception of the project.The nature of Higher Education is rapidly evolving in South Africa. Educational technologies, public-private partnerships and shifting employer expectations are resulting in rapid and unprecedented 'unbundling' and marketization of Higher Education. For example, over the past few years we have witnessed the appearance of many flexible online courses and qualifications, short courses and MOOCs, often delivered in partnerships between universities and private organisations. Unbundling refers to the process of disaggregating curricula into standalone units often available in flexible online modes, allowing universities to respond to the pressures of widening access, increasing student numbers, competition from alternative providers and technological change, by distributing provision across several individual, more cost-effective components. Marketization refers to the increasing presence of alternative (private) providers offering HE provision alongside universities, often through online means and at lower costs, and the emerging partnerships between universities and private providers to offer accredited learning at a wide range of levels. In particular, the South African higher education context seems poised to benefit from market-based innovations that may assist with the need to increase equality and access across the diverse sectors of South African society. Whilst these changes may offer opportunities for increased numbers of learners to access education and thus contribute to economic prosperity, there is very little empirical research about the process and impact of unbundling, or the marketization of Higher Education in Africa, or developed countries. In practice, we are observing the emergence of unspecified business models based on different flavours of 'unbundling', which in turn are leading to unclear relationships between universities and private partners or providers. For unbundled technology enhanced education or public-private partnerships to impact positively on sustainable economic growth in Africa, there is an urgent need for systematic research in this area, which is the topic of this timely and innovative proposal. Therefore, we ask the following overarching question: How are unbundling and marketization changing the nature of higher education provision in South Africa, and what impact will this have on widening access, educational achievement, employability and thus the potential for economic development? We will explore this research question through a focus on the process of 'educational market making'. We aim to examine marketization and unbundling in HE as the outcomes of negotiations and manoeuvres which have a 'constitutive' function. Our central assumption is that markets do not appear naturally, but are 'made' through increasingly networked interactions that involve individual decision-making, collective discourse, technical expertise and the deployment of key 'objects': educational technologies, data analysis techniques, and innovative business models. Our study will rely on primary evidence collected through interviews with 'experts', and on the analysis of available datasets, documents and other artefacts and, crucially, through systematic engagement with a wide range of stakeholders. The outcomes of this project will directly impact the future development of HE in South Africa, other African countries and in the UK, through providing evidence of the effectiveness of disaggregation of curricula and alternative providers offering HE on educational outcomes, access to HE and employability. The project will have direct impact through critically evaluating the on-going trends of 'unbundling' and marketization on South Africa's economic development. The research will provide evidence of the effectiveness of educational technology to support the emerging HE market, directly impacting the educational technology sector, technology suppliers and alternative HE providers.

Data was collected through semi-structured interviews (42), semi-structured focus groups (17), face to face surveys (400 respondents) and desk research. (1) Interview and focus group sampling. Interviews were held at two types of institution in South Africa; government/policy and public universities. We sampled by type, e.g. comprehensive/research. Within institutions we attempted to interview high level decision makers as well as those whose role was more about implementing that strategy. Online programme management companies were chosen as they emerged from the initial interviews as being active in the terrain. A similar methodology was utilised in England, although some of the online programme management companies are the same. Focus groups with academics were held at a subset of the same public universities in each country. (2) Surveys: 50 students from each university were approached to participate in the study. We spent at least two days on each campus. Using the onlinesurveys.ac.uk platform to input the data as we conducted the surveys allowed us to track the demographics of our sample as it increased to ensured that the sample was relatively representative of the population at each university, in terms of subject area, level of study, race (in South Africa), international versus local students (in the UK) and gender. The desk research involved iterative searches of publicly-available databases to collect data pertaining to partnerships between all public universities in South Africa and the UK and online programme management companies using search terms identified through the conception of the project.

Identifier
DOI https://doi.org/10.5255/UKDA-SN-853625
Metadata Access https://datacatalogue.cessda.eu/oai-pmh/v0/oai?verb=GetRecord&metadataPrefix=oai_ddi25&identifier=cf14a1f4c65538b32351af04e2199d02b9b2d36388d8dfd1629f14162022fb52
Provenance
Creator Morris, N, University of Leeds; Czerniewicz, L, University of Cape Town; Swinnerton, B, University of Leeds; Cliff, A, University of Cape Town; Ivancheva, M, University of Liverpool; Coop , T, University of Leeds; Walji, S, University of Cape Town; Mogliacci, R, University of Cape Town; Swartz, R, University of The Free State
Publisher UK Data Service
Publication Year 2019
Funding Reference Economic and Social Research Council; National Research Foundation, South Africa
Rights Neil Morris, University of Leeds. Laura Czerniewicz, University of Cape Town. Bronwen Swinnerton, University of Leeds. Alan Cliff, University of Cape Town. Mariya Ivancheva, University of Liverpool. Taryn Coop, University of Leeds. Sukaina Walji, University of Cape Town. Rada Mogliacci, University of Cape Town. Rebecca Swartz, University of the Free State; The Data Collection is available for download to users registered with the UK Data Service.
OpenAccess true
Representation
Language English
Resource Type Numeric; Text
Discipline Social Sciences
Spatial Coverage United Kingdom; South Africa