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Student Retention and Graduate Destination

Student Retention and Graduate Destination

Higher Education and Labour Market Access and Success Student attrition has been a perennial theme in South African higher education throughout the past decade. In its National Plan for Higher Education (2001), the Department of Education attributed high dropout rates primarily to financial and/or academic exclusions. Four years later, it was reported that 30% of students dropped out in their first year of study and a further 20% during their second and third years.

HSRC Press

Product Information

Format: 

240mm x 168mm (Soft Cover)

Pages: 

144

ISBN-13: 

978-07969-2309-7

Publish Year: 

2009

Rights: 

World Rights
Higher Education and Labour Market Access and Success Student attrition has been a perennial theme in South African higher education throughout the past decade. In its National Plan for Higher Education (2001), the Department of Education attributed high dropout rates primarily to financial and/or academic exclusions. Four years later, it was reported that 30% of students dropped out in their first year of study and a further 20% during their second and third years.

Acknowledgements
Acronyms and abbreviations

Introduction
Michael Cosser and Moeketsi Letseka
Background to the Student Retention and Graduate Destination Study
Organisation of the monograph

1 Uniformity and disjunction in the school-to-higher-education transition
Michael Cosser
Introduction
Findings from the Student Retention and Graduate Destination Study
Observations arising from the analysis

2 Poverty, race and student achievement in seven higher education institutions
Moeketsi Letseka, Mignonne Breier and Mariette Visser
Introduction
South Africa: Two nations
Poverty in the Student Retention and Graduate Destination Study
Race and poverty
The apartheid legacy in education
Reasons for premature departure
Financing studies
The National Student Financial Aid Scheme
Conclusion

3 Student inclusion and exclusion at the University of the Witwatersrand
Gill Scott and Moeketsi Letseka
Introduction
Racial desegregation
Staff integration
Curriculum integration
Institutional culture integration
Conclusion

4 Dropout or stop out at the University of the Western Cape
Mignonne Breier
Introduction
An institutional case study
The Student Retention and Graduate Destination Study at UWC
Conclusion

5 Weighing success and diversity in the balance at Stellenbosch University
Trish Gibbon
Introduction
Measuring success at Stellenbosch University
Success factors
Non-completion at Stellenbosch University
Changing Stellenbosch Universitys diversity profile
Conclusion

6 The graduate labour market
Percy Moleke
Introduction
Measuring the performance of the South African graduate labour market
Graduate labour market outcomes among the study cohort
Graduate employment
Conclusions

7 Student graduation, labour market destinations and employment earnings
Haroon Bhorat, Natasha Mayet and Mariette Visser
Introduction
Data
Higher education transition: A descriptive overview
From higher education to the labour market: A snapshot of trends
Graduation, employment and earnings: A multivariate analysis
The determinants of labour market outcomes: Employment and earnings equations
Conclusions

Afterword
Michael Cosser

Michael Cosser is the chief research specialist in the Human Sciences Research Council’s research programme on education, science, and skills development.

Moeketsi Letseka is a senior lecturer in the Department of Educational Studies at the University of South Africa (UNISA).

Mignonne Breier is the Research Development Cluster Manager in the Research Office at the University of Cape Town.

Mariette Visser is a research manager in the Human Sciences Research Council’s research programme on education, science, and skills development.