Gauteng universities head up population research
A population research project focusing on low-income communities in Johannesburg has been launched by the universities of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg and Pretoria.
A population research project focusing on low-income communities in Johannesburg has been launched by the universities of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg and Pretoria.
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Leah Wilson is a student journalist at Wits Vuvuzela. This is her life in lockdown.
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After three years at Wits, it has slowly dawned on me that I am bothered by the small number of coloured students.
On any given day, I have seen just one or two during my time on campus. So it has always been clear that we are demographically underrepresented on Wits campuses. In an institution with thousands of students, we are a drop in the ocean.
According to the 2018 Wits Annual Report, of the 39 953 Wits students, coloureds were just 1 659 (4,15%). The comparable figures for the rest of the student population were: African – 26 452; white – 6 392; Indian – 4 814; and Chinese – 211.
The low numbers are especially stark when one considers that in the 2019 population estimate by Statistics South Africa, the coloured and white populations make up 8,8% and 7,9% respectively.
These figures are not restricted to Wits. The percentage of coloured students is similar even in a distance learning institution such as Unisa where they make up 5,6% of the 400 000-strong student body.
Reflecting on the low numbers of coloured students in these institutions is disheartening for me as I consider the possible work opportunities and positive impact that learning in the university environment has meant for my future earning capacity.
When one considers that students could come from Johannesburg’s coloured residential areas such as Eldorado Park, Westbury, Riverlea and Ennerdale, one cannot disregard the socio-economic factors prevailing in these areas.
Visiting family in these areas is always a reminder that there are many communities that still face high levels of poverty, gang violence and proximity to substance abuse in friends or family members.
Being well aware of the privilege of being able to study at university, I feel sanitised from the experiences of many coloured people my age. There is hardly a correlation between the theory-filled bubble of university life and the issues that young coloureds face.
University of Johannesburg master’s candidate in industrial relations and political science, Robyn Williams, echoes the observation that coloureds are under-presented in university spaces.
“As the first individual of colour in my family to attend university, I can safely say that tertiary education has not been the first priority for school leavers. [Instead, it has been to] finish matric, go work and help your family. I can never take my privilege lightly,” she says.
I am grateful that my parents always spurred me to set my sights on a higher education and that I was confident enough to do so. However, I am aware that I am not the first in my family, and my family had the financial means.
Seeing more coloured students on campus would allow me to hope that they would be able to break the cycle of poverty in areas such as Riverlea, Westbury or Eldorado Park, that a university education would create opportunities to good jobs.
It is important for coloured youth to be encouraged to study. I believe that their resilience due to the tough community circumstances surrounding them could be just the weapon to help them to do well in the pressurised university spaces.
FEAUTURED IMAGE: Leah Wilson, a student journalist at Wits Vuvuzela.
Wits Lady Bucks are on a winning streak in ICSL
Staff union says a new vice-chancellor will have a lot to clean up around transformation, “nepotism, gender-based discrimination and violence, mental and emotional wellbeing, bullying, victimisation” and staff workloads.