“[COVID-19 presents] an opportunity for us to rethink how we teach and learn, how we do research and how we apply what we learn, recognising that our students will be working with us to build a new, post-COVID-19 world.”
This was the positive message University of Cape Town (UCT) Vice-Chancellor Professor Mamokgethi Phakeng shared with the university community during an online staff assembly on Thursday, 14 May.
The virtual event was convened to communicate the university’s overarching response to the COVID-19 pandemic and to share the executive’s thinking on a phased return to work on campus.
“The COVID-19 pandemic has brought into sharp focus the rapidly changing world. These challenges will test our solidarity and commitment, but together we can overcome each one,” Phakeng said.
Over the next few days UCT News will publish a series of articles that unpack how the university is responding to COVID-19. They will examine the phased return to campus, teaching and learning, student affairs, research, 2020 exams and 2021 admissions.
Navigating the storm
The COVID-19 pandemic continues to adversely affect many sectors of society, she added, including the higher education industry in South Africa and around the globe.
“This is a challenge we share with our students because higher education cannot be about staff on the one side and students on the other side.”
UCT’s challenges are not unique – tertiary institutions around the world are facing the same set of uncertainties. Now is the time for students and staff to pull together.
“This is a challenge and opportunity we share with our students because higher education cannot be about staff on the one side and students on the other side. The university is a community that includes all of us,” she said.
The UCT executive’s immediate focus is to salvage the academic year and to ensure all students complete the year successfully. A number of plans are in place to achieve this, among them emergency remote teaching and learning.
“We are thinking of solutions for all our students, including those whose environments are not suitable for learning, those living in poverty and those living with different kinds of disabilities.
“We are working together to meet the challenges. It’s not been easy.”
Plans under way
Emergency remote teaching and learning has been in effect since 28 April, and Phakeng said that online lessons will continue to help both students and staff in the upcoming terms.
“This new way of learning is stressful for all of us, but especially for students who may feel isolated from their instructors, and tutors from the camaraderie of fellow students.”
She commended the Centre for Innovation in Learning and Teaching (CILT) in the Centre for Higher Education Development (CHED) for developing innovative online teaching tools under strict time constraints to ensure remote teaching runs smoothly.
“I hope we can use online teaching as a way to free teaching staff in order to engage more meaningfully with students on a personal level. Your influence as role models remains as important as ever,” she added.
Health and safety
The health and well-being of staff and students is of utmost importance. The university has taken the necessary steps to ensure staff have the support they need, even while off campus, she said, and are encouraged to make use of the services available.
While everyone remains eager to return to work, Phakeng said UCT remains guided by national government directives and stressed that the executive will not return staff to campus (even in a phased approach) unless it is safe to do so.
“Of course, we would much rather be together, and social distancing is demanding.”
In the meantime, she urged staff to reach out to their colleagues, to provide a community of care and to maintain the “sense of camaraderie” that would otherwise have existed in the office.
“Of course, we would much rather be together, and social distancing is demanding. Like you, I would much rather sit with my colleagues around a conference table. But like you, I am finding ways to stay in touch online,” she said.
A new UCT
Thanks to the hard work and commitment from staff, a “new kind of UCT is emerging from this crisis”.
She thanked staff for demonstrating “excellence, resilience and innovation” during a difficult and uncertain time.
“Campus will be quiet for some time, even with the staggered return of the South African economy.
“[But] we are not going to just survive this crisis; we are going to thrive through it, and we are going to help South Africa thrive as well.”
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COVID-19 is a global pandemic that caused President Cyril Ramaphosa to declare a national disaster in South Africa on 15 March and implement a national lockdown from 26 March.
UCT is taking the threat of infection in our university community extremely seriously, and this page will be updated regularly with the latest COVID-19 information.
Getting credible, evidence-based, accessible information and recommendations relating to COVID-19
The Department of Medicine at the University of Cape Town and Groote Schuur Hospital, are producing educational video material for use on digital platforms and in multiple languages. The information contained in these videos is authenticated and endorsed by the team of experts based in the Department of Medicine. Many of the recommendations are based on current best evidence and are aligned to provincial, national and international guidelines. For more information on UCT’s Department of Medicine, please visit the website.
To watch more videos like these, visit the Department of Medicine’s YouTube channel.
As the COVID-19 crisis drags on and evolves, civil society groups are responding to growing and diversifying needs – just when access to resources is becoming more insecure, writes UCT’s Prof Ralph Hamann.
03 Jul 2020 - 6 min read RepublishedThe Covid-19 crisis has reinforced the global consequences of fragmented, inadequate and inequitable healthcare systems and the damage caused by hesitant and poorly communicated responses.
24 Jun 2020 - >10 min read OpinionOur scientists must not practise in isolation, but be encouraged to be creative and increase our knowledge of the needs of developing economies, write Professor Mamokgethi Phakeng, vice-chancellor of UCT, and Professor Thokozani Majozi from the University of the Witwatersrand.
09 Jun 2020 - 6 min read RepublishedSouth Africa has been recognised globally for its success in flattening the curve, which came as a result of President Ramaphosa responding quickly to the crisis, writes Prof Alan Hirsch.
28 Apr 2020 - 6 min read RepublishedIn an email to the UCT community, Vice-Chancellor Professor Mamokgethi Phakeng said:
“COVID-19, caused by the virus SARS-CoV-2, is a rapidly changing epidemic. [...] Information [...] will be updated as and when new information becomes available.”
We are continuing to monitor the situation and we will be updating the UCT community regularly – as and when there are further updates. If you are concerned or need more information, students can contact the Student Wellness Service on 021 650 5620 or 021 650 1271 (after hours), while staff can contact 021 650 5685.