Towards a social sustainability in higher education: enhancing students’ solidarity and togetherness through collaborative projects in racially diverse learning environments
Abstract
One key goal in the mission and vision statement of the University of the Free State is to
recruit the best and most diverse students who work in solidarity and togetherness across
social and historical divides. This goal is further echoed in the academic divisions’ own
mission and vision statements which endeavour to ensure that the broader institutional
goals are met. The Faculty of Education in this institution for instance, in accordance
with the institution’s vision, has included in their vision statement issues of diversity and
social transformation which foreground the Faculty’s commitment to produce teachers
who show solidarity in their dealings with others. A question that is worth considering
though is how these mission and vision statements can be implemented in practice by
lecturers in their classes. In this paper I report on an action research project towards the
realisation of the vision of togetherness and solidarity of the University of the Free State
and the Faculty of Education, in which spaces are created for collaborative work for
Honours classes. The results from this classroom practice indicate that students’
solidarity and togetherness in racially diverse learning environments can be enhanced
through collaborative students’ work designed by lecturers.