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All qualifications and part qualifications registered on the National Qualifications Framework are public property. Thus the only payment that can be made for them is for service and reproduction. It is illegal to sell this material for profit. If the material is reproduced or quoted, the South African Qualifications Authority (SAQA) should be acknowledged as the source. |
| SOUTH AFRICAN QUALIFICATIONS AUTHORITY |
| REGISTERED QUALIFICATION: |
| Master of Philosophy in Transdisciplinary Health and Development Studies |
| SAQA QUAL ID | QUALIFICATION TITLE | |||
| 100677 | Master of Philosophy in Transdisciplinary Health and Development Studies | |||
| ORIGINATOR | ||||
| Stellenbosch University | ||||
| PRIMARY OR DELEGATED QUALITY ASSURANCE FUNCTIONARY | NQF SUB-FRAMEWORK | |||
| CHE - Council on Higher Education | HEQSF - Higher Education Qualifications Sub-framework | |||
| QUALIFICATION TYPE | FIELD | SUBFIELD | ||
| Master's Degree | Field 07 - Human and Social Studies | People/Human-Centred Development | ||
| ABET BAND | MINIMUM CREDITS | PRE-2009 NQF LEVEL | NQF LEVEL | QUAL CLASS |
| Undefined | 180 | Not Applicable | NQF Level 09 | Regular-Provider-ELOAC |
| REGISTRATION STATUS | SAQA DECISION NUMBER | REGISTRATION START DATE | REGISTRATION END DATE | |
| Reregistered | EXCO 0821/24 | 2021-07-01 | 2027-06-30 | |
| LAST DATE FOR ENROLMENT | LAST DATE FOR ACHIEVEMENT | |||
| 2028-06-30 | 2031-06-30 | |||
| In all of the tables in this document, both the pre-2009 NQF Level and the NQF Level is shown. In the text (purpose statements, qualification rules, etc), any references to NQF Levels are to the pre-2009 levels unless specifically stated otherwise. |
This qualification does not replace any other qualification and is not replaced by any other qualification. |
| PURPOSE AND RATIONALE OF THE QUALIFICATION |
| Purpose:
The purpose of this qualification is to develop the learners' capacity to investigate and think critically about a range of questions to do with health and development. More specifically the qualification aims to: The qualification will deliver on these outcomes through two distinct strategies for learners from different backgrounds. The first strategy (Option 1), which is aimed at learners who have completed a social science Honours Degree or the Postgraduate Diploma in Transdisciplinary Health and Development Studies, involves the completion of a full Master's Degree thesis. Learners' original research will be complemented by collaborative participation in research teams, focused reading groups, seminars, and international workshops through which they will be equipped to conduct innovative, original social research. The second strategy (Option 2), which is aimed at learners from diverse disciplinary backgrounds and professional experience, involves the completion of a set of core, compulsory modules designed to help learners from diverse background develop a rich grounding in both the theory and methods of transdisciplinary health and development studies. Three modules ground the orientation of the qualification, combining careful study of critical social theory, history and ethics with an intensive training in social science methods for social studies of health and development. Learners will apply this learning to a focused research problem through a directed reading course (tailored around their own research focus) and a research assignment. Rationale: A range of social ills that profoundly shape the possibilities for life for many people still persist. How we understand the ways in which life changes are curtailed or increased in 21st century South Africa depends entirely on the knowledge we receive and the methodologies we rely on to observe, analyse, and intervene in the world. At this point in South Africa's transition, it is not sufficient to merely measure employment, income or the distribution of social goods and services or to target individual behaviours, problems, or sites to understand the life possibilities of the population. Rather, the various ways in which health and welfare are understood, shaped and experienced require an analytical scope that takes into account a range of structural, interpersonal, and subjective modalities. The qualification thus seeks to train learners in the critical analysis of the political, ethical and conceptual factors involved in such measurement and of the effects of state and non-state interventions on the lives of the citizens of a country. Work, education, health and rural development which are the central concerns of the National Development Plan (NDP) that are profoundly shaped by social, political and economic processes. For example, the NDP's ambition to broaden access to ART for persons with HIV, train community specialists and health workers, implement national health insurance, and promote "active lifestyles and balanced diets" is premised on particular ideas of how the state should operate in relation to its citizens and entails the profound reorganisation of social life. Similarly, rural development and land reformation are profoundly social and political concerns that seek to stabilise a range of relationships and processes in the pursuit of social justice. The ways in which health and development are tightly bound together in the South African context requires a set of critical tools for thinking through their mutual relationships. While many academic qualifications in South Africa focus on these concerns, whether as technical problems requiring a fix or as epiphenomena divorced from structural realities, there are few that are dedicated to critical, transdisciplinary scholarship and training that integrates strong political and theoretical orientations with engaged action. By bringing together critical analytical skills in the social sciences with a focus on applied questions of health and development, the degree trains learners to work across disciplines, between theory and practice, and between political and technical modes of engagement. The qualification will train learners to think critically about how "the social" appears in development thinking, how the politics of development shapes its outcomes, and how persons and citizens are produced as categories by such processes. Moreover, the transdisciplinary nature of this Degree will enable professional health care and development workers and other stakeholders to combine their research and lived experiences in communities, clinics and hospitals to develop novel intervention strategies. New avenues for engaging in research concerning important issues in service provision, quality of care and the social aspects of development and health interventions will be explored. This qualification supports a transdisciplinary targeted research, implementation and dissemination activities that supplement and exceed traditional approaches to address critical questions at multiple levels in innovative ways. The qualification will provide opportunities for learners to explore a diversity of research sites in health care and development and to be exposed to the practical realities of delivering services in a variety of settings and communities. |
| LEARNING ASSUMED TO BE IN PLACE AND RECOGNITION OF PRIOR LEARNING |
| Recognition of Prior Learning (RPL):
The University considers learners applying for RPL in terms of the "Policy for the Assessment and Recognition of Prior Learning". RPL requests are handled according to this institutional RPL policy. RPL can be used to grant admission to learners who do not meet the minimum entry requirements and to grant advanced standing. Entry Requirements: The minimum entrance requirements are: Or |
| RECOGNISE PREVIOUS LEARNING? |
| Y |
| QUALIFICATION RULES |
| This qualification consists of the completion of either:
Or Compulsory Modules at Level 9 for the part coursework option: |
| EXIT LEVEL OUTCOMES |
| The following Exit Level Outcomes are applied in an intergrated manner:
1. Conduct a research in Transdisciplinary Health and Development Studies. 2. Locate contemporary health and development issues within a historical context. 3. Understand a broad range of social theory concerned with health and development. 4. Use visual, oral and written skills to communicate effectively. |
| ASSOCIATED ASSESSMENT CRITERIA |
| The following Associated Assessment Criteria are assessed in an integrated manner across all the Exit Level Outcomes:
Integrated Assessment: In the MPhil by thesis (option 1), the only credit-bearing assessment is that of the thesis. It is examined internally and externally. In the MPhil by coursework, more than one assessment is required per module. Assessments formats include class tests, short assignments during tutorials, class participation, longer written assignments based on case studies prior to or after the contact week of a particular module. Learners will be required to read assigned texts before each class session. Assessment activities during the contact week are structured to inform the development of the larger assignment. Assessment also includes practical research projects, especially in the longer assignments (depends on the aims and nature of a particular module). Consistent with the institution's policy, the programme coordinator will ensure that the outcomes of the qualification are achieved; that appropriate assessment criteria and methods are used; that integrated assessment takes place; and that student feedback on modules and the qualification as a whole is followed up. The Department will ensure that assessment standards are upheld and that lecturers have sufficient and appropriate training and/or experience. |
| INTERNATIONAL COMPARABILITY |
| The format of this qualification compares with the format of Master's Degrees offered internationally i.e. the completion of a full research project or the completion of course work and the completion of a smaller research project. The content of the modules differs somewhat from international practice in that this qualification focuses on the South African and African contexts. A major difference is the offering of both modes of completion in one qualification.
The course work option of this qualification is internationally comparable with the Master of Arts in Health and Community Development Studies - De Montfort University in Leicester, which is designed for staff in local authorities, the NHS, the voluntary sector and NGOs who work especially with young people and adults especially those often labelled as hard to reach. It attracts professionals worldwide from a variety of settings, including: It is also suitable for youth work and community development practitioners seeking to explore health related topics prevalent in both generic work and specialist health education and development projects. The duration is one year full-time or, two-three years distance learning. Conclusion: The qualification, with its course work option, compares with the cited above in terms of general content, learner cohort and purpose. The duration is shorter however. The full research option is comparable to international practice for Master's Degrees in the development of research capacity, carrying out research and contributing new insights and knowledge to the particular field. |
| ARTICULATION OPTIONS |
| The qualification provides the necessary background and training to articulate vertically with Doctoral Degrees, Level 10 in health and development studies or in a related social science discipline or to pursue a professional career in a related field. The qualification also provides opportunities for horizontal articulation with other Master's Degrees, Level 9 within the same field. |
| MODERATION OPTIONS |
| N/A |
| CRITERIA FOR THE REGISTRATION OF ASSESSORS |
| N/A |
| NOTES |
| N/A |
| LEARNING PROGRAMMES RECORDED AGAINST THIS QUALIFICATION: |
| NONE |
| PROVIDERS CURRENTLY ACCREDITED TO OFFER THIS QUALIFICATION: |
| This information shows the current accreditations (i.e. those not past their accreditation end dates), and is the most complete record available to SAQA as of today. Some Primary or Delegated Quality Assurance Functionaries have a lag in their recording systems for provider accreditation, in turn leading to a lag in notifying SAQA of all the providers that they have accredited to offer qualifications and unit standards, as well as any extensions to accreditation end dates. The relevant Primary or Delegated Quality Assurance Functionary should be notified if a record appears to be missing from here. |
| 1. | Stellenbosch University |
| All qualifications and part qualifications registered on the National Qualifications Framework are public property. Thus the only payment that can be made for them is for service and reproduction. It is illegal to sell this material for profit. If the material is reproduced or quoted, the South African Qualifications Authority (SAQA) should be acknowledged as the source. |