Pedagogic Obligations toward a Decolonial and Contextually Responsive Approach to Teaching Philosophy in South Africa
Siseko H Kumalo- Philosophy
- History
- Education
Abstract
With the calls to decolonize the Philosophy curriculum, and the University more generally, which have seen a series of intellectual interventions in South Africa, the paper takes its cue from Nyoka’s (2020) recommendation when he suggests moving beyond merely thinking about decolonization. In reflecting on processes of decolonising the curriculum, the paper considers the successes and failures of a course taught during a global pandemic, wherein pedagogic strategies were constrained. Reflecting on a module taught in the first semester of 2021, the paper thinks through the fundamental question that underpins the course, primarily:—how to develop a contextually responsive philosophical approach on the southernmost tip of the African continent. Using two primary texts, Kumalo’s Decolonization as Democratization (2021) and Jansen’s Decolonization in Universities (2019), the module analysed this question by juxtaposing, respectively, a philosophical and educational text. In this pedagogic autocritique, I reflect on ‘what obligation do intellectuals owe their students’ in a decolonising context.