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Department of Higher Education and Training, 21 July 2016

 

 

Minister Blade Nzimande calls for more public-private partnerships

 

 

The Minister of Higher Education and Training Dr Blade Nzimande calls for
increased public-private partnership to deliver critically needed student
housing

 

The Minister of Higher Education and Training, Dr Blade Nzimande, has called
for "big and bold" solutions to tackle the enormous challenges that South
Africa is facing in providing housing for university, as well as technical
vocational education and training (TVET) college students.

 

Speaking at UNISA in Pretoria today, at the country's first ever student
housing symposium that was organised by the Department of Higher Education
and Training, Minister Nzimande also announced the government's resolve,
working with the private sector, to implement a number of development
projects this year that will unlock 15 000 new beds at 11 universities and
TVET colleges around the country.

 

Among the hundreds of attendees at the symposium are cabinet ministers,
university vice chancellors, property developers, student and organised
labour representatives, and leaders of banking and development finance
institutions.

 

"We have been talking for a long time about the shortage of student housing.
The solutions we devise today have to be big and bold, a match for the
challenge we face, to provide student housing that is affordable," he said.

 

Minister Nzimande said research into student housing at universities that
the government had undertaken in 2011 had revealed a "chilling view" of the
shortage of student housing at all the country's institutions of higher
learning.

 

That study had revealed that the entire university sector provided a mere
107 000 beds, with six or more applicants for every available place -
resulting in an estimated overall bed shortage of 195 817, and with
historically disadvantaged universities the worst affected.

 

"The Review showed us appalling pictures of students living in derelict
buildings, unfit for habitation, let alone for students who were expected to
study and emerge as young graduates with the skills needed for employment
and economic growth.

 

"Of the 583 000 students at the time, only 18% could be housed in university
residences. It was shocking to discover that only 5% of first year students
were housed in university residences.

 

"These are the most vulnerable young people in our system, away from home
for the first time and expected to perform in a post-school environment,
very different to the schools where most of them matriculated," Minister
Nzimande observed.

 

This state of affairs was despite mounting evidence from local and
international academic research that showed that students who live in
university residences performed better academically and coped better
socially than their peers who did not live on campuses - especially in the
crucial first year of study.

 

It was projected that by this year (2016), the bed shortage at all
universities stood at 216 000, and that by 2030 an extra 400 000 beds would
be needed to meet the enrollment targets set out in the National Development
Plan.

 

The challenge was no less daunting at TVET colleges, where a survey carried
out at the country's 50 public TVET colleges last year by the Department of
Higher Education and Training had shown that for the 710 000 college
students, there were only 10 120 beds - which meant that these colleges
could provide accommodation for only 1,4% of their students, that is 1 in 70
students.

 

Many of those students travelled hundreds of kilometres from their homes in
rural areas to the nearest college, amid estimates that the country needed
at least 100 000 student beds at TVET colleges to meet the immediate demand.

 

"We now have a wealth of knowledge and experience to draw on. One clear
lesson is that the challenge is big enough for all interested parties to
participate in resolving it.

 

"This year, working together with many of the powerful partners gathered
here today, we can implement projects with 15 000 new beds at the first 11
universities and TVET colleges, from the University of Venda in the far
North, to the University of the Western Cape on the southernmost tip of
Africa.

 

"In the next six months, we will start projects with more beds than were
built by the sector in the past three years. Moreover, we are committed to
maintaining the momentum," Minister Nzimande said.

 

"In closing, I have been saying recently that students must tell us what
must rise, not only what must fall. #FeesMustFall gave us the impetus to
address the challenge of rising tuition fees in a context of falling
subsidies, and we now have a national dialogue on finding a lasting
solution.

 

"We must not wait for student housing to be a crisis. Students,
universities, TVET colleges, banks, investors, we need to come up with
smarter solutions to solve this problem than the ones we have found working
apart.

 

"In addition to what government is already doing, there must be a national
consensus that one of the things that must definitely rise is a sustained
Student Housing Infrastructure Programme, supported by both the public and
private sectors," Minister Nzimande added.

 

 

Issued by:

Department of Higher Education and Training <http://www.dhet.gov.za/> 

 

Enquiries:

Khaye Nkwanyana

Director: Media Liaison Officer

Tel: 012 312 5555

Cell: 083 952 9723

Email: [email protected]

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 



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