Decolonising pedagogy in post-apartheid South Africa : the expanded understanding of Vygotsky’s theory and new postulates

dc.contributor.authorMuthivhi, Azwihangwisi Edward
dc.contributor.emailazwihangwisi.muthivhi@up.ac.za
dc.date.accessioned2025-11-25T09:48:42Z
dc.date.available2025-11-25T09:48:42Z
dc.date.issued2025
dc.descriptionSUPPLEMENTARY DATA : Datasets can be requested from the author (A.E. Muthivhi)
dc.description.abstractCONTEXT AND RELEVANCE : The paper examines contemporary post-apartheid pedagogy and its underlying epistemologies that position teachers and their students as passively conforming to prescribed knowledge and concepts disconnected from practical realities, goals, and students’ personal pursuit of meanings. OBJECTIVE AND HYPOTHESIS : Such an approach, premised on values of adaptation to the status quo of preexisting models and procedures, fails to promote knowledge premised on values of contribution to collective social practices and self-identity development. THEORETICAL BASIS : That is, pedagogy so conceptualised in the logic of colonial orthodoxies and solipsistic epistemologies, inevitably denies students and their teachers their inherent capacities for agency and meaningful engagement with reality. RESULTS AND DISCUSSION : Therefore, in instantiating decolonising approach to pedagogy, a young student the teacher had deemed to be experiencing learning difficulties, enacts her embodied knowledge1 and is thereby posited as debunking the logic of colonial epistemologies that underpin contemporary post-apartheid pedagogy. CONCLUSIONS : The student is therefore presented as enacting her culturally situated community practices and knowledge traditions which she embodies, despite the continued exclusion of such knowledge practices within contemporary post-apartheid pedagogy.
dc.description.departmentEarly Childhood Education
dc.description.librarianam2025
dc.description.sdgSDG-04: Quality education
dc.description.sponsorshipThe study was supported by the National Research Foundation (NRF).
dc.description.urihttps://psyjournals.ru/en/journals/chp
dc.identifier.citationMuthivhi, A.E. (2025). Decolonising pedagogy in post-apartheid South Africa : the expanded understanding of Vygotsky’s theory and new postulates. Cultural-Historical Psychology, 21(3), 136—144. https://doi.org/10.17759/ chp.2025210312.
dc.identifier.issn1816-5435 (print)
dc.identifier.issn2224-8935 (online)
dc.identifier.other10.17759/chp.2025210312
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/2263/105478
dc.language.isoen
dc.publisherMoscow State University of Psychology and Education
dc.rights© Muthivhi A.E., 2025. Open Access. All materials in this journal are licensed under the terms of Creative Commons Attribution-Non-Commercial 4.0 International License.
dc.subjectDecolonising pedagogy
dc.subjectTransformative agency
dc.subjectPost-apartheid pedagogy
dc.subjectIndigenous knowledge
dc.subjectVygotsky’s cultural-historical framework
dc.titleDecolonising pedagogy in post-apartheid South Africa : the expanded understanding of Vygotsky’s theory and new postulates
dc.title.alternativeДеколонизация педагогики в постапартеидской Южной Африке: расширенное понимание теории Л.С. Выготского и новые постулаты
dc.typeArticle

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