Mapula Maponya from the Allan Gray Centre for Leadership Ethics (AGCLE), is the recipient of the 2020 Vice Chancellor’s Distinguished Award for Community Engagement.
The Vice-Chancellor’s Distinguished Community Engagement Award is a prestigious and competitive annual award which recognises meaningful and committed partnerships between the members of the University and community partners in the areas of teaching, learning and research, where human and material resources of the University have been combined with assets found in local communities in order to contribute to sustainable human and community development.
While certain disciplines are thought to lend themselves more readily to incorporating community engagement into their teaching, learning and research practices, other disciplines with reputations for blue-sky research, theoretical knowledge production and limited field-work or practical activities often struggle to articulate their position within the community engagement landscape. The winner of this year’s Vice Chancellor’s Distinguished Award for Community Engagement, Ms Maponya, has shown, through her work, how service-learning has catalysed important transformational work within the department of philosophy, meaningfully contributed to the knowledge production and dissemination process within the discipline, and has served as a vehicle for the induction and training of ethically engaged students.
Ms Maponya is a lecturer in the AGCLE and coordinates the year-long service-learning component of IiNtetho zoBomi: Conversations bet36体育投注_bet36体育在线—激情赢盈中√ Life 101 and 102 — the flagship, engaged ethics course run by the AGCLE and housed in the Philosophy Department. Her passion for education and commitment to community engagement with a decade of experience shines through her work.
The course started in 2016 and suffered many changes, overcoming the multiple obstacles that service-learning courses can have. Ms Maponya was able to not only continued with the course but to develop it further by listening to the community partners, the learners and the students.
The impact of this inspirational service-learning course is seen on the university students, school learners at AGCLE’s community partner, Archie Mbolekwa Primary School, and the school. Students often remark on the impact of service-learning on their ethical development in their reflective journals. The school learners have shown and reported significant growth not only in terms of their English reading, writing and comprehension skills, but also in terms of their confidence and public speaking. The school is highly invested in the programme—including the principal, teachers, parents and learners. Indeed, the principal of Archie Mbolekwa has been so inspired by the service-learning aspect of IiNtetho zoBomi that he has recently registered at RU to study further towards a postgraduate degree in education. He said, “Miss Maponya is a true community leader; she is passionate about the Grahamstown community more especially the previously disadvantaged. Her aim is to use education to change the circle of poverty our learner and their parents are experiencing. Ms Maponya is an asset to our community. Her dedication and accompanying zeal to what she does makes her tackle challenges with great enthusiasm.”
Ms Maponya herself has also been impacted by this journey. She has deeply invested in the Makhanda community for over 5 years and won the coveted Rhodes Volunteer of the Year Award in 2015. She is currently finishing her PhD on service-learning using IiNtetho zoBomi as a case study. The development of this service-learning course in philosophy has broader and deeply meaningful implications for the ways that philosophy is taught at universities, and for how future academics come to understand the relationship between any discipline – even those previously considered to be at odds with the principles and practice of community engagement.
The Award to Ms Mapula Maponya will be made at the Rhodes University virtual Graduation in 2021. She will give a public lecture on her work to open the Community Engagement Symposium on 19 October 2021.