Covid-19 as a Catalyst for Strengthening Research Practice in BRICS’ Universities

South Africa’s National Development Plan 2030 (National Planning Commission, 2012) argues that there must be a simultaneous focus on research and teaching for South African universities to advance knowledge and society. However, since the dawn of COVID-19, most research focuses on teaching, leaving...

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Main Authors: Ntsofa Monyela, Neo Mofokeng
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: UJ Press 2023-07-01
Series:Journal of BRICS Studies
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.uj.ac.za/index.php/jbs/article/view/647
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author Ntsofa Monyela
Neo Mofokeng
author_facet Ntsofa Monyela
Neo Mofokeng
author_sort Ntsofa Monyela
collection DOAJ
description South Africa’s National Development Plan 2030 (National Planning Commission, 2012) argues that there must be a simultaneous focus on research and teaching for South African universities to advance knowledge and society. However, since the dawn of COVID-19, most research focuses on teaching, leaving unattended research about doing and philosophising about research practice. Therefore, this paper rethinks ways of thinking and researching for postgraduate students who are based in South Africa’s (SA’s) historically disadvantaged institutions of higher learning. It proposes how the COVID-19 should bring about a paradigm shift in research methodologies and research practice, including the necessary supervision support for students. This social constructivist paper draws on the reflections of two postgraduate supervisors, and further reflects on broader paradigmatic issues within research. This paper relies strongly on the experiences of the authors as a primary source and also conceptually harvested from the existing literature. The autobiographic element study allows the researchers to explore the intersection between themselves and the subject they are studying, permitting the reader to understand this intersection and reflect on their own experiences (Given, 2008). There are two main arguments in this paper; 1) A call for re-centring the ethics of care and ethics of social responsibility as premises from which all research should start. This can be done by reflecting and exploring the first-hand experiences of those who are in Historically Disadvantaged Institutions (HDIs). 2) It is a call for equitable distribution of resources across BRICS universities, focusing primarily on the improvement of the HDIs which is consistent with BRICS’ multilateral developmental agenda.
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spelling doaj-art-ff3fc04248304ed7ae04bca1c258cc0e2025-08-20T02:36:53ZengUJ PressJournal of BRICS Studies2519-74522519-74602023-07-011210.36615/jbs.v1i2.647Covid-19 as a Catalyst for Strengthening Research Practice in BRICS’ UniversitiesNtsofa Monyela0https://orcid.org/0000-0002-8641-775XNeo Mofokeng1https://orcid.org/0000-0002-6195-9587University of ZululandUniversity of Zululand South Africa’s National Development Plan 2030 (National Planning Commission, 2012) argues that there must be a simultaneous focus on research and teaching for South African universities to advance knowledge and society. However, since the dawn of COVID-19, most research focuses on teaching, leaving unattended research about doing and philosophising about research practice. Therefore, this paper rethinks ways of thinking and researching for postgraduate students who are based in South Africa’s (SA’s) historically disadvantaged institutions of higher learning. It proposes how the COVID-19 should bring about a paradigm shift in research methodologies and research practice, including the necessary supervision support for students. This social constructivist paper draws on the reflections of two postgraduate supervisors, and further reflects on broader paradigmatic issues within research. This paper relies strongly on the experiences of the authors as a primary source and also conceptually harvested from the existing literature. The autobiographic element study allows the researchers to explore the intersection between themselves and the subject they are studying, permitting the reader to understand this intersection and reflect on their own experiences (Given, 2008). There are two main arguments in this paper; 1) A call for re-centring the ethics of care and ethics of social responsibility as premises from which all research should start. This can be done by reflecting and exploring the first-hand experiences of those who are in Historically Disadvantaged Institutions (HDIs). 2) It is a call for equitable distribution of resources across BRICS universities, focusing primarily on the improvement of the HDIs which is consistent with BRICS’ multilateral developmental agenda. https://journals.uj.ac.za/index.php/jbs/article/view/647COVID-19Research philosophyResearch practiceBRICSHDIpost-graduate students
spellingShingle Ntsofa Monyela
Neo Mofokeng
Covid-19 as a Catalyst for Strengthening Research Practice in BRICS’ Universities
Journal of BRICS Studies
COVID-19
Research philosophy
Research practice
BRICS
HDI
post-graduate students
title Covid-19 as a Catalyst for Strengthening Research Practice in BRICS’ Universities
title_full Covid-19 as a Catalyst for Strengthening Research Practice in BRICS’ Universities
title_fullStr Covid-19 as a Catalyst for Strengthening Research Practice in BRICS’ Universities
title_full_unstemmed Covid-19 as a Catalyst for Strengthening Research Practice in BRICS’ Universities
title_short Covid-19 as a Catalyst for Strengthening Research Practice in BRICS’ Universities
title_sort covid 19 as a catalyst for strengthening research practice in brics universities
topic COVID-19
Research philosophy
Research practice
BRICS
HDI
post-graduate students
url https://journals.uj.ac.za/index.php/jbs/article/view/647
work_keys_str_mv AT ntsofamonyela covid19asacatalystforstrengtheningresearchpracticeinbricsuniversities
AT neomofokeng covid19asacatalystforstrengtheningresearchpracticeinbricsuniversities