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Community Learning



Service Learning Programmes

The Service Learning programme has different Service Learning modules in different faculties where students doing these modules visit communities around WSU Campuses.

The Service Learning modules are:


Faculty of Humanities, Social Sciences & Law

Practum A (BSY31M5) Service Learning Module

This Service Learning module is compulsory and carries credits towards Bachelor of Psychology.

It falls under the Department of Psychology and Social Work. Students are required to do practicum A during the second semester of the 3rd year level of study.

Activities incorporated in practicum A include visiting communities in and around Mthatha where community-based interventions are undertaken; these include addressing common social ills and issues such as teenage pregnancy, substance abuse, HIV and family counselling, to name a few.

The significance of practicum A, in addition to serving as a preparatory phase for the students, is that they (students) can integrate theory and practice at an early stage, given that at level 3 they are already familiar with counselling theories and ethics. 

For example, the students that have already done modules in Community Psychology (BSY2213), and Career and Counselling Psychology (BSY3112) are expected to do practicum based on these modules as well as Neuropsychology (BSY 3211). The module carries 12 credits.

Practicum B (BSY46M2)

Practicum B starts in the 4th year of B Psych programme upon successful completion of Practicum A for a period of six months. In Practicum B students are placed within an organisation.

Learning Outcomes:

  • Demonstrate ability and competence to put theory into practice.
  • Promote psychological well-being with a focus on prevention, psychosocial health promotion and community-based care.
  • Provision of counselling
  • Refer clients to relevant practitioners.

This module carries 24 credits.

Rural Local Government Service Learning Module

Rural Local Government (POL3240) is a service-learning module housed in the Department of Political Studies. This module is compulsory and carries credits towards Bachelor of Social Sciences (Political Science).

The main aim of this module is to help students understand the causes of conflict within local communities, especially conflicts among councillors, committee members and traditional leaders; and also to understand the ability to use a range of conflict resolution approaches. These are conflict prevention, management, and mediation. Students are expected to demonstrate the theoretical skills obtained in class during field trips to selected local communities.

Street Law Service Learning Module

Street Law mission is to enable law students to make indigent and impoverished rural and semi-urban people aware of their legal and human rights and where to obtain assistance if or when their rights are violated or infringed.  The purpose of establishing the Street Law programme is to enable 4th year Bachelor of Laws students, in the School of Law to be able to go out from the University to the surrounding communities to advise them about their human rights and socio-legal matters that affect such communities in their daily lives.

Through its training workshops, Street Law educates South Africans of all ages and diverse background about human rights, democracy, violence, HIV/Aids and the Law, voting, domestic violence, maintenance, children's rights, abortion, social security, wills, corporal punishment, child abuse and its effects, the legal system and the laws of the country in general.

Street Law's primary mission is to be a link between WSU and its surrounding local rural and semi-urban indigent communities.

The module carries 16 credits.

Research Methods, Social Statistics & Rural Development

Research Methods and Social Statistics strengthens and expands on the different research methodologies used in social science research.

The module examines in-depth, concepts and techniques in social research methods. It focuses on the different theoretical perspectives of social research methods, and techniques of conducting research from its conceptualisation to dissemination of findings.

The course focuses on but not limited to the following areas: Methods of acquiring knowledge, types of research, research design, writing proposals, sampling, and data collecting techniques, interpreting and analysing data results, writing and dissemination of results.

Students, while studying research and statistics, on the other hand, they do a research project. The research project is part of the module. The project is a practical component of the module.

Objectives

  • To teach students the different research methods used in social science research, in particular, methods relevant to rural/developing areas
  • To bring out the relationship between theory and research and how the two add value to each other
  • To guide students through supervision on how to conduct research (from the proposal, instrument design, scholarly literature review, data analysis, report writing and presentation of findings).

Faculty of Commerce & Administration

Economic Theory ECO31M1

The module aims to cover topics in both Micro and Macro Economics.  It is offered to Level 3 students doing BCom Economics.

It builds upon the foundation established in ECO 21M2 and ECO22M3.  The principal objective of this module is on building on a leaner’s knowledge and understanding of micro-economics and macro-economics. 

The lecturer gives learners topics to research on.

The module allows a learner to study in greater depth, providing some selected topics of current interest in economic theory.

The module is designed to ensure that students receive the skills necessary to begin to formulate the fundamentals for essential solutions to economic problems based on economic theory and analysis. It carries 15 credits.

Advanced Micro-Economics

The Outcome-Based Education approach is used. The module aims to cover topics in Micro-Economics. 

It builds upon the foundation established in ECO 31M1. 

The primary objective of this module is on building on a learner’s knowledge and understanding of microeconomics. 

The module allows a learner to study in greater depth, providing some selected topics of current interest in economic theory.

It is offered to Level 4 (Honours Students). It carries 15 credits towards BCom Honours.


Faculty of Health Sciences

Community-Based Education and Service (COBES) Service Learning Module

This Service Learning module falls under the Department of Community Medicine. This module is compulsory and carries credits towards MBChB and is offered to 3rd-year students.

Human health is mostly affected by factors such as biological, social, and environmental factors.

The Faculty then was inspired to train student doctors and equip them with the necessary skills to care for patients holistically. 

The Faculty offers a Problem-Based Learning (PBL) curriculum and Community-Based Education (CBE). CBE is a two-pronged programme with Community-Based Education and Service (COBES) in the first three years.

In the 3rd year level of the CBE programme, students are distributed to clinics in and around Mthatha. The allocation of students to various health centres creates a learning environment in which academic medicine becomes a reality.

Community Health Nursing Science Service Learning Module

The Faculty pioneered community-based education (CBE), in partnership with the Department of Health and the local communities.

The module incorporates primary health care as it is the vehicle for the delivery of health care services in South Africa. The curriculum emphasises problem-based research and community outreach programme to benefit learners and their clientele, aiming at health promotion, disease prevention and management and self-reliance.

The nursing students registered for the BCur (Basic) degree follow a module in community health nursing during their first year of study as part of the programme. They are expected to engage in community projects together with community members as part of their practicals. 

Health Promotion Service Learning Module (HPS32M1)

The module is completed by students who have registered for Bachelor of Science in Health Promotion at the 3rd-year level.

The module provides an overview of health promotion opportunities in a range of community settings.

It introduces the rationale for health promotion in each of the settings and the particular skills required to develop health promotion partnerships with organisations in each location.

The aims of the module are:

  • To develop a critical understanding of the potential for health promotion in several community settings
  • To develop an understanding of the techniques required to facilitate the adoption of health promotion activity by several community organisations.

Module Objectives

On completion of the module students should be able to:

  • Describe the effectiveness of school-based health promotion programmes and the techniques for their implementation, and present this information convincingly.
  • Describe the rationale for health care providers undertaking a health-promoting role, and demonstrate an ability to present this rationale to providers.
  • Demonstrate an understanding of the arguments in support of community-based approaches to health promotion, and demonstrate an ability to synthesise the evidence concerning the effectiveness of this approach.
  • Describe the evidence for work-based intervention programmes as an approach to health promotion, and to present a proposal for the conduct of such a programme.

Clinical Associates: Child Health (CHH 30M4)

The module is completed by students doing Bachelor of Medicine Clinical Practise at the 3rd-year level.

At the end of module CH, students can:

  • Demonstrate knowledge of the process of: 
    • child growth and development
    • the integrated management of childhood illnesses
  • Demonstrate adequate understanding of the immunisation schedule for South Africa
  • Perform complete history taking and physical examination of the child.
  • Show the knowledge of the joint investigations relevant to common childhood diseases/conditions.

The module has ten credits.


Faculty of Natural Sciences

Crop pests of Southern Africa Service Learning Module

This Service Learning module forms part of the Bachelor of Science. The objectives of the module are:

  • To create awareness for local farming communities in fundamental aspects of identifying arthropod (livestock, crops and household importance)
  • Introduce farmers to basic scouting techniques for vegetable arthropod pests as well as the use of pesticides to control these pests
  • Introduce students to basic sampling techniques for vegetable pests
  • Introduce students to various aspects of arthropod, weed and diseases of crops within agroecosystems and their control.

Insects and Man Service Learning Module

Insect and Man is a core academic module belonging to the Pest Management Programme of the Department of Botany.

It has been designed to assist students and subsistence farmers from local communities around:

  • Identify, combat and contain pests' problems in an ecologically and environmentally sound manner so that natural processes such as interactions between pests and beneficial insects in the environment are not disrupted.
  • Improve food production by small-scale farmers through the use of efficient and effective agronomic practices amongst other novel agricultural methods, thereby alleviating starvation, malnutrition, disease and poverty.

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Contact Numbers:
Mthatha: 047 502 2100
Butterworth: 047 401 6000
East London: 043 702 9200
Potsdam: 043 708 5200
Chiselhurst: 043 709 4000

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