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© Unisa Press ISSN 0256-8853 Progressio 34 (2) 2012 pp 3–16
Articles
Distance education as a ‘we-ness’: A case for
uBuntu as a theoretical framework
C. Du Toit-Brits
Lecturer: Faculty of Educational Sciences
North-West University
Potchefstroom Campus
Potchefstroom, South Africa
e-mail: Charlene.dutoit@nwu.ac.za
F. J. Potgieter
North-West University
Potchefstroom, South Africa
e-mail: ferdinand.potgieter@nwu.ac.za.
V. Hongwane
University of South Africa
Pretoria, South Africa
e-mail: hongwva@unisa.ac.za
Abstract
‘Education-for-me’ could, epistemologically considered, probably be classified as
a typically Western concept where the individual within distance education focuses
on individualised ‘education-for-me’, thus making the individual the most important
ordering principle. African – specifically Batswana – ACE (Advanced Certificate
in Education) students do not regard distance education as a solitary activity or
individualised ‘education-for-me’. It appears from the qualitative data reported in this
article that, for the African and more specifically the Batswana ACE student, distance
education is rather a ‘we-ness’ in which they experience the existential yearning to
live and observe the anthropological epistemological principle of communality and
collectivity, in matters also related to their academic lives. In the ideologically based
anthropological epistemological view of ‘communality’ of the Batswana ACE student,
man is regarded primarily as a social being, focused socially essentially on the reality
surrounding him/her, and growing into a belonghesion towards a communal unity
within a particular distance education community as aim.