Private higher education has come to be regulated in much the same way as public higher education in the past decade
When I glanced through the June 8 <i>Mail & Guardian</i>, I noticed the article "Selebi se galery kry nog ‘n rakker". I confess to being surprised, pleased, intrigued and then, as I read, troubled. Surprised because, yes, in this very English-language publication, it was surprising to find an article written in another South African language, writes Robert Balfour.
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/ 29 January 2007
On August 2 last year, the University of KwaZulu-Natal passed its language policy and plan through the university senate. The policy advocates additive bilingualism in English and isiZulu, and supports multilingualism more broadly with respect to Afrikaans, the Indian heritage languages, and languages of strategic importance in Africa and globally.