Transdisciplinary service-learning for construction management and quantity surveying students
Abstract
The transformation of higher education in South Africa has seen higher education institutions
become more responsive to community matters by providing institutional support for
service-learning projects. Despite service-learning being practised in many departments at
the Cape Peninsula University of Technology (CPUT), there is a significant difference in the
way service-learning is perceived by academics and the way in which it should be supported
within the curriculum. This article reflects on a collaborative transdisciplinary servicelearning
project at CPUT that included the Department of Construction Management and
Quantity Surveying and the Department of Urban and Regional Planning. The aim of the
transdisciplinary service-learning project was for students to participate in an asset-mapping
exercise in a rural communal settlement in the Bergrivier municipality in the Western Cape
province of South Africa. In so doing students from the two departments were gradually
inducted into the community. Once inducted, students were able to identify the community’s
most urgent needs. During community engagement students from each department were
paired together. This allowed transdisciplinary learning to happen with the exploration of
ideas from the perspectives of both engineering and urban planning students. Students were
able to construct meaning beyond their discipline. Cooperation and synergy between the
departments allowed mutual, interchangeable, cooperative interaction with community
members. Outcomes for the transdisciplinary service-learning project and the required
commitment from students are discussed.
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- TD: 2021 Volume 17 [42]