Decolonising the retail business management curriculum in the higher education sector

V. Mugobo
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

This article critiques the retail business management curriculum as currently offered in the Higher Education (HE) sector. The study used an exploratory qualitative approach, which involved conducting telephone interviews with a purposively selected sample of 25 participants conversant with the phenomenon studied, retail management practitioners, students and curriculum review experts. This was augmented by secondary literature. The study found out that by and large the retail business management (RBM) curriculum that is currently rolled out in the HE sector is largely based on Western epistemologies. The knowledge economy that is consumed by the recipients of the RBM curriculum in the HE sector is mainly from American and European academics and that is at the expense of the local or indigenous knowledge. It was found out, that the majority of the curriculum recipients do not identify with the current curriculum because it is divorced from their lived experiences that include their culture in particular their languages, beliefs and values. The study avers that indigenous knowledge systems were left out in the process of the RBM curriculum development and that partly explains its alienation from the lived realities of the local students and academic staff. The study therefore recommends that the current RBM curriculum needs to be effectively decolonised and the starting point for this decolonisation process is the involvement of all stakeholders in the curriculum development process. Secondly, the use of diverse educators to reflect the country’s racial mix is recommended. The study also recommends the convening of all stakeholder curriculum review engagements, the use of a local knowledge economy and local languages in teaching and learning of the RBM curriculum.
高等教育部门零售商业管理课程的非殖民化
本文对目前高等教育(HE)部门开设的零售商业管理课程进行了批评。该研究采用了探索性质的方法,其中包括对25名熟悉所研究现象的参与者、零售管理从业人员、学生和课程审查专家进行电话采访。二手文献进一步证实了这一点。该研究发现,目前在高等教育领域推出的零售商业管理(RBM)课程总体上主要基于西方认识论。高等教育领域的RBM课程接受者所消费的知识经济主要来自美国和欧洲学术界,这是以牺牲当地或本土知识为代价的。据发现,大多数课程接受者不认同当前的课程,因为它脱离了他们的生活经验,包括他们的文化,特别是他们的语言,信仰和价值观。研究认为,在RBM课程的开发过程中,本土知识体系被忽略,这在一定程度上解释了它与当地学生和学术人员的生活现实的疏远。因此,该研究建议,当前的RBM课程需要有效地去殖民化,而这一去殖民化过程的起点是所有利益相关者参与课程开发过程。其次,建议使用多样化的教育工作者来反映国家的种族混合。该研究还建议召集所有利益相关者参与课程审查,在RBM课程的教学和学习中使用当地知识经济和当地语言。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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