Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://hdl.handle.net/10321/3894
Title: Preparing the future workforce in African universities of technology : a case of new media art as a mutating discipline in the 4IR
Authors: Makwela, Mashaole Jacob 
Olalere, Folasayo Enoch 
Editors: Smal, Desiree 
Botes, Herman 
Salaam, Safia 
Keywords: Arts and design education;African university of technology;Fourth industrial revolution (4IR);New media art, post-phenomenology
Issue Date: 14-Dec-2021
Publisher: Design Education Forum of Southern Africa
Source: Makwela, M.J. and Olalere, F.E. 2021. Preparing the future workforce in African universities of technology: a case of new media art as a mutating discipline in the 4IR. Proceedings of the 16th Design Education Forum of Southern Africa Conference. Presented at: The 16th DEFSA Conference: 92-101 (10).
Journal: The 16th DEFSA Conference 
Abstract: 
The industrial revolution, a steady process of change that started in the eighteenth century, has been
characterised as presenting different phases. The fourth phase (4IR), which signals an unprecedented
convergence of physical, digital and biological spheres into technological forces, is transforming jobs faster
than employees can adapt, and setting the base for a different kind of skill. Hence, everyone, including arts
and design educators, are asking similar questions about its potential challenges and opportunities in their
fields, particularly in the African universities of technology that place emphasis on career-directed courses.
One of the questions revolves around the issue of how 4IR will affect the visual arts ecosystem in general
and specific to types of skills required, production processes, theory, epistemological curiosity, intellectual
tools, authorship, commodification, representation, distribution, among others. Furthermore, it is thought
provoking to realise, through literature search that not much is written about the potential challenges and
opportunities in the context of visual arts at universities of technology in Africa. Against this backdrop, this
paper explores the changing landscape of the supply and demand of skills and how arts and design
education can respond to this inevitable change. Using new media art as a case study, the exploratory case
study employed post-phenomenology to interrogate the mediating effects of the technological revolution
in shaping the new media art discipline. This was achieved through a content analysis of secondary data. In
response to these mediating effects, the study proposed a framework that could help create access to new
skills sets that would equip students to face the new markets and opportunities.
URI: https://hdl.handle.net/10321/3894
ISBN: 978-0-620-97912-2
Appears in Collections:Research Publications (Arts and Design)

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