South Africa's higher education landscape is at a crossroads with its postgraduate sector. Despite significant growth in master's and doctoral enrolments, national bodies are voicing urgent concerns over the quality and readiness of graduates. Recent discussions led by Universities South Africa (USAf) highlight a system producing more degrees but fewer equipped scholars and professionals, prompting calls for comprehensive reforms to bring clarity and rigour to master's and doctoral programmes.
The National Qualifications Framework (NQF), managed by the South African Qualifications Authority (SAQA), places master's degrees at Level 9 and doctorates at Level 10. Yet, blurred distinctions between professional and research-oriented qualifications, coupled with inadequate preparation, supervision, and alignment with labour market needs, have created a crisis. This article delves into the challenges, stakeholder perspectives, and proposed solutions shaping the future of postgraduate education in South Africa.
🔔 Surge in Enrolments Amid Stagnant Proportions
Postgraduate enrolments have risen steadily. From 2005 to 2020, they increased by 53% to 151,268 students, with master's up 36% to 60,132 and doctorates surging 150% to 23,588. However, they constitute just 14% of total higher education headcounts, far from the National Development Plan's (NDP) ambition of over 25% by 2030. Graduation rates remain low: doctoral throughput hovers at 15%, with only 3,552 doctorates awarded in 2020 despite targets of 5,000 annually.
Black South African participation has grown to 80% of postgraduates, but disparities persist: only 10% of black postgraduates pursue doctorates, and throughput lags behind whites (e.g., 68% black vs 88% white honours completion after six years). Females now dominate at 57%, yet males lead doctorates at 52%. International students, especially from the rest of Africa, drive doctoral growth, comprising 37% by 2020.
Fields have shifted: Science, Engineering, and Technology (SET) now 36% (up from 26%), balancing humanities' decline. Yet, this masks readiness gaps, as employers report skills mismatches despite volume growth.
National Bodies Sound the Alarm
The Council on Higher Education (CHE), Department of Higher Education and Training (DHET), Universities South Africa (USAf), and Department of Science, Technology and Innovation (DSTI) have converged on the crisis. In March 2026, USAf's colloquium, 'From Curriculum to Credibility', featured DHET's Mandisa Cakwe stressing balance between professional and academic master's, curriculum-industry alignment, and work-integrated learning.
CHE's 2022 Doctoral Degrees National Report reviewed 28 institutions, finding predominant general doctorates, rare professional variants, and implementation gaps in the 2018 standard (360 credits, NQF 10). CHE's Dr Amani Saidi noted challenges in graduate attributes development beyond traditional supervision. DSTI's Dr Sibusiso Manzini warned of 'post-truth' erosion, delegated theses, and integrity threats.
USAf's 'More Degrees, Less Readiness' (March 2026) underscores the dilemma: surging outputs but employability lags, with graduate unemployment at 10.3% for bachelor's+, higher for postgrads in non-SET fields.
Blurred Distinctions: Master's vs Doctoral Pathways
A core demand is clarifying NQF Level 9 (master's: advanced knowledge, limited research) and Level 10 (doctorate: original contribution). Master's often mix coursework/professional with research, diluting rigour; doctorates rarely differentiate professional (practice-focused) from traditional (theory-led). Prof Stephanie Burton (Pretoria) advocates explicit handbooks defining purposes: master's for application, doctorates for innovation.
CHE recommends HEQSF review: rename to 'Doctoral Degree (research-based)' or '(research- and coursework-based)', delete ambiguous qualifiers. SAQA's NQF ensures consistency, but articulation gaps persist—poor undergrad research prep hinders progression.
Professional doctorates (e.g., EdD, DBA) need promotion for industry needs, with 120 credits coursework + 240 dissertation.
Supervision and Mentorship Crisis
Supervisor shortages (ratios 1:3 to 1:12+) overload staff, with inconsistent models. CHE 2022 flags traditional one-on-one isolation, power imbalances, poor feedback. Prof Jonathan Jansen calls for cohort seminars fostering communities, interdisciplinary methods.
Reforms: Mandatory MoUs, co-supervision, supervisor certification/training (CHE rec 1-2), cap workloads tied to graduations. External experts for practice-based theses, equity for black/women supervisors.
Ethics delays (clearance, plagiarism) extend timelines; average doctoral completion 4-6+ years vs 3-year norm.
Funding and Equity Barriers
NRF funds 36% eligible (R1.3bn shortfall 2022); bursaries (R176k) ignore living costs, forcing part-time work. UCDP aids but under-resourced. Black/first-gen students face role model shortages, accidental fields.
International reliance (37% doctorates) risks displacing locals. Reforms: Full-cost bursaries, TCS 'living scholarships' (R350k+), NRF equity across fields (beyond 80% SET). For more on funding opportunities, see NRF site.
Low Throughput and Employability Gaps
Doctoral throughput 15-40%, dropouts 19-22% in 5 years; master's 22%. Employability: Postgrad unemployment ~11.7% (2025), skills mismatch in humanities. USAf notes 'more degrees, less readiness'.
Realign undergrad for research skills; NESP/MMUF for talent pipelines. Prof Jansen warns of 'corrupted' outputs via predatory journals, salami-slicing.
Curriculum Reforms for Industry Alignment
Curricula lag: Limited WIL, interdisciplinary skills (leadership, ethics, digital). DHET demands updates for tech/policies. Differentiate: Academia (theory), industry (applied), societal (transdisciplinary).
Flexible pathways: Blended/part-time, RPL. Assessment: Practical skills, not theory alone. For details, USAf colloquium report.
Quality Assurance and Evaluation Overhaul
CHE: Robust progress monitoring, ethics, viva for independence. Shift to assessing scholars (attributes, ethics), not theses. Standardize examiners, reduce bias. Senior academics challenge subjectivity, call for viva equity.
Postgrad centres for support; decolonise via African epistemologies.
Pathways Forward: Structured Reforms
CHE recs: Structured doctorates (onboarding, cohorts, attributes assessment), supervisor dev, funding expansion, HEQSF review. USAf: Differentiated pathways, integrity focus. Minister Manamela (Jan 2026) stresses PSET differentiation, STEM alignment.
Implement via policy coordination, NRF/DHET investments. Unis like UCT, Wits pilot structured PhDs.
Outlook: Building a World-Class Postgraduate System
Reforms could meet NDP targets, boost 28 PhDs/million to 100. Implications: Renew academia, address brain drain, enhance economy. Stakeholders must act: DHET policy, unis implementation, funders support. Positive steps via USAf colloquia signal momentum for credible postgrads.
- Prioritise equity: Target black/women throughput.
- Invest in supervisors: National training.
- Align with Vision 2030: Industry partnerships.
- Monitor via CHE audits.
South Africa's postgrad future hinges on these changes for skilled graduates driving innovation.
