Assignment 1 2026
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Due Date: 15 May 2026
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, QUESTION 1
1.1
The indigenous people of Southern Africa are the original inhabitants of the region
who lived there long before colonial occupation and long before European systems
of knowledge were imposed. In the prescribed text, these communities are mainly
represented by the San and the Khoi, who developed their own ways of living,
learning, producing knowledge and transmitting skills across generations (Seroto,
Davids and Wolhuter, 2020). They were not dependent on formal schools or written
systems in order to educate their children. Instead, they used practical experience,
observation, participation, language and community interaction as key forms of
education.
The extract shows that indigenous people of Southern Africa had established ways
of teaching practical skills that were closely linked to survival and daily life. For
example, the San used hunting knowledge that had been refined over centuries.
They taught younger people how to use bows and arrows, snares, traps and poison
in hunting, and this required not only physical skill but also deep knowledge of
animal behaviour, distance, movement and timing (Seroto, Davids and Wolhuter,
2020). This means indigenous people were knowledgeable communities with their
own educational systems rooted in their environment.
The term “indigenous” in this context also refers to people whose knowledge was
embedded in the land and in their relationship with nature. The extract explains that
the San knew the seasons, understood where edible and medicinal plants grew, and
collected them without harming the environment. They could follow antelope
migration patterns in order to locate water, and they developed methods of storing
water, such as using ostrich eggshells buried in sand to keep the water cool (Seroto,
Davids and Wolhuter, 2020). These examples show that indigenous identity is
connected not only to ancestry, but also to a long-standing ecological knowledge of
place.
In addition, indigenous people were communities with social and cultural systems
through which children became competent members of society. Education took place
through demonstration by experienced adults, observation by the youth, and
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, participation in community life. Language socialisation was central in this process
because children learned both how to speak and how to use language appropriately
within cultural contexts. Through storytelling, proverbs and oral traditions, they
learned values, identity and social expectations (Seroto, Davids and Wolhuter,
2020).
Therefore, the indigenous people of Southern Africa can be understood as the
original communities of the region, such as the San and Khoi, who possessed their
own knowledge systems, technologies, languages and educational practices. Their
learning was non-formal, practical, intergenerational and culturally grounded. Far
from being undeveloped, these communities had rich systems of knowledge that
enabled them to survive, adapt and educate future generations effectively (Seroto,
Davids and Wolhuter, 2020).
1.2
The view that indigenous people were ignorant of technological skills and practices is
inaccurate and deeply shaped by Eurocentric assumptions. The prescribed text
clearly shows that indigenous people of Southern Africa possessed advanced
practical knowledge and developed technologies suited to their environment and way
of life (Seroto, Davids and Wolhuter, 2020). Their technologies may not have
resembled modern industrial tools, but this does not mean they were ignorant or
unskilled.
The San, for example, used bows and arrows, poisoned tips, traps and snares in
sophisticated ways. These hunting methods required careful observation, planning
and scientific understanding of prey behaviour, poison sources and tracking
techniques. The use of poisoned arrows was especially complex because hunters
needed to know which natural substances could be used, how to apply them and
how to safely remove poisoned flesh from the hunted animal (Seroto, Davids and
Wolhuter, 2020). This reflects technical knowledge rather than ignorance.
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