ASSIGNMENT 3
DUE DATE: JULY 2026
,HED4804 ASSIGNMENT 3 2026
DUE JULY 2026
Decolonisation and Africanisation in Education: A Critical Examination through
the Lens of Women and Education
Education in Africa continues to be shaped by colonial ideas that have pushed African
knowledge, cultures, and ways of learning to the margins. Decolonisation and
Africanisation are essential for creating an education system that reflects African
realities, histories, and identities instead of relying on Eurocentric perspectives. The
experiences of women clearly show why this change is urgently needed, as many
continue to face barriers created by both colonial legacies and patriarchal systems that
limit their voices, opportunities, and knowledge. I argue that although decolonisation
and Africanisation have the potential to transform women's education, meaningful
change can only be achieved by challenging both colonial and patriarchal structures
and placing African women's knowledge and experiences at the centre of education.
, Critically Assessing the Proposition: Women, Education, and Decolonisation
The call to shift away from Eurocentric paradigms resonates strongly with feminist
scholars who have long critiqued the exclusion of African women's voices from
educational discourse. Contemporary feminist education remains "riddled with
inequalities that place Western feminist theories and pedagogies at the centre of
teaching and learning feminism, while African knowledges and pedagogies remain
marginalised" (Nkealah, 2026, p. 298). This marginalisation is not incidental but reflects
what Maldonado-Torres (2007) describes as the pervasive "coloniality" that persists
long after formal colonialism ended.
In the South African context, colonial epistemic frameworks continue to dominate
university curricula, "impeding decolonisation and Africanisation efforts" (Sebola-
Samanyanga, Nkosi & Peter, 2025, p. 205). For women, this has meant that their
educational experiences have been shaped by what Nkealah (2026, p. 299) identifies
as the dominance of Eurocentric models that "undermine, or exclude altogether, African
feminist theorisations of gender". The exclusion operates on multiple levels: African
women's knowledge systems are devalued, their historical contributions are erased, and
their educational needs are framed through Western lenses that fail to account for local
realities.
The #FeesMustFall movement of 2015-2016 exposed fundamental inequities in
knowledge production and demanded "the radical decolonisation of curricula" (Pillay,
2024, p. 78). However, as Pillay (2024, p. 82) emphasises, the distinctions between
Africanisation, decolonisation and deracialisation are "often conflated". For women's
education, this conflation has meant that gender-based inequalities have sometimes
been overlooked in broader decolonisation agendas. A decolonised education, as