Assignment 3
EXCEPTIONAL ANSWERS
Due 8 August 2025
,RCE2601 Assignment 3: Exceptional Research Proposal - Part 1
Due: 8 August 2025
Title: Enhancing Agricultural Education in South African FET Schools:
Addressing Curriculum Misalignment and Practical Skill Gaps in Rural KwaZulu-
Natal
Contents
1. Introduction .............................................................................................................. 2
2. Problem Statement .................................................................................................. 2
3. Research Aim and Objectives .................................................................................. 4
4. Theoretical Framework ............................................................................................ 4
5. Literature Review ..................................................................................................... 6
6. Research Questions ................................................................................................ 7
7. Significance of the Study ......................................................................................... 7
8. Conclusion ............................................................................................................... 8
9. References ............................................................................................................ 10
, 1. Introduction
Agricultural education within South Africa’s Further Education and Training (FET) phase
occupies a position of profound strategic significance, serving as a pivotal mechanism
for equipping the nation's youth with critical competencies essential for bolstering
national food security, catalyzing rural socio-economic development, and rigorously
promoting sustainable agricultural practices. However, insights gleaned from protracted
pedagogical engagement and empirical observations within rural KwaZulu-Natal
unequivocally underscore a pervasive systemic discrepancy: a pronounced
misalignment between the predominantly theoretical orientation of the Agricultural
Sciences curriculum and the contextually imperative practical skills demanded by the
dynamic rural agricultural economy. Consequently, despite graduating with formal
qualifications, learners frequently demonstrate a demonstrable deficit in context-relevant
technical proficiencies, thereby significantly diminishing both their immediate
employability and their prospective entrepreneurial agency within a vital economic
sector (Lekhetho, 2017).
This formidable challenge is acutely exacerbated in under-resourced rural areas where
agriculture remains the primary, and often sole, livelihood strategy for marginalized
communities. In these contexts, institutional support, infrastructural provisions, and
opportunities for applied vocational training are demonstrably insufficient (Hart & Aliber,
2012). The compelling rationale for this exacting inquiry is thus firmly situated within the
urgent imperative to critically examine, systematically analyze, and propose evidence-
based, actionable solutions for this critical educational and developmental lacuna that
perpetuates cycles of rural vulnerability and underdevelopment.
2. Problem Statement
The extant Agricultural Sciences curriculum in South Africa’s FET schools exhibits a
persistent epistemological bias, unequivocally privileging theoretical instruction at the
expense of applied competencies. This pedagogical approach disproportionately
focuses on foundational scientific principles such—as soil chemistry, crop physiology,
and livestock classification—while frequently neglecting the tangible, hands-on