This book delves into extensive research regarding the identification and characterization of academic literacies constructs, encompassing academic literacy, quantitative literacy, mathematics comprehension, and reasoning skills, with a specific focus on their relevance within South African educational contexts. The volume provides an in-depth exploration of the research behind the design and creation of assessments aimed at gauging these crucial literacies. It also delves into theoretical aspects of developmental work while shedding light on historical and contemporary inequalities in the South African educational landscape.
Emphasizing the practical implications of this research, the book underscores the pivotal role that assessing academic literacies can play in the equitable selection of students, particularly those hailing from educationally disadvantaged backgrounds. Additionally, it highlights how such assessments can inform higher education responsiveness, curriculum development, programme implementation, and the provision of support services for students, ultimately aiding in informed student placement decisions.
This book delves into extensive research regarding the identification and characterization of academic literacies constructs, encompassing academic literacy, quantitative literacy, mathematics comprehension, and reasoning skills, with a specific focus on their relevance within South African educational contexts. The volume provides an in-depth exploration of the research behind the design and creation of assessments aimed at gauging these crucial literacies. It also delves into theoretical aspects of developmental work while shedding light on historical and contemporary inequalities in the South African educational landscape.
Emphasising the practical implications of this research, the book underscores the pivotal role that assessing academic literacies can play in the equitable selection of students, particularly those hailing from educationally disadvantaged backgrounds. Additionally, it highlights how such assessments can inform higher education responsiveness, curriculum development, programme implementation, and the provision of support services for students, ultimately aiding in informed student placement decisions.
Alan Cliff
academic literacy assessment alternative admissions criteria and processes assessment of learning potential placement testing generic and discipline-specific literacies educational assessment of students language of instruction and student readiness
“In this deeply considered and carefully argued book, Cliff reviews three decades of work into academic literacies testing begun at UCT. His account gives the wider academic community insight into how the testing project evolved at the intersection of local commitments in South Africa … . The monograph provides a valuable historical overview of the central debates around academic literacy in South Africa and how they manifested in the different models of support and curriculum transformation implemented across various institutions.” (Laura Dison and Maria Prozesky, CriSTaL - Critical Studies in Teaching & Learning, Vol. 13 (2), 2025)
“Cliff’s book not only provides a record of the testing initiative but, also, a means of challenging many of the commonsense assumptions that inform thinking about access to higher education in South Africa and elsewhere by providing an account of the reasoning behind the tests and their analysis. In doing this, the book is a powerful reminder of what we do not know, and are often blinded from knowing, by the power of common sense.” (Chrissie Boughey, South African Journal of Science, Vol. 121 (3-4), March-April, 2025)
“Cliff offers a detailed overview of why the project chose to frame its work theoretically using the idea of ‘academic literacies’, an approach that was prominent in higher education studies in the late 1990s and early 2000s. … A huge body of research has been conducted on results from these tests over the 30 years of the project (with the bulk of activity in the 2010s exploiting data from universities across the country) and here Cliff offers a comprehensive summary.” (Jennifer M. Case, Higher Education, September 16, 2024)