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[3] [7] [8] As of the 2024 academic year, UCT comprises four faculties—education, language, and arts; medical sciences; social sciences; and agricultural engineering—offering 22 degree programs. [17] Each year, only 25 to 30 students are accepted for each program. [3] [7] Portuguese is the main teaching language at UCT.
The University of Cape Town (UCT) (Afrikaans: Universiteit van Kaapstad, Xhosa: iYunivesithi yaseKapa) is a public research university in Cape Town, South Africa.Established in 1829 as the South African College, it was granted full university status in 1918, making it the oldest university in South Africa and the oldest university in Sub-Saharan Africa in continuous operation.
The platform was launched in 2014 and managed by UCT Libraries according to UCT's Open Access Policy. [9] The Libraries' Digital Library Services department is involved in a retrospective digitisation project of all UCT theses. The aim is that all UCT's Master's and Doctoral theses, dating back to 1929, will be available via OpenUCT.
André Brink OIS (1935–2015), professor of English language and literature; Leslie Casson (1903–1969), professor of medieval literature; J. M. Coetzee OMG, professor of literature, 2003 Nobel Prize in Literature; Imraan Coovadia, director of creative writing; Johannes du Plessis Scholtz (1900–1990), professor of Afrikaans and Dutch
SHAWCO Education is a UCT student-run development programme which facilitates tutoring of school learners in previously disadvantaged communities and the focus of all projects is to help children learn. Academic subjects such as Maths, English, Science and Life Orientation are
Coordinated Universal Time (UTC, of which UCT is a deprecated alias) Topics referred to by the same term This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the title UCT .
The gift of speech and the travail of language 1994: E Foner: The story of American freedom 1996: O Patterson: The paradoxes of freedom in America 1997: Noam Chomsky: Market democracy in a neoliberal order: Doctrines and reality 1999: Alan Ryan: Academic freedom: Human right or professorial privilege? 2001? Wole Soyinka
In 2002, UCT Vice-Chancellor Njabulo Ndebele re-opened the matter of the Mafeje affair. [64] In 2003, UCT officially apologised to Mafeje and offered him an honorary doctorate, but he did not respond to UCT's offer. [14] [64] Mafeje died in 2007. [73] In 2008, on the incident's 40th anniversary, UCT formally apologised to Mafeje's family. [74]