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Submit your Research - Make it Global NewsThe Storied Past of Damelin College in South African Higher Education
Damelin College, established in 1943 by Benjamin Damelin, has long been a fixture in South Africa's private higher education landscape. Originally positioned as a cramming college, it evolved into a comprehensive private higher education institution (PHEI) offering degrees, diplomas, higher certificates, and short courses across multiple campuses. Registered with the Department of Higher Education and Training (DHET) under certificate number 2001/HE07/009 as a private higher education institution under the Higher Education Act No. 101 of 1997, Damelin's programmes were historically accredited by the Council on Higher Education (CHE) and quality assured by the Higher Education Quality Committee (HEQC). With around 4,000 students enrolled as of 2022, primarily at its Randburg flagship campus and others nationwide, it catered to career-focused learners seeking flexible study options like full-time, part-time, blended, or distance learning.
Part of the larger Educor Holdings group, which includes CityVarsity, Lyceum, and ICESA City Campus, Damelin symbolized accessible private education amid South Africa's growing demand for post-school qualifications. The private higher education sector now accounts for over 20% of total enrollments, enrolling more than 250,000 students and tripling in size since 2010, driven by public university capacity constraints. Yet, this expansion has spotlighted quality control challenges, with Damelin's current predicament exemplifying the risks of regulatory lapses.
A Timeline of Accreditation Challenges and Deregistrations
Damelin's troubles trace back years, culminating in multiple deregistration episodes. In March 2024, then-Minister Blade Nzimande announced the deregistration of Damelin alongside CityVarsity, ICESA City Campus, and Lyceum College due to persistent non-compliance, including failure to submit audited financial statements since 2020 and widespread student complaints over undelivered study materials, inaccessible online platforms, delayed exam results, and unissued certificates. This affected over 13,000 students across Educor institutions, stranding them mid-programme.
Provisional reinstatements followed in August 2024 and early 2025 after remedial actions, but issues resurfaced. By November 2024, campuses like East London cancelled year-end exams abruptly, directing students to transfer without clear pathways. Allegations of misconduct persisted, including lecturers marking unfamiliar subjects and unfair dismissals. The cycle repeated with Minister Buti Manamela's December 13, 2025, Notice of Intent to cancel registrations, published imminently in the Government Gazette per Section 63(a) of the Higher Education Act.
The Pivotal December 2025 Notice and Government Rationale
On December 13, 2025, Minister Manamela notified Damelin, CityVarsity, and ICESA City Campus of his intent to deregister them following review of their representations. The decision underscores a 'prolonged pattern of non-compliance' threatening student futures and sector integrity. Institutions had until a specified deadline to respond, but Director-General Nkosinathi Sishi revealed in January 2026 that Damelin failed to meet the June 6, 2025, deadline for 2024 Annual Reports, among seven major violations.
"Institutions that fail to meet their legal and educational obligations cannot be allowed to compromise the futures of the people they serve," stated the department. Sishi added, 'This institution is just not able to cope,' signaling low prospects for reversal despite ongoing reviews.
Core Non-Compliance Issues: Financial, Operational, and Academic Failures
The violations span financial viability, governance, and academic delivery:
- Financial Reporting Lapses: No audited statements, SARS tax clearance certificates, or proof of solvency, breaching Section 59 of the Higher Education Act requiring annual reports within six months of financial year-end.
- Operational Deficiencies: Non-compliance with occupational health and safety, contradictory submissions to DHET.
- Academic Irregularities: Exam disruptions, manipulated marks, undelivered materials—echoing 2024 complaints where DHET intervened by sharing result screenshots directly with students.
- Governance Issues: Educor's CCMA loss in January 2026, ordering R1.3 million payout for unfair dismissals, highlighting labour woes.
For context, PHEIs must maintain CHE programme accreditation, NQF registration via SAQA, and DHET oversight to ensure qualifications hold value in South Africa's competitive job market. Damelin's lapses undermine this framework.Department of Higher Education and Training (DHET)
Student Stories: Limbo, Frustration, and Uncertain Futures
Thousands face disruption. In 2024, over 4,000 Damelin students grappled with halted studies; recent exam cancellations left others stunned, as one East London learner lamented, 'Damelin has failed us.' Transfers to public universities or other PHEIs are urged, but credit recognition varies, prolonging timelines and costs.
Existing qualifications earned before potential deregistration remain valid if fully CHE-accredited, per DHET policy. However, incomplete programmes risk invalidation, prompting panic among mid-degree students. Parents express tentative relief post-past reinstatements but wariness now. This crisis amplifies vulnerabilities in a sector where private enrolments surged amid public admission battles for 2026.
Regulatory Framework: How DHET and CHE Safeguard Quality
The DHET registers PHEIs, while CHE accredits programmes. Non-compliance triggers audits, provisional status, or cancellation. PHEIs must submit annual reports detailing enrolments, finances, and graduations. South Africa's National Qualifications Framework (NQF) ensures portability.
Damelin's case highlights enforcement: post-2024 deregistration, reinstatements required teach-outs (completing enrolled students) and audits. Yet recidivism prompted the 2025 notice.DHET Notice of Intent (PDF)
Prospective students can verify status via DHET registers.Craft a strong academic CV for transfers via resources like AcademicJobs.com.
Educor Holdings: The Parent Company's Systemic Struggles
Educor, Damelin's owner, faces cascading failures: deregistrations, CCMA rulings, and insider reports of 'corporate greed' and integrity lacks. Financial opacity since 2020 eroded trust, with 2022 enrolments plummeting across brands (Damelin: 4,012; CityVarsity: 540).
While Educor hopes for stability, recent blows like the R1.3m payout signal deeper woes. This mirrors sector risks where profit pressures compromise quality.
Wider Implications for Private Higher Education in South Africa
Private HEIs fill gaps—20%+ enrolments, innovative modes—but scandals fuel 'bogus college' fears, eroding confidence. DHET's crackdowns protect integrity amid 2026 readiness pushes. New entrants emerge, but viability demands transparency.
Navigating the Crisis: Practical Advice for Students and Parents
Immediate Steps:
- Verify your programme's CHE accreditation on DHET site.
- Contact DHET helpline for transfer guidance.
- Explore accredited alternatives; check South African academic jobs and courses.
- Secure transcripts promptly.
Photo by Babak Eshaghian on Unsplash
Future Outlook: Reforms and a Stronger Sector
Deregistration could shutter Damelin, but teach-outs ensure continuity. Broader reforms—stricter audits, financial bonds—loom. Positive: sector growth, with JSE-listed players rising. Students prioritizing accredited paths will thrive; AcademicJobs.com supports via university jobs and faculty openings.
South Africa's higher education evolves toward quality, equity. Stay informed, choose wisely.

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