South Africa's higher education sector is marking a significant milestone this month as the Siyaphumelela student-success network convenes to assess more than a decade of collaborative work aimed at boosting completion rates and equity across universities and colleges. The gathering, scheduled for late June in Johannesburg, comes at a time when institutions face intensifying financial constraints that test the sustainability of these gains.
Origins of a National Collaboration
The Siyaphumelela initiative, whose name means "We Succeed" in isiXhosa, began in 2014 under the leadership of the South African Institute for Distance Education with backing from the Kresge Foundation. Its core purpose has been to strengthen the capacity of post-school education and training institutions to collect, analyse and act on data in order to raise student retention, progression and graduation outcomes while narrowing longstanding achievement gaps linked to race, gender and socioeconomic background.
Early partners included the University of the Free State, Durban University of Technology, Nelson Mandela University, the University of the Witwatersrand and the University of Pretoria. Over subsequent years the network expanded steadily, eventually encompassing 20 public universities that together enrol roughly 80 percent of all students in the public university system. More than 1,500 staff members have received training in data-informed practices, and total investment since launch has reached R240 million.
Data as the Foundation for Improvement
Participating institutions have embedded routine use of learning analytics, early-alert systems and cohort-tracking dashboards. These tools allow academic and support staff to identify students at risk of disengaging long before formal dropout occurs. Interventions range from targeted tutoring and mentoring to curriculum redesign that incorporates high-impact practices such as learning communities and undergraduate research opportunities.
Universities report measurable shifts in minimum-time-to-completion rates and overall year-on-year success metrics. The emphasis remains on moving beyond simple access metrics toward genuine throughput and work-readiness, ensuring that expanded enrolment translates into meaningful qualifications.
Equity and Inclusion at the Centre
A defining feature of the movement has been its explicit focus on closing achievement gaps. Institutions track disaggregated data by demographic group and socioeconomic status, then design context-specific supports. Examples include extended orientation programmes for first-generation students, financial-literacy workshops and peer-led study groups that address both academic and psychosocial barriers.
These efforts align with national priorities articulated by the Department of Higher Education and Training and the Council on Higher Education, which continue to stress the need for a transformed student experience that reflects South Africa's diverse population.
Persistent Funding Pressures
Despite documented progress, universities and colleges operate under significant budgetary strain. The 2026/27 allocation to the Department of Higher Education and Training stands at R149.286 billion, with the vast majority transferred directly to institutions and students. However, real-term increases have not kept pace with enrolment growth, infrastructure needs and rising operational costs.
The National Student Financial Aid Scheme remains the largest single transfer item, now exceeding direct grants to universities. This shift creates structural tension: while access expands through bursaries and loans, institutional capacity to deliver quality teaching, research and student support faces pressure. Administrative challenges within NSFAS, including occasional disbursement delays, add further complexity for both students and universities.
Institutional Experiences Across the Sector
Partner universities illustrate varied yet complementary journeys. The University of the Free State has scaled integrated student-success strategies over more than a decade, embedding high-impact practices and refining them through successive grant cycles. Durban University of Technology has focused on data capacity building to support its diverse student body. Newer participants such as the University of Cape Town and the University of KwaZulu-Natal have adapted the network's frameworks to their own contexts, contributing fresh insights on large-scale implementation.
TVET colleges are increasingly engaging with the same data-driven principles, extending the movement beyond traditional universities into the broader post-school landscape.
The Role of Government and Regulatory Bodies
The Department of Higher Education and Training continues to support the network through policy alignment and occasional participation in convenings. The Council on Higher Education monitors quality and success indicators, providing an external lens on progress. Parliamentary oversight committees regularly examine the balance between NSFAS expansion and institutional sustainability, highlighting the need for coordinated planning.
Recent ministerial statements have reaffirmed commitment to student funding while acknowledging the requirement for a more sustainable long-term model.
Looking Ahead at the 2026 Conference
The upcoming Siyaphumelela conference, themed "Reimagining Student Success and Expanding Opportunity for All," will bring together more than 500 delegates at the Birchwood Hotel and OR Tambo Conference Centre in Boksburg from 23 to 26 June. Sessions will review achievements, share emerging practices and confront the funding realities that threaten continued momentum.
Keynotes and workshops are expected to explore how artificial intelligence and advanced analytics can further personalise support, while also addressing graduate employability in a changing economy.
Photo by Jolame Chirwa on Unsplash
Implications for the Wider Sector
The student-success movement demonstrates that sustained, evidence-based collaboration can deliver measurable improvements even in resource-constrained environments. Its emphasis on shared learning across institutions offers a model for other national challenges in higher education. At the same time, the funding squeeze underscores that data and good intentions alone cannot substitute for adequate resourcing of teaching, infrastructure and student support services.
Stakeholders across universities, government and civil society agree that maintaining and scaling these gains will require innovative financing solutions alongside continued commitment to equity-focused practices.
Path Forward
As the network enters its next phase, priorities include deeper integration with TVET colleges, stronger links to industry for work-integrated learning, and refined metrics that capture holistic student development. The 12-year reflection serves not as a celebration of completion but as a checkpoint for renewed ambition in a sector that remains central to South Africa's social and economic transformation.
