Universities SA tackles post-school pathways as admissions crunch looms

Staff Reporter|Published

Universities SA is launching a new dialogue series to rethink education and training for employability as universities reach capacity.

Image: Chatgpt

As 2025 enters its final quarter, public universities are preparing for yet another challenging  admissions season in 2026. They will be turning away hundreds of higher education aspirants who  cannot be accommodated in Bachelor's programmes due to limited space.  

This challenge will be the subject of discussion at the first Thought Leadership event of Universities  South Africa (USAf) to be hosted at the Future Africa campus of the University of Pretoria on  Thursday, 2 October 2025. The engagement, themed “Rethinking Post-School Pathways for Youth  Employability in South Africa,” will be hosted in a hybrid format. 

During this dialogue, a panel of five experts - representing public universities, technical and  vocational education and training (TVET) colleges, and private higher education institutions - will  lead discussions with an in-person audience of up to 50. Deliberations will be live-streamed to a  nationwide online audience representing higher education policymakers, university Vice 

Chancellors, their deputies, registrars, institutional planners, and finance directors. Senior  academics, researchers and administrators will also be present alongside representatives from  TVET colleges, private sector interest groups, student organisations, and civil society. 

This event will be the first in a series of dialogues, each dedicated to a specific higher education  challenge.  

“While Universities South Africa (USAf) routinely convenes higher education stakeholders to  deliberate on matters of shared concern, this marks the first occasion on which such a platform is  extended to the broader public,” says Dr Phethiwe Matutu, Chief Executive Officer of USAf. “Our  objective is to foster public understanding of the complex challenges facing our sector, addressing  them - one issue at a time - and to co-create viable solutions. We will consider it a victory when 

these engagements lead to solutions and meaningful policy reform.  

“Through this first Thought Leadership event, we particularly hope to open the eyes of our young  people to the opportunities available to them in post-school education and training – especially  opportunities for future employability and entrepreneurship.” Dr Matutu said this event was long  overdue, considering the high youth unemployment rate in South Africa and the limited capacity of  public universities. “Our youth are the future. It is our responsibility to ensure they all realise their  potential.” 

Registration is now open. The 50 spaces available for in-person attendance will be allocated on a  first-registered, first-served basis.