Institutional and Socio-Cultural Constraints in Technical and Vocational Education and Training: Insights from South Africa
Ronnie Risimati Maceke *
Department of Education Studies, University of Limpopo, South Africa.
Nkarhi. E. Mathebula
Department of Education Studies, University of Limpopo, South Africa.
Mohammed Xolile Ntshangase
Department of Education Studies, University of Limpopo, South Africa.
Sibonangaye Dick Nkalanga
Department of Social Sciences and Economic Management Education, University of Limpopo, South Africa.
*Author to whom correspondence should be addressed.
Abstract
Technical and Vocational Education and Training (TVET) in South Africa is repeatedly positioned as a central lever for youth employment, inclusive growth, and industrial development, yet its outcomes remain uneven and its social legitimacy contested. This review synthesises recent peer-reviewed scholarship on the institutional and socio-cultural constraints that shape TVET participation, provision quality, and post-college transitions. The review argues that constraints operate as a mutually reinforcing “constraint nexus”: institutional misalignments (between governance, funding logics, curriculum design, lecturer development, quality assurance, and employer engagement) interact with socio-cultural dynamics (status hierarchies between vocational and academic tracks, gendered and classed occupational imaginaries, stigma, language and identity, and historically produced distrust in state capability). Evidence indicates that colleges often confront contradictory policy signals and compliance regimes, while partnerships with employers and workplace learning opportunities remain fragile and uneven. At the same time, students navigate powerful perceptions that vocational routes are inferior or risky, which influences programme choice, persistence, and aspiration formation. The review highlights emerging conceptual contributions using capability, Bourdieusian, Freirean, and decolonial lenses to explain why technical training reforms can fail when they neglect recognition, agency, and social meaning. The study concludes with integrative implications for policy and research, emphasising institutional coherence, credible progression routes, lecturer professional formation, and socially anchored strategies to rebuild the symbolic value of vocational pathways.
Keywords: South Africa, TVET, institutional constraints, socio-cultural factors, stigma, employability, articulation, capability approach, partnerships, vocational identity