The divide between the workplace and higher education is a barrier that has hindered the progress of the South African workforce. Many professionals possess the skills needed for senior roles but lack the official degree to prove it, and leaving work to study is rarely a realistic option. Workplace-integrated learning offers a modern solution that turns the office into a campus. This approach acknowledges the high value of practical experience, delivering a win-win outcome where employees earn recognised credentials and employers see an immediate uplift in productivity.
Moving beyond evening classes
Traditional part-time programmes often treat work and study as separate activities, with little overlap between the lecture hall and the office. Workplace-integrated qualifications, by contrast, are designed from the ground up so that the two reinforce each other.
Simon Gathua, Vice Principal at Chartall Business College, notes that these qualifications incorporate workplace learning into every single subject. “Assignments and projects require that students apply concepts directly to their specific workplace context,” Gathua explains. At Chartall, this is facilitated through the DDDA (Define, Describe, Debate, and Apply) methodology. Gathua adds that a module like financial accounting is not a theoretical exercise but “a live analysis of the student’s own organisation,” compelling the student to ‘internalise’ knowledge and immediately translate it into real-world practice.
Learn while you earn – the employee advantage
For the individual, this model shifts the narrative from the sacrifice of studying to the advantage of career-linked growth. The ‘learn while you earn’ approach ensures that personal and professional development occur simultaneously.
Leigh-Ann Revill, CEO of Chartall Business College, highlights that employees benefit from a realistic path to obtaining qualifications without having to pause their work or family life. Because assignments are embedded in real work, employees see their academic efforts translate into tangible improvements in performance reviews and promotion potential almost immediately. Furthermore, affordable monthly payment plans and digital resources in such a model ensure that the cost of education does not become a source of financial stress.
Student Nurmi Bezuidenhoudt, who studied from abroad and graduated with a Bachelor of Business Administration degree from Chartall Business College, addressed this in his graduation speech. “Chartall gave me more than a qualification. It opened my mind to a new way of thinking about leadership, learning and growth that I’ll take with me forever,” he explained. “The school was flexible, and I was able to manage my job and studies, which helped me develop skills and new ideas that continue to impact my job today, in an ever-changing world.”
Immediate ROI – the employer’s advantage
From a business perspective, the application of learning is built into the qualification rather than measured separately after graduation. Employers do not have to wait years to see the value of their investment; they see a steady stream of process improvements, research proposals, and business plans produced as part of the learner’s academic requirements.
Revill notes that this real-time upliftment often leads to career acceleration during the study period. “We have seen numerous learners receive promotions while they were still studying because the skills were definitely noticeable as the studies occurred,” Revill says. The impact is often immediate in areas like communication and emotional intelligence, where managers see a visible difference in how a team member leads once a module is completed.
Recognition of Prior Learning – the underutilised tool
Recognition of Prior Learning (RPL) remains the most significant untapped resource in South African skills development. This process allows experienced professionals to turn years of hands-on expertise into a formal, portable qualification without having to re-study what they already know. Despite its value, many workers remain unaware that they qualify for this pathway. Gathua describes RPL as a vital tool that respects and rewards the dignity of learning on the job.
It is important to understand that RPL is not a shortcut. Revill explains, “It is a different methodology of obtaining a qualification. You show us your skills against outcomes versus us teaching you the skills”. Instead of learning new material from scratch, students demonstrate that they already meet the required academic standards through their professional history.
Beyond the initial credentialing process, the success of workplace-integrated learning depends heavily on active support from the employer. Shifting the corporate perspective on study leave is a critical step in this journey. Rather than viewing time away from the desk as work missed, Revill suggests that employers should see study leave as an investment in employees’ future productivity. A focused and motivated learner, supported by their organisation, often returns to their tasks with greater efficiency and a sharper professional edge.
A new standard for success
The true value of this model lies in its ability to produce graduates who deliver measurable impact long before they receive their qualification. Merging the office and the classroom removes the traditional lag time associated with new graduates entering the workforce. However, the effectiveness of workplace integrated learning in South Africa will hinge heavily on close collaboration between training providers and businesses to ensure that learning outcomes meet real-world demands.
Gathua captures this shift perfectly, noting that graduates should not need a transition period before they can contribute; they should start contributing from the first day. This approach does more than grant qualifications; it rewards the dignity of experience and secures a talent pipeline ready for the challenges of tomorrow.
By Leigh-Ann Revill, CEO of Chartall Business College
