Editor-in-chief | Zach Simpson, Engineering Education, University of Johannesburg, South Africa
Managing Editor | Siphosetu Ningiza, Engineering & the Built Environment, University of Johannesburg
Editorial board
Kibbie Naidoo – Academic Staff Development, University of Johannesburg, South Africa
Michael Samuel – School of Education, University of KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa
Vivienne Bozalek – Teaching and Learning, University of the Western Cape, South Africa
Denise Newfield – English and Education, University of the Witwatersrand, South Africa
Carolina Guzmán-Valenzuela – Higher Education, Universidad de Tarapacá, Chile
Kooi Cheng Lee – Centre for Development of Teaching and Learning (CDTL), National University of Singapore, Singapore
Sergio Celis – Higher Education, University of Chile, Chile [book review editor]
Catherine Manathunga – Education Research, University of the Sunshine Coast, Australia
Caroline Suransky - Humanistic Studies and Social Change, University for Humanistic Studies, The Netherlands
Shireen Motala - Postgraduate School (PGS), University of Johannesburg, South Africa
Gift Masaiti - Educational Administration, University of Zambia, Zambia
John Chang’Ach, School of Education, Moi University, Kenya
In memoriam:
The inimitable force behind both this journal and the inaugural 2017 SOTL in the South conference was our late editor-in-chief, Professor Brenda Leibowitz. Sadly, Brenda passed away on April 26, 2018. Brenda was a force for good in higher education, and in her work, she sought out a higher education space that was more caring of its participants: students and teachers alike. Her efforts were aimed at supporting academics – particularly young academics – to engage in scholarly teaching practice. Brenda was a friend, colleague, supervisor and mentor to all of us involved in SOTL in the South, and to many others, and we will miss her warmth and dynamism.
Dennis Banda was an inaugural member of the SOTL in the South editorial board. Sadly, Dennis passed away from COVID-19 on 12 February 2021. Dennis will be sorely missed by the SOTL in the South community for his humility and sense of humour as well as for his intelligence and contribution. His research, into topics such as decolonization of higher education, leaves an important legacy for scholarship in teaching and learning in Zambia and further afield.