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Teaching and learning

How we learn has changed

From a single purpose to a comprehensive vision

In 1956, health sciences education at the Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences was shaped by a single purpose: to train doctors. Over the next seven decades, that focus underwent a far-reaching transformation. Programme by programme, the Faculty expanded its vision to reflect a broader understanding of health and healing.

Today, in addition to medical doctors, we educate nurses, physiotherapists, occupational therapists, dietitians, speech-language therapists, and researchers. With more than 90 postgraduate programmes — many unique in South Africa — the Faculty offers one of the continent's most comprehensive health sciences education portfolios.

70 years of impact

We offer a comprehensive series of programmes, matched by state-of-the-art training facilities.

Education at scale
6
Undergraduate programmes
90+
Postgraduate options
7
Health professions trained
70
Years of curriculum evolution

A curriculum that evolves

While the scope of our teaching has grown, its guiding question has remained constant: how to best equip health professionals to serve their communities and inspire lifelong learning?

Healthcare in 2025 looks vastly different from that of 1956. In response, our curricula are continually renewed to reflect the latest scientific, clinical and technological advances. Modern learning technologies are embedded across programmes to create immersive learning experiences that prepare graduates not only for the world of work, but for the discipline of lifelong learning.

Watch Celebrating 70 Years of Impact: Teaching and Learning on YouTube.

Celebrating 70 Years of Impact: Teaching and Learning

Six programmes. Six paths

Today, the Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences offers six undergraduate programmes: Medicine and Surgery (MBChB), Occupational Therapy, Dietetics, Physiotherapy, Speech-Language and Hearing Therapy, and Nursing - training the next generation of health professionals who will serve communities across South Africa and beyond.



 

World-class learning environments

State-of-the-art facilities — including a cutting-edge Clinical Skills and Simulation Unit and Africa's largest Medical Morphology Learning Centre — support experiential training through high-fidelity simulation, virtual technologies, and ethically sourced human specimens. Together with world-class research infrastructure, they ensure our graduates are ready for the complexities of modern healthcare.

Watch Medical Morphology Learning Centre  |  Stellenbosch University on YouTube.

A campus that keeps pace

Next: Visual redress

From classrooms to creating a space everyone can embrace