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Cultural factors as an aspect of culturally sensitive feedback : implication for the management of teacher competence.14 August 2012 (has links)
M.Ed. / The objective of this study was to establish if the cultural factors as an aspect of culturally sensitive feedback are accommodated during assessment. This research has helped to procure teacher opinion as to the extent at which principals are culturally sensitive when giving feedback during assessment. The study showed that lack of awareness of cultural differences between principals and teachers make feedback ineffective and impairs the development of teachers. These differences have some implications for teacher competence and its assessment. Principals need to be culturally sensitive when they give feedback to teachers after assessment. In this way the feedback process will be regarded in a positive light and teachers will see it as a development procedure and not as a tool for pinning them down. The recommendations made in this study may be useful in developing teacher assessment programs that will be effective and also enhance teacher competence in schools countrywide.
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The use of computers for learning in outcomes-based education in primary schools in the Lenasia district.21 October 2008 (has links)
M.Ed. / South Africa's democratic government inherited a divided and unequal system of education. Under apartheid, South Africa had nineteen different educational departments separated by race, geography and ideology (Department of Education, 2002:4). In this education system, teachers taught a syllabus and learners were required to meet certain objectives. These objectives were normally fixed and had to be achieved by all learners within a certain time frame. Assessment was based mainly on knowledge by means of a test. This system did not serve the needs of all learners in the country (Pretorius, 1998:1). Curriculum change in post-apartheid South Africa started immediately after the election in 1994 when the National Education and Training Forum began a process of syllabus revision and subject rationalisation (Department of Education, 2002:4). The purpose of this process was mainly to lay the foundation for a single national core syllabus. This brought about the implementation of Curriculum 2005 in 1998 which marked a watershed in the educational history of South Africa. The Outcomes-based education (OBE) approach represents a paradigm shift in education. / Prof. Duan Van der Westhuizen
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The relationship between second language achievement and language learning strategies in English first and second language learnersLutz, Nicolette January 2016 (has links)
Submitted in part fulfillment of the requirements for the degree
Master of Education in Educational Psychology
At the
University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg
February 2015 / All learners in the current South African setting, according to the Curriculum Assessment Policy Statement (CAPS) document and government legislation, have to learn a second language. Whilst taking this into consideration, this study aimed to look at the relationship between second language achievement and language learning strategies in English first and second language learners. The sample consisted of 128 English first and second language learners in Grade 6 and 7 from a Primary Government School in Johannesburg, Gauteng. The learners completed the Strategy Inventory for Language Learning (SILL) which provided information on the language learning strategies they use most readily. The data collected from the SILL was then analysed in relation to the learners’ marks in the second language they were studying to ascertain the relationship that the strategy use may have with second language achievement. It was discovered that there were significant relationships between metacognitive, memory and affective strategy use and second language achievement. Alongside this, certain learning strategies were found to be correlated with each other and due to this relationship, may also impact on second language achievement. Given the role that language has played in South African society and the impact it has had on the schooling system, understanding what may impact on language learning may serve to enhance this setting. / MT2016
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Examining pre-service teachers' reflections on their classroom teaching in order to identify topic specific pedagogical content knowledge in their practiceVan der Merwe, Denise January 2017 (has links)
A research report submitted to the Faculty of Science, School of Education,
University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, South Africa, in partial
fulfilment of the award of Master of Science (M.Sc) in Science Education. 6 November 2017. / The gap between theory and practice in education remains a persistent problem identified by
some researchers as today’s “Achilles heel of teacher education”. The experience in science
education is no different. Pedagogical content knowledge (PCK) has emerged as a theoretical
construct that offers science education practitioners a framework to bridge the theory-practice
divide because of its ability to transform content knowledge. However, little is known about
how the complexity of classroom practice influences PCK acquired by pre-service teachers
from structured courses. The purpose of this study was to illuminate pre-service teachers’ PCK
as it develops from a point of reasoning about teaching a specific topic into classroom delivery.
This study was performed as a qualitative case study of 23 final year pre-service science
teachers. It was located in a methodology class that had a specific objective to develop PCK in
core topics of science. The students were exposed to an explict intervention on developing PCK
in teaching stochiometry then placed in various High Schools around Johannesburg during
teaching experience. Data collected was largely during their placement in schools. It consisted
of qualitative data such as lesson plans, audio recordings of classroom teaching and self -
analysis reports submitted after the teaching experience. Analysis was based on a qualitative
in-depth method for identification of evidence of teaching segments illustrating pedagogical
transformation. These are segments where there is evidence of two or more topic specific
components of PCK defined as Topic Specific Content Knowledge (TSPCK). These were
called TSPCK episodes. The TSPCK episodes identified in lessons plans and in recorded
lessons were analysed for identificaton of components present and the nature of interactions.
These were turned into pictorial TSPCK MAPS. The analysis of pre-service teachers’ views
on TSPCK were analysed through a combination of open statements and a science teacher
belief tool. The findings indicated that TSPCK episodes identified in lessons plans experience
an authentic expansion, blossoming into a cluster of episodes which still carried out the original
intention. In some cases the intention could be seen through a similar TSPCK episode in some
cases the component sequence and identity had changed. Furthermore, pre-service teachers
showed positive awareness of their own level of teacher development and credited their
development to the TSPCK framework. Recommendations in this report include promotion of
the implementation of the TSPCK framework in Initial Teacher Education, particularly in the
methodology courses with reference to classroom complexity. / LG2018
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Factors influencing Grade 7 teachers' implementation of outcomes-based approaches in the national curriculum when teaching 'human reproduction'Doidge, Megan Caroline 01 September 2014 (has links)
A thesis submitted to the Faculty of Science, University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, in fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy. Johannesburg, 2014. / Outcomes-based education was introduced into South Africa almost 20 years ago amidst much controversy. During the period of my study, a modified version of the outcomes-based curriculum was in use, i.e. the Revised National Curriculum Statement Grades R-9. In this curriculum, critical and learning outcomes were described and a learner-centred approach advocated which would enable learners to achieve the outcomes. Human reproduction was introduced as one of the content areas in the senior phase of the Natural Sciences. Human reproduction is a sensitive but very relevant topic in South Africa where HIV/AIDS, teenage pregnancy and child abuse are prevalent and so was selected as a Grade 7 topic in one educational district of Gauteng.
In my study, I was interested in finding out what factors influenced Grade 7 teachers' implementation of outcomes-based approaches when teaching Human Reproduction. I explored the use of learner-centred approaches and the extent to which the critical and Natural Sciences learning outcomes could be achieved through these approaches. Firstly I wanted to know to what extent Grade 7 teachers used outcomes-based and learner-centred approaches when teaching human reproduction. Secondly I was interested in the factors that influenced the teaching of human reproduction. Thirdly I set out to find which factors affected the use of outcomes-based and learner-centred approaches during the teaching of human reproduction. Lastly the influence of teachers' behavioural, normative and control beliefs on their teaching of human reproduction in outcomes-based and learner-centred ways were of interest. My theoretical framework took into account the above-mentioned factors and beliefs about the influence of these factors and their possible impact on teaching human reproduction in outcomes-based and learner-centred ways.
My research involved a workshop for Natural Sciences teachers on the teaching of human reproduction to Grade 7's, followed by a survey. Forty teachers completed the survey questionnaire in which they recorded their perceptions of the expected influence of the learners, the learning environment and support structures, as well as teachers' beliefs, on the teaching of human reproduction. Ten of these teachers participated as the case studies in my multiple case study, forming a convenience sample.
I used a mixed methods approach in my investigation, starting with the survey questionnaire and then narrowing my focus to the ten case study teachers and becoming a participant observer in their classes. I recorded my data in field notes and as digital recordings of class discussions and when teachers had completed teaching human reproduction, I interviewed them. The data from the questionnaires, interview and lesson transcripts and field notes were analysed and conclusions drawn.
I used profiles to assess the achievement of the critical and learning outcomes by each teacher and to assess the extent to which each teacher used learner-centred approaches when teaching human reproduction. A cross case analysis enabled me to compare the teachers with regard to each outcome and learner-centred feature. Some quantitative data from my surveys and mostly qualitative data from my observations and interviews were used to explore the influence of factors internal to the teacher, i.e. personal and professional factors, and those external to the teacher such as the learners, the
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learning environment and support structures. I also used the qualitative data to identify the influence of behavioural, normative and control beliefs about teaching human reproduction in outcomes-based ways on practice.
My findings were that all teachers taught towards some outcomes and used some learner-centred approaches and these differed amongst teachers. The profiles enabled me to identify overall strengths of each teacher as an outcomes-based and learner-centred teacher, and the cross-case analysis indicated which outcomes were being met by learners through the teaching and learning approaches used. I found that the learning environment, and in particular the provision of or lack of learning support materials and other resources, impacted on the achievement of the outcomes. The school principals, colleagues, parents and friends proved to be mostly very supportive of the teaching of human reproduction and the need for strong communities of practice became evident. The choice of language was seen as a dilemma but my findings pointed to the use of home language or preferably code-switching to promote conceptual development and the development of English language skills. Cultural beliefs of learners contributed to their prior knowledge, and religious beliefs influenced some teachers who promoted more conservative values amongst their learners regarding sexuality. The need for clear boundaries on what could be discussed in class became evident, to protect both the teacher and learner from intrusion into their personal lives. Group work was seen as an important approach for this sensitive topic, and the need for workshops to strengthen teacher's subject content knowledge and thus their self efficacy when teaching human reproduction and to build strong communities of practice in which ideas and experiences could be shared amongst teachers, was a finding of this study.
In conclusion, some teachers were more outcomes-based and learner-centred than others. Subject content knowledge, choice of an appropriate language or language mix for teaching and learning, suitable learning environments with adequate learning support materials, school, district and parental support for the teaching of human reproduction all promoted a teachers sense of self-efficacy and made a difference to their teaching of human reproduction using outcomes-based approaches.
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Exploration of challenges faced by Grade 9 educators in the implementation of outcomes-based education (OBE) in Maleboho East Circuit of the Limpopo Province Department of EducationMoganwa, Lesiba Samuel January 2007 (has links)
Thesis (M.Dev.) --University of Limpopo, 2007. / This study sets out to explore the challenges faced by grade 9 educators in the implementation of Outcomes-Based Education (OBE) in Maleboho East Circuit in Limpopo Province in view of the role played by this new education approach in the government’s agenda for social transformation. The study is mainly exploratory in design and has been undertaken within a qualitative framework. Thus, the study does not purport to come with explanations of cause and effect relations. It only explores the challenges that impact on successful implementation of the OBE approach.
The research results show that the OBE approach is not effectively implemented in schools, due to inadequate teacher training, limited or little support to educators in their classroom practice, overcrowded classes and poor working conditions of educators. There is a need for a multi-dimensional approach that aims to address not only deficiencies in training, but also to impact on the attitudinal changes of educators. / N/A
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The universities and social welfare education in a post-industrial societyCameron, Helen, n/a January 1995 (has links)
How we think about universities, their purposes and about the place of postcompulsory
education in our society is the exemplification of a number of attitudes
about humanity and life in general. Perceptions about the place of tertiary or postcompulsory
education in the life of the ordinary person have changed along with a
broader sweep of changes in the way people view themselves in relations to the
world. The meaning of education in general and in particular, that of tertiary or postcompulsory
education in the life of people today occupies a very different one to that
of as little as forty or thirty years ago. The recent movements in the policies and
processes surrounding the structure, form and purpose of higher education in
Australia signifies to some extent at least the depth of these shifts in perceptions.
In the field of social welfare education changes in political and social attitudes have led
to calls for increased accountability in standards of practice in both service delivery
and professional education, yet this call has come at a time of change in the cultural
climate where there is decreasing clarity about what is expected of social welfare as a
service, and of education for professional practice in the area.
This thesis contends that the practice of and education for social work and social
welfare stand in an invidious position in the current society in that practitioners and
teachers, agencies and universities are being called on to be more accountable both
philosophically and pragmatically, but that at the same time as this call for
accountability presses upon the profession, questions are also being asked about the
value basis of professional practice. Criticisms are being levied at the profession
some suggesting that it is ideologically bound and ineffective in dealing with social
problems seen to be within its scope of contribution to society. With justification these
same criticism are being aimed at social work and welfare training programs with
suggestions that contend that the education of people to work in the social welfare
sector is at a cross-roads. Unless a reassessment of the goals and purposes of
education for this field takes place it may lose all social status and relevance, yet there
are those who suggest that change is long overdue and that there has been little change
in the philosophy and practice of social welfare education
The thesis has a primary contention that training people to work as social workers and
other professional providers of social welfare in the current society is being placed
under the microscope as a consequence of a number of movements in educational and
political thought that have had their culmination in the competency movement that has
impacted on both tertiary education, the professions and the industries.
The institutions in which this training or education takes place have been changed in
form and function particularly since 1989, following the Dawkins restructuring of the
tertiary education sector and the account of these changes provides a backdrop for the
story about social welfare education in Australia.
These changes have included the construction of a national training platform with the
espoused intention of formulating a seamless web of credentialling linking schools,
the workplace, industry based training, DeTAFE and universities.
The introduction of Competency Based Education, where training is asked to
demonstrate a higher level of accountability and transparency than has been the case in
the past, and the introduction of higher, sharper demands for effectiveness and
relevance have shaken the universities out of comfortable complacency.
In particular the competency movement has placed demands on the professions to
demonstrate that they are able to describe their skills, roles and functions in accessible
and assessable terms. This demand has also been placed on the social welfare
profession. The requirement for the social welfare profession to formulate
competencies has thrown into sharp relief an ideologically bound framework of
practice that is seen to be out of touch with the needs of the current society, and this
has had direct relevance for the education programs preparing people to practice in
these areas.
Chapter One focuses on views of knowledge and education and goes on to critique the
changes in higher education that have occurred over the last half-century in Australia
in general and in South Australia in particular, specifically in reference to the
programs for educating social welfare workers. This chapter is largely historical, but
this history is told with more of an appreciation of the spectacle of history's passing
or recycling parade rather than of social progress.
Chapter Two addresses the impact and significance of the structural and policy
changes within the higher education sector with a particular focus on the competency
movement as a demonstration of one of the currently perceived purposes of
education.
Chapter Three explores responses to the competency movement as further indicators
of the views about the purposes of higher education in general and their relevance to
those teaching with the social work and social welfare programs.
Chapter Four locates voices in the discourse about the social welfare field, the type of
work involved in the area, the sort of training needed, and the dilemmas inherent in
the profession in the current society. This chapter highlights the need for a consensus
position to support the formulation of standards for practice as implied in the design
of competencies, and the ramifications of the lack of such consensus.
Chapter Five displays the state of disarray in the profession through the analysis of
the draft competencies produced so far, where lack of vision and consensus are seen,
in the final reckoning, as the stumbling blocks to future clarity of purpose. Of any
profession, social welfare work is one of the most difficult to put into competency based
form due to both the nature of the work and the lack of a consensus view of its
primary goals and purposes, yet it is essential that this can be achieved given the
impactful and intrusive nature of the work, and the push for accountability implicit in
the competency movement.
The thesis concludes with a statement of hope that clearer standards for practice can be
formulated and that social welfare education and practice can re-configure to
contribute relevantly to the current society.
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Community college faculty experiences with learner outcomes and the influence on professional practiceDavis, Marilyn Ellen 22 July 2002 (has links)
The study was designed to determine how learner outcomes, one
aspect of a comprehensive assessment plan at an urban community college
in the Northwest, may have influenced professional practice. Research
subjects were selected from a group of forty-four faculty who participated in
a college sponsored professional development activity. The purpose of this
activity was to provide resources for faculty to develop curriculum from a
learner outcomes perspective. The researcher was interested in how the
adoption of learner outcomes may have influenced pedagogical methods,
instructional content, classroom assessment, or other aspects of
professional practice.
Research participants responded to open-ended interview questions
administered by the researcher. The shared phenomenon being
investigated was the experience of community college faculty who were
directly involved with transforming instructional objectives to learner
outcomes and/or assisting other faculty with the conversion. Data were
analyzed following a five-step process based on phenomenological
research methods. Five themes were evident in the data: 1) importance of
the process (writing outcomes and designing curriculum); 2) changes in
classroom instruction; 3) classroom assessment modifications; 4) the
integrative nature of the experience; and 5) changes in the classroom
experience for students. The data indicated that participants shared two
common experiences--writing outcomes and changing the syllabi as a
result of incorporating learner outcomes.
The findings indicated that learner outcomes influenced professional
practice. However, the degree of influence was not at the same level of
intensity for all participants and the degree of influence was not related to
the number of years a participant had been teaching. Experienced faculty
with twenty or more years of experience were distributed among three
subgroups which denoted the degree of influence on professional practice
or the amount of change evident from lower to higher levels of intensity. / Graduation date: 2003
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Orthopaedic Surgery Residents Perspectives on the Roles and Tasks Effective to Becoming a Competent Physician: A Mixed Methods StudyKennedy Hynes, Melissa 29 November 2012 (has links)
In Canada, residents’ views on which roles and tasks are effective to becoming a competent physician is not yet part of the research discourse. Ensuring that competency-based curriculum (CBC) objectives are aligned with competencies and evaluation methods is critical to build a curriculum that will produce competent physicians.
This research reports on the residents' views of the current Orthopaedic Surgery curriculum (UofT) which is solely competency-based. The residents' views were explored about which CanMEDS Roles and Entrustable Professional Activities (EPA’s) would be important to develop for them to become competent physicians.
This study employed a mixed methodology. The individual interviews were from CBC orthopaedic surgery residents and the survey respondents were orthopaedic surgery regular time-based stream and competency-based stream residents.
This research provides a better understanding of the resident experience so that educational practice and residency education can influence decisions around the curriculum design in postgraduate competency-based medical education programs.
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Orthopaedic Surgery Residents Perspectives on the Roles and Tasks Effective to Becoming a Competent Physician: A Mixed Methods StudyKennedy Hynes, Melissa 29 November 2012 (has links)
In Canada, residents’ views on which roles and tasks are effective to becoming a competent physician is not yet part of the research discourse. Ensuring that competency-based curriculum (CBC) objectives are aligned with competencies and evaluation methods is critical to build a curriculum that will produce competent physicians.
This research reports on the residents' views of the current Orthopaedic Surgery curriculum (UofT) which is solely competency-based. The residents' views were explored about which CanMEDS Roles and Entrustable Professional Activities (EPA’s) would be important to develop for them to become competent physicians.
This study employed a mixed methodology. The individual interviews were from CBC orthopaedic surgery residents and the survey respondents were orthopaedic surgery regular time-based stream and competency-based stream residents.
This research provides a better understanding of the resident experience so that educational practice and residency education can influence decisions around the curriculum design in postgraduate competency-based medical education programs.
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