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Exploring the tension between the discourses of affirmative action and the knowledge economyWaglay, Afsar Ali 03 1900 (has links)
Thesis (MEd)--Stellenbosch University, 2013. / Bibliography / ENGLISH ABSTRACT: South Africa needs to ensure equal opportunity for all to higher education, and given that it also
needs to correct the drastic imbalances brought about by apartheid, affirmative action is seen as a
strategy to pursue both goals. Affirmative action is comprised of programs and policies that grant
favorable treatment on the basis of race or gender to government-defined “disadvantaged”
individuals.
However, affirmative action is not without its own challenges and difficulties. The
main question that this thesis addresses is “what are the tensions between applying affirmative
action policies in South African higher education institutions and the demands of a knowledge
economy within a globalised world?” I argue that though universities need to be more
demographically representative and broaden access to previously disadvantaged individuals by
adjusting entry requirements, they cannot compromise on their quality of graduates by adjusting
their exit criteria in line with racial representivity. That would undermine the very worth of higher
education as a social good, the dignity of the individual graduate, as well as the economic growth
of the country. Accusations that affirmative action is merely “reverse discrimination” are refuted by an appeal to
Rawls’s Principle of Difference which holds that policies of inequality can be socially just.
Drawing on Charles Taylor and Wally Morrow, I posit that within a democracy, affirmative
action should be seen as a shared rather than a convergent good for broadening access to quality
education. But whereas broadening formal access seems like a legitimate and necessary step to
address the inherited inequities, the broadening of epistemological access would undermine the
very aims of quality education. Furthermore, I argue that formal access should be driven by the
politics of difference, but that epistemological access that ensures educational success should be
driven by the politics of equal dignity.
In order to see how some of these concepts and policies of affirmative action play out in an actual
institution, I look at the University of Cape Town (UCT). Here the main debates relating to its
affirmative action policy are whether demographic representivity is the only outcome for
evaluating the success of affirmative action, and whether “disadvantaged” individuals should be
selected on criteria other than race. It also considers whether its affirmative action policies could compromise its functioning and ability to supply quality qualifications to the required number of
disadvantaged individuals.
There is no easy and simple answer to whether affirmative action in fact promotes equal
opportunity to higher education and equips all South African graduates with the necessary skills
for a knowledge economy. It would be therefore important to do further research on what nonrace
based affirmative action policies might entail while keeping in mind the shifts in the global
economy and the need for academic rigor. Furthermore, more longitudinal research needs to be
done on the complex consequences of affirmative action, on both an individual level with issues
of identity and career mobility, and on a broader socio-economic level with issues of economic
growth and social welfare. / AFRIKAANSE OPSOMMING: Suid-Afrika moet hom beywer tot die daarstelling van gelyke geleenthede vir almal tot
hoëronderwys, en gegewe dat daar ’n behoefte is om drastiese ongelykhede van apartheid reg te
stel, word regstellende aksie gesien as a strategie om beide doelstellings na te streef. Regstellende
aksie bestaan uit programme en beleide wat daarop gemik is om begunstigde behandeling te dien
aan “voorheen benadeelde” individue, soos deur die staat gedefineer, op grond van ras en geslag.
Maar regstellende aksie is nie sonder sy eie uitdagings en swaarhede nie. Die hoofvraag wat
hierdie tesis addreseer, is: “Watter gespannenhede is daar tussen die uitvoering van regstellende
aksie beleide in Suid-Afrikaanse Hoëronderwys instellings en die eise van ’n kennis-ekonomie
binne ’n geglobaliseerde wêreld?” Ek argumenteer dat, ofskoon daar ’n behoefte is vir
universiteite om meer demografies verteenwoordigend te wees en hul toegang tot voorheen
benadeelde individue te verbreed deur toelatingsvereistes te wysig, kan hulle nie kompromeer op
hul gehalte van gegradueerdes deur uitgangskriteria in lyn met ras verteenwoordiging nie. Dit sal
juis die waarde van hoëronderwys as ’n sosiale goedheid, die waardigheid van die individule
gegradueerde asook die ekonomiese groei van die land ondermyn.
Aantygings dat regstellende aksie bloot “wedergekeerde diskriminasie” is, word weerlê deur ’n
verwysing na Rawls se Beginsel van Verskil wat stel dat beleide van ongelykhede maatskaplike
regverdiging kan hê. Gegrond op Charles Taylor en Wally Morrow, postuleer ek dat, binne ’n
demokrasie, regstellende aksie beskou moet word as ’n gedeelde eerder as ’n konvergente
goedheid om gehalte onderwys verder toeganklik te maak. Maar waar verbrede formele toegang
gesien kan word as ’n wettige en nodige stap om geërfde ongelykhede aan te spreek, sal die
verbreding van epistemologiese toegang juis die doelstellings van gehalte onderwys ondermyn.
Verder voer ek aan dat formele toegang aangedryf moet word deur die politiek van verskil, maar
dat epistemologiese toegang wat opvoedkundige sukses verseker, aangedryf moet word deur die
politiek van gelyke waardigheid.
Ten einde te sien hoe van hierdie konsepte en beleide van regstellende aksie hulself uitspeel in
eintlike inrigtings van onderwys, kyk ek na die Universiteit Kaapstad (UK). Hier draai die debat
aangaande regstellende aksie beleid om of die demografiese verteenwoordiging die enigste uitkoms is ter evaluering van die sukses van regstellende aksie, en of “benadeelde” individue
geselekteer moet word op grond van kriteria anders as ras. Dit (UK) oorweeg ook of sy
regstellende beleide sy funksionering en vermoë om gehalte kwalifikasies aan die verlangde getal
benadeelde individue kompromiteer.
Daar is geen eenvoudige en maklike antwoord betreffende regstellende aksie en of dit gelyke
geleenthede tot hoëronderwys promoveer en alle Suid-Afrikaanse gegradueerders toerus met die
nodige bevoegdhede vir ’n kennis-ekonomie nie. Dit sal derhalwe belangrik wees om verdere
navorsing te doen oor wat nie-rasgebaseerde regstellende aksie kan behels terwyl in gedagte
gehou word die skuiwe in die globale ekonomie en die behoefte aan akademiese kwaliteit. Verder
moet veel meer longitudinale navorsing gedoen word oor die ingewikkelde gevolge van
regstellende aksie op beide die individuele vlak met kwessies van identiteit en beroepsmobiliteit
en op breër sosio-ekonomiese vlak met kwessies van ekonomiese groei en maatskaaplike welsyn.
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Exploring notions of assessment through three vocational education sites in the Western CapeArnold, Mogammat Adiel 04 1900 (has links)
Thesis (MEd)--Stellenbosch University, 2014. / ENGLISH ABSTRACT: With the coming of a new education and training dispensation in 1994 came the idea that equal opportunities for all learners could be created within different learning institutions - via the creation of new institutional and qualifications framework - and in so doing encourage equal opportunities through proper articulation, portability, and mobility within the different phases of the various education bands. As education and training provision and learning is complexly intertwined with its appraisal, assessment was regarded as one of the main processes to find out whether learning had taken place, on the goal and quality of that learning, as well as pointing to the kinds of ways in which teaching and learning could be further improved.
In my study I focused on how educators and trainers within the differentiated Further Education and Training (FET) Band spoke about and understood assessment, with the aim of the study being to analyse how assessment is understood in three different sites of provision within the FET band. The main goal was to better understand challenges at the ground level of policy implementation. A further goal was to explore some of the ways in which the role and function of assessment in our contemporary society was understood, and whether, in its present formulation, it served the purposes that much of the policies and reform statements claimed. The study’s main claim is that educators and trainers in the FET Band in South Africa mainly experience assessment processes, criteria, and frameworks as a form of jargon, and that they translate ‘the jargon’ into ‘judgements of value’ about learning and knowledge that lead to quite different approaches being followed at different sites. It is argued that this scenario would be acceptable in terms of different work settings - producing different kinds of skills for the economy- were it not that the education and training infrastructure in South Africa remains perhaps too preoccupied with achieving a principle of similarity across the FET Band.
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Development of a school -based performance management framework for self-managing schools in South AfricaBooyse, Nicolaas Johannes 10 1900 (has links)
With education at the centre of the South African government’s National Development Plan for 2030, an effective schooling system is not negotiable. A review of the literature showed that public schools in South Africa are self-managing. The performance of most of these schools are unsatisfactory with specific reference to academic performance, infrastructure, finances and resources. The review further revealed severe shortcomings with the use of the Integrated Quality Management System (IQMS) for school-based performance management. This included that the IQMS is insufficient, that its application is ineffective and that it does not support school-based performance management. It is a compliance system and does not allow schools’ stakeholders the freedom to take part in designing their own strategy for the school. The researcher argues that self-managing schools link to the Participatory Democracy Theory that ensures the involvement of stakeholders. The IQMS however, links to Managerialism, rejecting stakeholders’ independence of self-management and decision-making. Therefore, this study aimed to develop a school-based performance management framework for public schools in South Africa.
Specific attention was given to the Balanced Scorecard (BSC) as a theoretical framework for its flexibility to accommodate diverse organisations. The BSC was placed in the Evolutionist theories under the Resource-Based View (RBV) approach, focussing on the uniqueness of organisations’ tangible or intangible resources. The researcher argued that a combination of the IQMS and the BSC might close the theoretical gap and contribute to school-based performance management in self-managing public schools.
A qualitative research paradigm, embedded in the interpretivism philosophy, guided this study. A Design-Based Research (DBR) method was followed to develop the framework. The first phase was to develop a preliminary framework, using the IQMS and BSC as existing theoretical frameworks. The second phase consisted of two iterative cycles of testing and refinement of the framework in practice. For both cycles, the researcher conducted semi-structured interviews with the school’s principal, one member of the school’s governing body and one member of the school’s management team of the four selected schools. The third phase was a reflection on the design process to enhance the application of the framework. / College of Accounting Sciences / D. Compt.
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An assessment of the appropriateness of agricultural extension education in South Africa.Worth, Steven Hugh. January 2008 (has links)
This thesis is about agricultural extension education. The context is agricultural extension in South Africa. It addresses the following questions: To what extent does current agricultural extension education in South Africa adequately reflect the current and changing educational and developmental imperatives? To what extent does it adequately equip extension officers and other agricultural development practitioners to deliver relevant support to farmers and farming communities? In short, how relevant is the training received by South African Agricultural Extension practitioners? The South African government has made significant changes in the policy environment governing agriculture. While the majority of the policy changes fall outside the scope of this research, it can be safely argued, as noted in the current Strategy for South African Agriculture, that the changes are fundamental. The changes redirect agriculture to the majority population which has hitherto been marginalised and generally denied meaningful access to the agricultural sector of the South African economy. To implement these changes, the agricultural sector will need appropriate skills – skills which, it is submitted – are largely lacking within the agricultural extension service and, more relevantly to this study, in Agricultural Extension curricula. In addition to the foregoing, assumptions about farmers and their roles in technology and information creation and consumption, assumptions about the roles of tertiary institutions in the triad of teaching, extension and research and indeed about the triad itself need to be challenged. A system of education which has its origins in the 1800s (before even the industrial revolution, much less the digital revolution) needs, per force, to be interrogated regularly to ensure that it delivers according to the demands of the exigencies of the time. Similarly, assumptions about the aim of development and in particular agricultural development have been questioned in many parts of the world. And yet it is submitted that in South Africa, the basic extension methodologies have not changed in any fundamental way; rather they have adopted some of the outer trappings of new approaches, without assessing the fundamentals of the core extension approach. It is believed that extension is in need of a serious review and that it is timely to do so. Recent research in Africa and elsewhere in the world indicates that extension needs be reconstructed on a different set of operational objectives led by a different vision. The extension strategy herein presented is built around a vision which places the focus on the farmer (and other land users) in the context not of technology, but of creating prosperity. The vision implies that the purpose of agricultural extension is to facilitate the establishment of self-reliant farmers who are contributing to widespread prosperity. The dual outcomes of self-reliant farmers and widespread prosperity are meant to be realised through a new set of =rules of engagement‘. Prosperity is derived out of farmers working together, sharing information, and learning together. Self-reliant farmers are an outcome of a learning partnership between farmers and extension practitioners. This study was conducted in a series of stages. The first thrust examined the nature of Agricultural Extension and the assumptions on which it is predicated. The result of this interrogation was to propose a new concept for Agricultural Extension – Agriflection – which is a learning-based concept aimed at improving the sustainability of the livelihoods of farmers through iterative development processes fostered through a learning agenda that is facilitated by an appropriately trained Agricultural Extension practitioner. To realise such a vision, it is essential that the mission of the extension service be recast to reflect the dynamics of the implications of the vision. The key elements of the mission are, therefore, client-responsiveness and partnerships. The power to realise the vision rests in three critical aspects. First is the capacity of the extension service to engage with its clients as genuine partners in a shared learning agenda. The second is the capacity of the extension service to engage with the many other agencies and organisations which supply goods and services to farmers and land users. The third is ensuring that engagements with farmers support sustainable development, that is, that production of food, fibre and fuel is socially just, economically sustainable and environmentally sustainable. This new vision and mission lay the foundation for a fundamental shift in the way agricultural extension is positioned, resourced, implemented and evaluated. The strategic goals, principles and values presented in this strategy are built on this foundation, and they, in turn, create the framework for constructing the operational plans of the extension service as well as for management and measurement of the service. The second thrust of the study was to filter the Agriflection concept through South African educational and agricultural policy. Given that the agricultural frontier is subject to change in focus and priorities, it was reasoned that the training and education of would-be extension practitioners needs to be able to respond to changes in methods and in the field. The National Government has adopted the outcomes-based model as the general structure for curriculum development. Further sustainable development/livelihoods has been adopted as the general framework for development. Outcomes-based education and sustainable development/livelihoods provide a framework for studying and developing curricula. A tool that enables curriculum analysis and development which allows for adjustment to changing imperatives while maintaining integrity in terms of education and development, would be valuable for tertiary institutions training extension officers. The result of this second thrust was the development of curriculum markers that encapsulated what non-technical knowledge and skills (i.e. Agricultural Extension knowledge and skills) were needed to be able to deliver on the imperatives of the transformation agenda of current agricultural policy. Thirty-four markers were identified. The third thrust of the study was to create a credible method to evaluate Agricultural Extension curricula and to capture and analyse data. A detailed review of methods and approaches was made resulting in fashioning the Theory-led Instructional-Design Curriculum Evaluation (TICE) method. One of the primary facets of this six-process method is questioning of the assumptions on which the discipline of Agricultural Extension is based. Such a questioning would lead to a new theory to govern the evaluation of curriculum. Ancillary to the TICE method were the methods of data collection and analysis. The study consolidated these in presence and efficacy factors. These factors measured the presence of the 34 markers in Agricultural Extension curricula and the extent to which they were addressed, if present. The fourth thrust of the study was the detailed evaluation of curricula of qualifications most commonly held by public sector Agricultural Extension practitioners. The study examined the curricula of agricultural diplomas, of three- and four-year agricultural degrees and of one-year postgraduate qualifications offered by Colleges of Agriculture and selected Universities and Universities of Technology. The fifth thrust was to conduct corroborative investigations in the public sector. This was done by surveying Agricultural Extension practitioners asking them to evaluate the extent to which they believed they have knowledge and/or skill represented by the 34 curricula markers. In addition, a brief analysis was made of Agricultural Extension practitioner job descriptions used in the public sector. This was done to determine what knowledge and skills were expected of Agricultural Extension practitioners and comparing this to the 34 markers. The study revealed that there is very limited Agricultural Extension training offered in the curricula of qualifications held by the majority of public sector Agricultural Extension practitioners. Further, using the 34 markers as the touchstone, it was determined that the current curricula do not adequately equip public sector Agricultural Extension practitioners to deliver on the agenda of current South African agricultural policy. Without extensive revision of curricula in terms of both the quantity and content of extension training, the South African public sector Agricultural Extension service will not be able to realise the intended transformation of agriculture. Its key operatives will not have the knowledge and skills needed to do so. This is a unique study. No study of its kind has ever been conducted in South Africa. Numerous studies have been conducted into the training needs of Agricultural Extension practitioners. None have gone to the extent of questioning the assumptions on which Agricultural Extension is based. None have made a critical examination of curricula in the light of current educational and agricultural policy. This study found that there is an urgent need for serious attention to be given the purpose, scope, outcomes of Agricultural Extension higher education in South Africa to ensure that it can contribute to the positive and sustainable transformation of agriculture. / Thesis (Ph.D.)-University of KwaZulu-Natal, Pietermaritzburg, 2008.
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The role of the senior management team in managing outcomes-based assessmentSaib, Mariam 30 June 2004 (has links)
Assessment is an integral component of outcomes-based education which requires a paradigm shift in assessment processes. Outcomes-based assessment is more intense than traditional assessment since it reports on many dimensions of performance. Performance is analysed in relation to outcomes and the learning demonstrated and record-keeping is more complex. This study explored the experiences of the Senior Management Team and Foundation Phase educators of a selected primary school regarding outcomes-based education, outcomes-based assessment and its management. A literature review of outcomes-based education, outcomes-based assessment and instructional leadership and an empirical study using a qualitative approach were conducted. Document analysis and semi-structured interviews with educators and school management were used for data-gathering. Findings indicated that the initial implementation of outcomes-based education was problematic, however, effective instructional leadership had improved educators' understanding and implementation of assessment. Thereafter recommendations were made for the improvement of practice. / Educational Studies / Thesis (M.Ed.)
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From policy to practice: an evaluation of the Unisa National Professional Diploma in Education from the perspective of social critical theoryMays, Tony John 30 June 2004 (has links)
The National Professional Diploma in Education is an in-service programme for classroom-based educators who have less than three years of professional training. The programme seeks to create a pathway to qualified teacher status in ways that will impact positively on classroom practice, prepare teacher-learners for the implementation of the new curriculum and provide a sufficiently rigorous foundation for further study. This evaluation adopted a fourth generation evaluation approach characterised by extensive engagement with programme stakeholders. Chapter 2 outlines an epistemological and philosophical framework of reference whilst Chapters 3 and 4 explore learning and teaching strategies and management and costing issues. The findings of these investigations lead to the recommendations made in Chapter 5. It is felt that the Unisa NPDE meets many of the goals of the programme, but further research is needed into the impact on classroom practice and into the management of the decentralised learner support. / Educational Studies / M.Ed. (Didactics)
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A study of the influence of particular teaching methods in conservation education on knowledge retention and attitude changeKilian, Heidi 11 1900 (has links)
This study focuses on the influence of particular teaching strategies that can be used in Environmental Education (EE) and examines how specific methods influence knowledge retention and attitude change.
The aim of the study is to compare the 'traditional' lecture style method where learners are passive, with cooperative learning to determine their influence on learners’ knowledge retention and attitude towards marine conservation. Both methods can be considered effective teaching methods to increase knowledge retention and induce a positive change in environmental attitudes. However, this study suggests that the teaching method used in a particular school could influence the learning outcomes of the EE programme because of pre-existing abilities, skills the learners may have and context to which the learners are exposed.
In conclusion, when offering an EE programme, for the programme to be successful one would need to determine which method of teaching is practised within schools and then ensure that the same method is used. / Teacher Education / M. Ed. (Environmental Education))
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A model for the evaluation of ABET programmesQuan-Baffour, Kofi Poku. 11 1900 (has links)
This research project focuses on a model designed for the evaluation of ABET
instructional programmes. In the light of rapid changes in the socio-economic and
political contexts in Africa and particularly in South Africa, this study examines adult
basic education and training, which has become acknowledged as an indispensable
tool for the transformation and development of societies. Since 1994 education has
become a constitutional right for all citizens of South Africa. In an attempt to offer
basic education and training to all adults many institutions and departments have
established ABET programmes offering adults the skills they may need in order to
contribute to the development of their communities. The lack of guidelines for
instructing, assessing and evaluating ABET programmes prompted the choice of
research topic.
The study begins with a review of relevant literature pertaining to the field of adult
education and also provides a general discussion on didactics as it .is relevant to adult
education. The study proposes a model for evaluating ABET instructional
programmes. Focus group discussions are employed as a research tool to validate the
proposed model and its accompanying guidelines. The study reveals that, for ABET
instructional programmes to be outcomes based, relevant, conducive to critical
thinking and creativity and productive of meaningful assessment, a model for
evaluating the programmes' performance in these areas is essential. Based on this presupposition,
the study proceeds to develop a model for the evaluation of ABET
programmes. It draws on literature pertaining to educational evaluation in general and
extrapolates the findings to construct a model appropriate for evaluating ABET
programmes.
In the field component of the study, endeavour is made to validate the model
according to the perceptions of a sample of ABET practitioners. In-depth focus
interviews are conducted to validify the various components of the model. In
conclusion, the study recommends further research into the didactics of adult
education and training (ABET) in order to improve adult education practices. / Curriculum and Instructional Studies / D. Ed. (Didactics)
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A critical review of language errors in the writing of distance education studentsWard-Cox, Maxine 11 1900 (has links)
‘A critical review of language errors in the writing of distance education students’ examines linguistic competence and investigates the language errors made by a heterogeneous group of 100 entry-level distance education university students with a view to improving their academic writing skills. The research follows a process of error identification and statistical analysis, and reviews intervention strategies based on the findings. Despite the continuing debates on the value of error correction, especially in relation to ‘World Englishes’, language accuracy remains a key factor in determining academic success. This is of particular concern in the South African multi-lingual context and in the light of the under-performance of South African students as evidenced in international comparative studies. The implications of the bimodal pattern of distribution in the review findings are discussed and pedagogically appropriate approaches and intervention strategies are suggested. / English Studies / M.A. (TESOL (Teaching English to speakers of other languages))
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Validation of a rating scale for distance education university student essays in a literature-based moduleWard-Cox, Maxine Welland 01 1900 (has links)
This thesis reports on the findings of a study to validate an assessment scale for writing
in an Open Distance Learning (ODL) context by first-year students in their responses to
English literary texts. The study involved the interrogation of an existing scale, adapted
from Jacobs et al. (1981), which was being used for the Foundations in English Literary
Studies (ENG1501) module at the University of South Africa. Despite the credibility of
the original scale, the modified version had been used in language- and literature-based
courses in the English Studies Department since 1998 and had not been updated or
empirically tested in the context of the target group. Thus, the gap that this current study
addressed was the need for a valid rating scale that takes into account the complexities
of literature teaching and ODL in the current South African university environment.
This thesis includes a review of the debate on validity and the validation of rating scales
both internationally and in South Africa, the ODL environment, and the assessment of assignments based on literary texts, particularly in the multicultural South African
context. The methodology included research of both a quantitative and a qualitative
nature. The outcome was an empirically-validated scale that should contribute to the
quest for accuracy in assessing academic writing and meet the formative and summative assessment needs of the target group / English Studies / D. Litt. et Phil. (English)
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