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Self-esteem in relation to the educational and occupational aspirations of black South African adolescent girlsMalema, Kgomotso Portia January 2004 (has links)
A dissertation submitted to the Faculty of Arts at the University of Zululand, (South Africa), in fulfillment of the requirements for the Master of Arts in Research Psychology degree, 2004. / The purpose of the study was to examine certain aspects of educational and occupational development in adolescent females. Specifically, the aims were: (1) to ascertain the nature of occupational aspirations of black adolescent girls, (2) to determine the relationship between black adolescents self esteem and occupational aspirations, and (3) to find out whether parents' level of education has an influence on black adolescents' occupational aspirations.
Subjects were 161 black girls, aged between 14 and 23 years, from two schools (one a private school and the other a government school) in the township of Atteridgeville, west of Pretoria. The overall results on the educational aspirations of this sample of adolescent girls indicated that these girls intend to graduate from, high school and achieve higher levels of education beyond high school. Occupational aspirations were assessed on the basis of their training requirements, on the first choice of occupation, which the students wanted more than the others; a majority of them aspired to occupations necessitating a degree.
The type of schooling did play a role in influencing occupational aspirations, it is thus important to acknowledge that socioeconomic factor is the important variable , since socioeconomic influences which children go to public schools and which go to private schools.
It was interesting to find that individual value for educational aspirations and social approval for educational aspirations were significantly related, and that the individual value for occupational aspirations and social approval for occupational aspirations were significant.
The t-test for equality of means showed that the government school girls were slightly higher than the private school girls on school ability, while the private school girls were significantly higher on occupational aspirations than the government school girls
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It's all in the mind : an integrative approach to teaching and learningGovender, Kistensamy Marimuthoo. January 2004 (has links)
A dissertation submitted in fulfilment of the requirements for the degree
Master in Communication Science at the University of Zululand, 2004. / In this dissertation the researcher uses cognitive science and communication science to develop an integrative motivational learning framework for teaching intermediate phase learners to solve problems in the subject domains of mathematical literacy, language literacy, natural science, economic and management sciences, social sciences, technology, arts and culture and life orientation within the South African Outcomes-based Education curriculum.
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Challenges and opportunities for implementing Recognition of Prior Learning (RPL) Policy in higher educationSutherland, Lee January 2006 (has links)
Submitted in partial fulfillment for the requirements of the Degree of Doctor of Education in the Department of Educational Psychology in the Faculty of Education at the University of Zululand, 2006. / This thesis explores the responses of higher education to the national imperative to implement Recognition of Prior Learning. It makes use of a mixed methods mode of research to explore this phenomenon at three sites of higher education delivery in KwaZulu-Natal. The research investigates how these three institutions have responded to the imperative at an institutional level, in terms of policy development, organisational structures and philosophical approach. It also looks at academic staff perceptions of RPL policy and implementation and its successfulness in terms of the integration of RPL into the curriculum, the capacity of the curriculum to facilitate the assessment of RPL and the extent to which it has been implemented within the higher education system. It identifies the articulation of national policy on RPL as one of the factors that impacts on successful implementation. In so doing, barriers to the successful implementation of RPL are also identified and explored. These barriers include epistemological, material and systemic barriers. However, it also seeks to elicit the benefits that higher education sees in implementing RPL, both in terms of fulfilling the goals of higher education and in terms of the benefits for the national economic imperatives and the skills development initiative. Ultimately, the research attempts to establish the extent to which RPL has been institutionalised within the institutions in terms of a set of indicators as identified by the researcher. / University of Zululand
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An evaluative study of the influence of the principal's leadership on learner academic performanceMkhize, Thembinkosi Simon January 2005 (has links)
Submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirement for the degree Master of Education in the Department of Educational Planning and Administration at the University of Zululand, 2005. / Schools are judged by their results and the quality of learners they produce. The quality of learners depends, among other things, on the amount of knowledge and skills he or she acquired at school. Motivation, both intrinsic and extrinsic, plays a crucial role in the learner's performance and acquisition of knowledge. The principal, through the effective exercise of his leadership role, motivates learners to make concerted efforts to improve their academic performance.
A literature study and empirical investigation were conducted to determine the principal's role in influencing learner academic performance. The study investigated the kind of leadership that the principal has to exercise in order to contribute to the improvement of learner academic performance. It also investigated the leadership style that the principal has to adopt to improve learner performance. Factors that hinder effective leadership and negatively affect learner performance were also highlighted.
A key finding was that principals do not involve learners in making decisions on matters affecting them. Their leadership style has an autocratic bias and they cannot strike a balance between democratic and autocratic leadership. Most principals also did not provide instructional leadership in their schools by, among other things, monitoring learner progress, showing high expectations of learners and visiting classes regularly to ensure that teaching and learning take place.
A key recommendation was that principals should keep communication channels open so that they are informed about the feelings, needs and problems learners encounter in schools. Monitoring of learner progress cannot be overemphasized. It was recommended that principals should involve learners in making decisions on matters affecting them. It was also recommended that effective leadership requires a balance between democratic and autocratic leadership styles.
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Absence epilepsy as a barrier for effective teaching and learning in underprivileged communitiesMabele, Pretty Zakhi 01 1900 (has links)
After the dispensation of the White Paper 6 in schools, there were no detailed guidelines to accommodate the learners with invisible impairments like absence epilepsy, especially those who live in underprivileged communities. Affected learners are still struggling and not receiving proper instruction in ordinary schools because of the nature of absence epilepsy. It seems like it is unknown that they are suffering, because the symptoms are absent. These learners are performing poorly; they are having learning and behavioural problems. At home parents are ignorant of their plight, teachers are oblivious of their problems and at schools they are being discriminated against by other children. As a result, they repeat grades and some end up leaving school to join the unemployed. They have a low self-esteem and remain unsociable. This is because they suffer from absence epilepsy which is a medical problem. Absence epilepsy is unknown to both parents and teachers in these communities. Cultural beliefs and ignorance prevent parents from taking these children to clinics for identification, which results in them not being supported in schools. / Inclusive Education / M. Ed. (Inclusive Education)
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An evaluative study of the Environmental Education Centres of Kwazulu-Natal Department of Education and CultureBurge, Kevin Paul 11 1900 (has links)
This study evaluates the effectiveness of the three (3) extant Environmental Education Centres of the KwaZulu-Natal Department of Education and Culture (KZNDEC) as contributors to the environmental learning, and to education, in KwaZulu-Natal. In the process, it is an exploratory response as to how better the Centres can answer the call of the Reconstruction and Development Programme to "empower all communities to act on environmental issues" (African National Congress 1994:40).
The research traces the history, the philosophical background and functions of environmental education, of environmental education centres, and of personnel employed at environmental educators, in the ex-Natal Education Department and in its successor, the KZNDEC.
The researcher recommends that environmental education centres should become "agents of change" in the wider environment, and in the educational processes, of the communities of which they are a part. The study suggests methods by which people's lives at a "deep rural" level may be improved by helping restore the balance of "the three pillars of sustainable development - economic, social and environmental - and [in the process, having a positive] focus on poverty eradication" (WSSD 2002).
The centres, the researcher contends, can become more effective agents of the KZNDEC for the protection of the environment "for the benefit of present and future generations" (Constitutional Assembly 1996:11). / Educational Studies / M.Ed.
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The use of adapted teaching strategies in literacy by grade three educators in the northern KwaZulu-Natal regionLoopoo, Veena 21 August 2012 (has links)
Submitted in fulfilment of the requirement for the Degree of
Master of Technology: Language Practice, Durban University of Technology, 2011. / The literacy levels in South African schools are alarmingly low. Educators are
challenged in diverse classrooms with multicultural and multilingual learners as they
are faced with the problems that these learners are experiencing in literacy.
Educators therefore need to be able to adapt their teaching strategies to suit the
needs of their learners to address learners’ different learning needs and styles.
This study investigated the use of adapted teaching strategies used by grade 3
educators in literacy in selected schools in northern KwaZulu-Natal. A mixed
methods research design was used which included the use of a questionnaire and
semi-structured interviews to gather data.
The findings which were linked to the literature review revealed that educators
lacked adequate knowledge and skills to adapt their teaching strategies as they have
not been adequately trained to teach literacy within multilingual contexts. Although
some educators were using adapted teaching strategies they were not using them
effectively in their multilingual classrooms while some educators did not have a wellstructured
intervention programme at school to deal with learners who were
experiencing problems with literacy. Inexperienced educators also had problems
identifying learning styles and adapting their teaching strategies. This study found
that teachers require continual professional development to enable them to
effectively adapt their teaching strategies to suit individual learning needs and styles.
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The hegemonic position of English as a medium of instruction at primary school level in KwaZulu-Natal, and its impact on parents' preferences of schooling for their childrenNaidoo, Jeevarathanum 21 August 2012 (has links)
Thesis in compliance with the requirements for the Doctor’s Degree
in Technology: Language Practice, Durban University of Technology, 2012. / This study is concerned with the choices parents of second language learners
make with regard to the schooling of their children in respect of medium of
instruction, and explores the reasons why parents choose to disregard
education in their mother tongue in favour of English as a medium of instruction.
This is contrary to the Language in Education Policy, as the Department of
Education instils in principals, educators and parents the need for children at
primary school level to be taught in their mother tongue. The theoretical
framework used to address the problem was the Critical Language Approach,
this being an appropriate position from which to investigate language and
power. A combination of questionnaires, interviews and observation was used
to acquire data from parents and management in a large primary school in
KwaZulu-Natal. After analysis of the data, which confirmed the hegemonic
position of English as influencing choice of medium of instruction by parents of
English second language learners, a model was developed to assist them to
see the possible consequences of various choices. The model comprised a tenpoint
questionnaire to identify needs, a flow chart diagram resulting from the
needs analysis, a pictograph to assist stakeholders to understand the relevant
choices available, and workshops to support the choice of medium of
instruction. The value of the research, it is thought, lies in clarifying the various
influences at play, in particular, the hegemonic position of English, and offering
stakeholders a rational, rather than political or emotional basis for the choice of
medium of instruction for second language learners, as well as pointing out the
possible consequences of such choices.
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The impact of English as medium of instruction on the academic performance of second language learners in the Further Education and Traning band at schools in KwaZulu-NatalDorasamy, Rajendren Sabapathy 03 September 2012 (has links)
Thesis in compliance with the requirements for the Doctor’s Degree in Technology: Language Practice, Durban University of Technology, 2012. / This study, in adopting a phenomenological approach, provides an overview of the contextual realities surrounding language choice and usage as it impacts on the academic performance of English second language learners. There have been concerns that the majority of learners with indigenous mother tongues can be seen to fare badly in a post liberation educational system in which English or Afrikaans is still used as medium of instruction. The focus of this study was therefore the impact of English as the medium of instruction on the academic performance of English second language learners. Using a mixed method approach, through a case study, data from questionnaires, interviews and observations were analysed using various statistical packages and the findings were reported on. It was established that it was not so much the language per se which had a negative impact on the academic performance of English second language learners: it was rather the efficacy of usage of the chosen language and other periphery issues in the formal environment, such as lack of interactions with target language speakers, code-switching, and teacher competence, which resulted in the poor academic performance of English second language learners. Furthermore, it was also established that the informal environment, consisting of learners’ culture and traditions, family educational qualifications, absenteeism and appropriate resources at home and community libraries, which also had a negative impact on academic performance. It was therefore recommended that, amongst other things, the Language in Education Policy be amended to provide for more opportunities for learner interaction with the target language. Furthermore, given that the efficacy of education is contingent upon the competence of the teachers, relevant skills and competencies among teachers should be developed to enhance their performance in class. It was also found that code-switching was counterproductive to learning the target language, thus holding back ESL learners’ acquisition of content knowledge. As such, code-switching should be used very restrictively, if at all, in the Further Education and Training phase. It was also recommended that necessary lexicons and registers of the indigenous languages be developed sufficiently so that these are worthy of use as media of instruction, without necessarily being seen as a replacement of English as medium of instruction. There should also be greater involvement of all stakeholders in the choice of and availability of resources which are relevant to the context of learners. Other issues requiring intervention from a broader stakeholder involvement include
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interdepartmental integration to alleviate poverty, and provision of transport so that learners might report regularly and timeously to school, thus reducing absenteeism. The solution to improving learner academic performance requires concerted and co-ordinated inter-governmental, community and other stakeholders’ effort and the necessary will of the government to ensure that learners receive quality education. / Durban University of Technology Postgraduate Development and Support Centre.
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A self study of curriculum design for the teaching and learning of isiZulu as an additional language in primary schools in the Maye babo! seriesSoni, Sumithra Jaysooklal 10 September 2012 (has links)
Thesis in compliance with the requirements for the Doctor's Degree in
Technology: Language Practice, Durban University of Technology, 2012. / This autoethnographic self study tracks my new ways of knowing in the various roles I play
from daughter (passive recipient) to curriculum designer (active analytical composer). It
retells my journey in the teaching profession at a school in Durban, in South Africa. The
story occurs during a period when schools were racially desegregated in order to address
the anti-apartheid policies that were prevalent prior to the first democratic elections in
1994. The story captures the challenges I faced during the transformation era in education
and how I went about addressing two of the main challenges I faced:
1. Cultural diversity in racially desegregated schools.
2. Teaching isiZulu as an additional language as a pioneer, non- mother tongue teacher
of learners with mixed abilities in an environment deprived of resources in terms of
mentorship, and teacher/learner resource material.
This study reveals how the challenges I experienced were, in retrospect, the disguised
opportunities that led to my growth from teacher to textbook writer. It gives an account of
the “behind the scenes making”, of the Maye babo! series, with a view to offer an exemplar
for curriculum development. The study uses autoethnography (Ellis 2004) as a method to
bring to life the teaching of isiZulu as an additional language in South Africa. It defines
some of the difficulties experienced by teachers during a transformation era in education.
In this study I clarify the relationship between Outcomes Based Education and the National
Curriculum Statement (NCS), as well as where the Curriculum and Assessment Policy
Statement (CAPS) is located within the NCS. More importantly, I use the tacit knowledge
gained from intuition and experience to demonstrate how these policies can be applied in
the classroom to achieve effective learning, an aspect often ignored in in-service teacher
education. Readers (particularly teachers) will resonate with the experiences described in
the stories, and, in so doing, gain a better understanding of themselves and their teaching
practices; this might provide the much needed optimism amongst teachers, and might
motivate and inspire them to grow professionally. The personal benefit in writing this
thesis is that it renewed my place in the academic world, and more importantly, it has
satisfied my quest for self realisation. Through personal exploration, questions such as who am I? and how did I become? reveal my evolvement. This project has been a soul
satisfying and enriching journey. It is hoped that this study will in some way contribute to
the transformation in education process in post liberation South Africa.
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