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Management implications of the movement of children from township to suburban schools : a study of selected schools13 August 2012 (has links)
M.Ed. / Education in South Africa is in a process of transformation. The opening of public schools to all races has resulted in the exodus of learners from township to suburban schools. Parents have transferred their children because of, among other reasons, lack of culture of learning and teaching, lack of quality teaching, lack of resources, and violence in township schools.The movement of learners from township to suburban schools has necessitated a new management technique that will accommodate the unique characteristics of learners from diverse cultural, linguistic and socio-economic backgrounds.Head masters and educators need to develop an approach that will lead to the transformation of the total school environment, and the creation of equal educational opportunities for learners who have for a long time been deprived quality education. Headmasters and educators need to be aware that education provided by the state to African learners is not of equal standard to white education. Therefore tolerance, empathy and understanding of the problems these learners bring with them is essential. They need to be equipped with the necessary knowledge in managing learners from diverse cultural backgrounds. They require cultural literacy and sensitivity which can be acquired through in-service training. To provide all learners with an equal opportunity to achieve in the classroom, multicultural education should be practised. Diversity of culture must be acknowledged, and teaching methods ought to be altered to accommodate the different kinds of learning styles and children with different learning needs.
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Kwalifikasiestruktuur vir technikonopleiding in biblioteek- en inligtingkunde deur middel van afstandsonderrig19 November 2014 (has links)
D.Litt.et Phil. (Information Science) / Schools of library and information science, like all professional schools, are tied to the profession they prepare their students for. They must balance the needs and demands of the profession they serve and the needs and demands of the educational institution they form part of. In South Africa and elsewhere, there is a perceived gap between the product the library schools deliver and the needs of the library and information profession. The technikons in South Africa are relative newcomers to the training and education of librarians and information workers. Their task is seen mainly as the training of paraprofessional library workers, since it is the aim of technikons to provide relevant, vocational education and training through co-operation with the relevant industries/professions. The qualification structure of technikons makes provision for different levels of undergraduate qualifications in the form of national certificates, national higher certificates, diplomas and since 1994, technikon degrees. The conventional qualification structure used for library and information science training, does not however make provision for certificate qualifications - technikons at this stage offer only the National Diploma: Library and Information Practice. There is presently no possibility for technikon diplomates to upgrade their paraprofessional qualification to professional level. The education and training of librarians and information workers through the medium of distance education is well established in South Africa. The distance education institutions use the same qualification structure as the residential institutions, despite the fact that qualifying through parttime distance education takes much longer. Distance learners therefore could benefit from interim qualifications like certificates, since it could serve as indication to their employers that they are making progress with their studies. There are indications from the library and information science profession that there is a need for more undergraduate levels of qualifications because of the different needs of the different communities in South Africa, especially those of the disadvantaged communities. The qualification structure for library and information science education at Technikon SA, which teaches through the medium of distance education, can however not be changed without consulting the library and information profession. The aim of this study is to determine whether the profession would accept a changed qualification structure. To determine this, the Delphi method is used. The Delphi method is a technique that makes use of the opinions of experts for forecasting future events. The Delphi study is supported by a literature study which serves to put the research into context by ...
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The community of the resurrection's involvement in African schooling on the Witwatersrand, from 1903-1956.Winterbach, Heidi January 1994 (has links)
A Research Project Submitted to the Faculty of Education
University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg
for the Degree of Master of Education / THE COMMUNITY OF THE RESURRECTION'S INVOLVEMENT IN
AFRICAN SCHOOLING ON THE WITWATERSRAND, FROM 1903 TO 1956
This research project is an historical reconstruction of the schools established and
run by the Community of the Resurrection (CR) on the Witwatersrand from 1903
40 1956. The aim of this research is to contribute to knowledge and understanding
of missionary education in South Africa, through a study of the educational work
of this particular missionary body, as embodied in their schools.
The report examines key aspects of the schools, including their financial and organizational
structures, the education they offered and their ethos. The CR schools
varied in physical size, numbers of pupils and level of sophistication, from the well
established St Peter's Secondary School, to numerous one-roomed wood and iron
shacks. Similarly, the products of these schools varied from well-known African
leaders and academics to domestic servants. Although a definitive judgement on
the merits of missionary education is not the focus of this study, the project concludes
that the initial Eurocentric attitude of the CR towards Africans and their
education was transformed to one of genuine sympathy and the CR brethren
became leaders in the fight for equal education for Africans in the face of Government opposition.
This project is based on primary source material located in the Church of the
Province Archives of South Africa at the University of the Witwatersrand and is
influenced by secondary sources such as historical works and theories on missionary
education. as well as works by CR members themselves. / Andrew Chakane 2019
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The relationship between adult basic education and training (ABET) and work opportunitiesMohlotsane, Mapule 06 June 2014 (has links)
A national education policy proposal to integrate adult basic education and training
(ABET) in South Africa came about largely because of pressure from trade unions to
introduce training at the workplace which would make workers more marketable in case
of retrenchment. Workplace ABET programmes provide literacy and numeracy skills,
after which some workers have a chance of joining further training opportunities provided
by their employers. The Independent examinations Board (JEB) provides adult
examinations and certifies those learners who pass. This study aims to find out whether
the ABET certificates issued by the IBB, particularly Level 3 certificates, open up job
opportunities for their holders.
A qualitative approach was adopted to research the views of ABET learners and their
managers. A small scale survey was undertaken in which four industries providing ABET
in the Gauteng area were visited. Interviews were conducted to access information on
learners’ and managers’ views on ABET certification. This proved a suitable method for
the study because the researcher managed to build confidence in learners and at times
used the learners’ home language to clarify questions.
The study concludes that ABET empowered learners by giving them reading, writing and
communication skills. These skills helped them in building their confidence when
communicating with their supervisors and to work with less supervision. On the other
hand the study showed that there was no direct relationship between the certificates that
learners earned and work opportunities. Managers could not clearly identify the kind of
work that learner who had attained ABET Level 3 certificates could perform.
The recommendations call for a clear' policy by both unions and employers on ABET.
Workers need to be rewarded for the effort they put into learning, even if the rewards are
not the reasons which lead them to learn.
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The feminist classroom: women's action in the reinvention of adult learning spacesShubane, Letlhabile Monica January 2017 (has links)
Thesis is submitted in partial fulfilment for the degree of Master of Architecture (Professional) to the Faculty of Engineering and the Built Environment, School of Architecture and Planning at the University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, 2017 / My focus is on working women in post democracy education and training programmes. Due to societal gender roles, rights for women, in both education and opportunity, should materialise in adult education systems. In order for women to be exposed to work opportunities as well as to maintain the domestic and child-rearing roles they play in society, these systems and spaces must be reinvented.
I hope to defi ne indigenous feminist theories, and then to manifest these in the creation of learning spaces. Th rough deconstructing the hugely diverse lived experiences of women in their social roles, I will question educational subject matter, women’s representation as learners, workplace roles, domestic and child-rearing roles, and fi nally challenge the idea of the widely accepted school and classroom model as a centralised institution.
Alternative practices of learning and knowing possibly have great impact on transformation for women. Th e ties between education and work lead me to choose factories as my site of interest. Th e site of Jeppestown is appropriate because it is where the light industrial practices about which I am talking, continue to exist.
With this thesis I aim to propose an alternative model for working- women as students and educators. I aim to reinvent the systems and spaces in which women learn and in which contextualised feminist theories are manifested. / XL2018
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The establishment of an ABET centre in a rural school in the Northern Province of South AfricaManamela, Enos 21 May 2014 (has links)
The aim of the study was to ident-fy issues involved in the
establishment of an ABET centre in a rural secondary school. A
case study of two schools with ABET centres and one without an
ABET centre as well as a community college was undertaken. The
procedure involved gathering information on how ABET was
established and how it is implemented in the two schools.
Observations and unstructured interviews were carried out in the
four institutions. The information which was gathered was
analysed to identify themes related to the establishment of an
ABET centre. Factors which were investigated in the four
institutions included among others, strengths, weaknesses,
opportunities and threats (herein referred to as swot-analysis,
see Abbreviations, Acronyms and Terminology). All the
stakeholders such as ABET practitioners and governing bodies were
requested to, for example, list and explain factors of 'swot'
which they were experiencing.
The analysis of the information gathered was used to inform the
’ researcher what factors to consider in es'tXL ishing an ABET
centre in a rural school,, A procedural model for the
establishment of an ABET centre is proposed in this study. The
proposed model can be used not only by the sale rural school
alone, but by other schools both in the rural and urban areas
wishing to establish ABET centres in future. The decision, to :ise
the model will depend on the evaluation by ABET implementers.
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Facilitating the development of self-concept skills in the classroom among trainee teachers.Thabethe, Pauline Poppy Ntombi January 1991 (has links)
A RESEARCH REPORT SUBMITTED TO THE DIVISION OF SPECIALIZED EDUCATION,
UNIVERSITY OF THE WITWATERSRAND, JOHANNESBURG, IN PARTIAL FULFILMENT
OF THE REQUIREMENTS OF THE DSGREE OF MASTER OF EDUCATION (SCHOOL
COUNSELLING) / There is generally a lack of research in the area of self concept development in
the classroom, as related to Black education in general, and at Black colleges of
education in particular. The importance of self-concept in the academic situation
and the need to develop it in Black education was a motivating reason for the
current research study. The study was undertaken at the Soweto College of
Education. (Abbreviation abstract) / Andrew Chakane 2019
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Accentuating the right to ample access to quality education in rural South Africa : legal analysisSefoka, Isaiah Mmatipe January 2016 (has links)
Thesis (M. Dev.) -- University of Limpopo, 2016 / This mini dissertation seeks to articulate the issues and challenges being faced by the rural South Africa pertaining to the aspect of providing ample access to quality education. The structures, policies and programs of the flows of apartheid are therefore compered and contrasted to the post-apartheid (1994) structures, policies and programmes. It further argues that any impediment to the right is in contrast to the spirit and purport of the provisions of the Bill of Rights enshrined in the South African Constitution of 1996 which provides for this constitutional right. Although there was a radical transition in educational policies and programmes from apartheid to postapartheid, till to date there are still numerous challenges within the basic and higher educational sectors within and between institutions. This mini dissertation recommends that government should make education completely free from levels such as primary, tertiary and the postgraduate levels, and to use education as an investment tool. In this regard, government will be investing in youth to contribute in developing solutions to aid the rural masses. It recommends that education be made compulsory from grade 1 to grade 12.
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Telematic tuition in a South African higher education institution : a case studyMalatji, Mapula Martha January 2002 (has links)
Thesis (M. Ed.) -- University of Limpopo, 2002 / Refer to document
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Addressing the development of full-service schools to include learners who are deaf, using the auditory oral approachRetief, Wilhelmina Francina 30 November 2006 (has links)
Learners who are deaf and who are using the auditory oral approach are currently included in ordinary schools in South Africa. By default, most educators are not adequately trained to include these learners successfully. Transformation and train-ing, specific to the context of inclusive education, is thus undeniable.
Therefore, in order to address the development of full-service schools to include learners who are deaf and who are using the auditory oral approach, a literature study on the nature of inclusive education with the focus on full-service schools to include the mentioned learners, took place.
A qualitative study was conducted and data was gathered by interviews with six, learners, parents and educators. The findings were corroborated with the literature study with a view to addressing learner and system needs in order to include these learners successfully in a full-service school.
Based on the findings, recommendations are made to address the development of full-service schools to include the mentioned learners. / Educational Studies / M. Ed.
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