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The challenge of using English as a medium of technology instruction: a study of grade 9 in King Sabata Dalinyebo district, Eastern CapeAmpofo, Isaac Yaw. January 2009 (has links)
Thesis (MTech. degree in Education) -- Tshwane University of Technology, 2009. / The English language is not used by the majority of people in their daily and
normal conversations at King Sabata Dalindyebo (KSD) district. It is not even
encouraged in many homes and townships because it is associated with an
oppressive regime. Hence, it is difficult for children to experience the English
language before they start formal education.
This study investigated the challenges posed by the English language in the
teaching and learning of Technology in Grade 9 at King Sabata Dalindyebo
educational district. The first section of the study focused on the language policy
in schools, and the second part investigated language practice in schools and
classrooms. Structured interviews were conducted with 5 learning areas
specialists of the General Education and Training (GET) Band in the district.
Closed questionnaires were administered to sampled technology teachers, and a
literature review of previous studies on the topic was also conducted.
The study revealed that the English language poses a challenge in the teaching
and learning at KSD schools, not in the Technology learning area only, but in all
the other learning areas. The study also found that, though schools have written
language policies that are in line with that of the Department of Education (DoE),
there are no implementation and monitoring strategies in place.
From the findings, the study recommends that the Department of Education
should develop implementation and monitoring strategies to enforce the
language policy. The researcher further recommends that language teachers
should be re-trained and equipped with the right books and resources which will
improve their methods of teaching. Furthermore, it is recommended that schools
should be provided with libraries. Reading, speed writing and debating should
form part of the GET curriculum.
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Stereotype activation and university access programmes : preparing students with one hand and holding them back with the other?Essack, Zaynab. January 2008 (has links)
A generally untested assumption within the stereotype threat literature is that it is only those individuals who are highly identified with a domain who will be susceptible to stereotype threat. Further, many of the studies on stereotype threat have been confined to artificial laboratory settings and have been conducted on American samples. The current study aimed to develop a measure of domain-identification in order to test this central assumption of stereotype threat theory on a sample of students in a humanities access programme in a South African university. Results indicate that the experience of stereotype threat varies with respect to the combination of 1) the degree of domain-identification, and 2) the degree to which students are aware of negative domain-relevant stereotypes. That is, students who were highly domain-identified and were highly or moderately aware of negative stereotypes performed worse than highly domain-identified individuals who had low levels of awareness of others negative stereotypes about their in-group. / Thesis (M.Soc.Sc.)-University of KwaZulu-Natal, Pietermaritzburg, 2008.
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An exploratory study of the South African New Era Schools Trust.Coutts, Alexander. January 1989 (has links)
The focus of this research is the New Era Schools Trust (N.E.S.T.) system of non-racial, multi-cultural schooling,with its first school Uthongathi as an exemplification of its unique approach. In the theoretical component of the research, a thorough study is made of literature relating to multi-cultural
education, with the issues of culture, race and socioeconomic
class explored as problematics of central concern to the South African context. Selected strategies are analysed, upon which the possible implementation of multi-cultural education in South Africa might be based. A chapter is included on the the socio-political origins of N.E.S.T. Its birth and infancy are set against background events that have impinged on education in South Africa since World War 11. The empirical section of the research is focused on Uthongathi, as it evolved and developed during the period January 1987 to July 1989. Among the most important
findings emanating from the research are the following: 1. New Era Schools Trust was established primarily as a reaction to the historically evolved policy of apartheid, which the originators of the endeavour perceived to be unjust. 2. Central to the endeavour is the creation of school communities that are the antithesis of the present, largely ethnocentric, state educational structures. It is hoped to thereby create a vehicle to aid peaceful evolutionary change as an alternative to the violent and confrontational strategies widely current. 3. Uthongathi propounds (and is guided by) policies of nonracialism, multi-culturalism, and access for pupils of various socio-economic classes and both sexes.
4. Some tension is apparent between the policy of a "balance of races" and the school's egalitarian aims, although the racial balance itself appears to be remarkably effective in practice. An impressive level of social solidarity is evident amongst the pupils.
5. A broad, liberal education is offered. It is focussed
on university entrance, and is enriched by a wide variety of
extra-mural pursuits. Self-help and a comprehensive
community service scheme operate.
6. Despite the absence at the present time of academic
results gained through public examinations, upon which
objective judgements can be based, it is clear that high
academic standards are pursued. A comprehensive academic
support programme has been mounted in the lower standards in
order to assist those pupils who originate from educationally and economically deprived backgrounds. Bursary support is generous.
7. The N.E.S.T. schooling model appears to be malleable to
suit regional needs. It appears to have relevance to future
policy directions for state and private schooling alike. The costs and fee structures are, however, likely to limit the extent of extrapolation possible. 8. Tentative suggestions have been made for appropriate action. More accurate judgements on the adoption of N.E.S.T. schooling as a proposed model for South Africa will
become possible as the system evolves further to incorporate
the four schools initially planned. 9. Recommendations have also been made for further research. There is a great need for selected facets of the N.E.S.T. schools to be researched in greater depth than has been possible in this exploratory study. / Thesis (Ph.D.)-University of Natal, 1989.
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Policy and practice related constraints to increased female participation in education management in South Africa.Moorosi, Pontso. January 2006 (has links)
This thesis examines South African policies addressing gender inequality in education
management, and interrogates whether or not these policies made a difference to the
career route of women principals of secondary schools. The under-representation of
women in education management has been a long observed problem in many countries
including South Africa. A number of initiatives have been put in place to address this
issue but little improvement is seen in the South African situation in education
management. The purpose was to understand why women are still under represented in
school management and to learn from their experiences.
The study used data from three sources. Firstly, policy documents and practices were
analysed in terms of their symbolic, regulative and procedural functions. Secondly, the
personal accounts of 28 women principals in KwaZulu-Natal who had been appointed
after 1994 were collected through the use of extended interviews, and thirdly, interviews
were conducted with key officials and members of School Governing Bodies that had
participated in the selection of principals. The data generated were analysed at two levels
in order to understand the factors constraining the participation of women in education
management.
At the micro level, I use the 'management route model' as an analytical framework that
identifies the three phases women principals go through in their career route, namely
anticipation, acquisition and performance (van Eck and Volman, 1996). The model
reveals that factors influencing women's career paths into management are very complex
and based firstly on the individual agency where women grapple with more internal
issues such as professional qualifications and experience, aspirations, lack of ambition
and family responsibilities. Secondly, these factors are at the organisational level where
women suffer discrimination at the recruitment and selection processes, and lack of
institutional support through mentoring and sponsorship. Thirdly, it is the social level,
which involves the cultural discourses in which women operate. These discourses include
sex role stereotypes that inform the social expectations about the role of men and women
in society.
On the macro level, I use feminist theory to interpret and understand the women's
experiences and findings in general. The findings reveal that policy interventions put in
place since 1994 to close the gender gap were mostly informed by liberal feminism that
focused on affirming women in order to gain access into the school management without
tackling the social practices that are defined by sex role socialisation and which therefore
continue to work subtly and insidiously towards the discrimination of women.
I conclude that although the liberal feminist interventions that have been put in place
have been useful to some extent, the problems impeding women's full participation in
education management cannot only be tackled at a policy level because this attempt
leaves the most problematic social practices intact. However, I argue for policy and legal
intervention as a starting point to combat the gender crisis in a society that has inherited
so much inequality. While I acknowledge that women of all races in South Africa have
all been negatively impacted upon by the historical and traditional values and
expectations on the role of women and men in society, I argue that the situation has been
worse for women of the Black African race, who suffered dual oppression in terms of
gender and race.
The study proposes the need to look beyond provision of legal and democratic reforms
and more into social practices that prevent legal reforms from reaching the desired goals.
Social structures and cultural practices that hamper the greater representation of women
should be dealt with in order to allow women freedom to participate in discourses where
their choice is not informed by gender subordination. / Theses (Ph.D.)-University of KwaZulu-Natal, 2006.
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The contours of disadvantage and academic progress : analysis of perceptions of students from disadvantaged schools at the University of KwaZulu-Natal.Mpofu, Bhekimpilo. 23 July 2013 (has links)
The overall purpose of this study was to analyse the perceptions and experiences of students from
disadvantaged schools regarding their academic progress at the University of KwaZulu-Natal
(UKZN). The study focused on the students’ material and social circumstances, their learning
environment while at University, their connections to their home community, and their career
aspirations. It set to answer three key research questions, namely: (1) what are the contours of
disadvantage that can be discovered through investigating samples of students from disadvantaged
schools at UKZN? (2) How do the ‘contours’ seem to co-occur with factors relating to academic
progress? (3) What are the perceptions of students from disadvantaged schools at UKZN about their
pre-university experience and the learning environment at university? The notion of disadvantage was
defined using the Department of Education (DoE)’s classification of schools into the quintile system
which is based on measurements of the poverty of the catchment community. Thus, this study shows
that the notion of disadvantaged students in higher education can be investigated through class-based,
rather than merely racially-based definitions. This study was conducted within a three-fold conceptual
framework based on sustainable livelihoods approaches (SLA), social capital theory and social justice
ideology. The SLA approach teaches us that livelihoods can only be understood and captured in
particular contexts. This research project therefore aimed to gain a clearer understanding of such a
context, in this case, the campus environment. Through the phenomenological approach of the openended
questions in the interviews, this thesis taps into the perceptions of students themselves about
their environment and how they cope. Social capital theory postulates five spheres: the academic, the
social, the economic, the support, and the democratic. These were probed in both a survey of a sample
of disadvantaged students, and by interviewing eight students. With regard to academic progress, the
measurements used were the matric aggregate, the grade point average for salient years and
programmes, and the time it took for students to graduate or dropout. Comparisons are made between
the norm of students, the disadvantaged (those from low quintile schools), and those in the sample.
The purpose of utilizing such measurements is to contribute to the social justice discourse about
university education based on Taylor’s notion of Fair Equality of Opportunity (FEO), where
disadvantaged students’ abilities and aspirations can best be developed and exercised, leading to the
attainment of self-realization. Until disadvantaged students show academic progress that fits the norm,
the contours of their disadvantage need to be continually investigated; it is hoped that the findings of
this thesis will contribute to further research and concrete proposals which can be implemented to
improve conditions so that students who are already disadvantaged as a result of their schooling are
not further disadvantaged while at University . / Thesis (Ph.D.)-University of KwaZulu-Natal, Durban, 2013.
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An investigation of gender discrimination against South African women educators of Indian descent.Pahliney, Kethamonie. January 1991 (has links)
Claims of gender discrimination by women educators in South Africa were investigated through an
examination of specific issues surrounding the employment of women educators of Indian descent.
These include maternity leave, housing subsidy, pension scheme, medical aid, salaries, merit
awards and promotions. The study is located within the context of the general oppression of all
women in society. The analysis used the sexual division of labour as its central focus. Since
the subjects under investigation were members of a minority ethnic group, factors such as their
cultural heritage, race, and class difference were considered an integral part of the analysis.
The study assessed the validity of each of the claims of discrimination through an examination
of official documentation such as the Principal's Handbook and staff circulars relating to
teachers' conditions of service, regulations and occupational incentives. Wherever possible,
the claims were empirically examined through an analysis of the responses obtained from a
sample of educators. Cross-tabulations and Chi-square analyses were used to test the claims
statistically. Participation in a union as a possible organising strategy for women educators
in their challenge of gender discrimination is suggested. A list of recommendations for the
amelioration of gender discrimination against women educators is presented at the end of the
study. / Thesis (M.A.)-University of Natal, 1991.
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Democracy, power and the organization of education projects.Parker, Benjamin Philip. January 1994 (has links)
Abstract available in pdf file.
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Open sesame! : learning life skills from Takalani Sesame : a reception study of selected grade one learners in Pietermaritzburg, South Africa.Coertzee, Geraldine. January 2011 (has links)
Early Childhood Development (ECD) programmes are important in the promotion of intellectual development and school readiness in children. Equally important is the opportunity to learn in one‟s mother tongue. This study aimed to determine the value of using the multilingual television series Takalani Sesame as a Life Skills educational resource in specific South African schools, amongst Grade One learners. The focus lay on researching a possible mechanism for allowing children who had not attended quality ECD programmes to „catch up‟ in terms of knowledge they may be lacking, as well as providing a form of mother tongue instruction to African learners in schools where the language of instruction is English.
A field experiment and a reception study were carried out at a primary school in Pietermaritzburg, South Africa. Two groups of twelve Grade One learners (from two different Grade One classes at the same school) were included in this research, which spanned a period of 6 months. The children in the test group watched a television series of Takalani Sesame (with guided viewing) and completed related activities including post viewing and homework activities. The children in the control group were not shown the series at school. Both groups were administered the same questionnaire both pre- and post-test in order to determine changes in Life Skills related learnt data. Other research methods included participant observation, focus group discussions, interviews with parents/caregivers and interviews with educators. These used Social Cognitive Theory as their basis, taking constructs that impact on behaviour change, such as modelling, outcome expectancies and behavioural capabilities into account. The research included a large focus on interpersonal communication between researcher and learner, and caregiver and learner, plus a concentration on the children‟s knowledge of and attitudes surrounding HIV/AIDS.
Results showed satisfactory levels of attention to the series, as well as high levels of engagement with and enjoyment of the series. Levels of identification with characters were also noted to be high, increasing the possibilities of learning and behaviour change taking place. Decoding of messages was, for the most part, in line with the intentions of the producers, although oppositional readings, erroneous and creative
decoding were also noted in some instances. The guided viewing component did well to increase levels of attention to the episode as well as allow for erroneously decoded messages to be corrected almost immediately. Positive changes in learnt data in the Life Skills areas of HIV/AIDS, Nutrition and Safety and Security were identified and these were noted to be impacted on by the homework activities which were included in the intervention to promote parent/caregiver-child communication. The research intervention was deemed to be a success in the selected school, and could possibly be recommended for use in similar South African primary schools where learners are taught in a language which is not their mother tongue. Possible areas for future related research were outlined.
This research study contributes to the body of Entertainment Education (EE) research by identifying a new and valuable application for an EE intervention in the South African setting. This highlights the important aspects of localisation, in the South African context, promoting mother tongue learning and ECD. / Thesis (M.A.)-University of KwaZulu-Natal, Durban, 2011.
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Education policy development in South Africa, 1994-1997.Fataar, Mogamad Aslam January 1999 (has links)
Black South Africans have been exposed to an unequal and divided education system. It has been expected that the basis for an equitable education system would be laid in the post apartheid period. In this thesis I have provided an analysis of education policy development in South Africa between May 1994 and mid-1997. My main aim has beento understand the policy vision that the post apartheid state has enacted as the basisfor educational reconstruction.<br />
<br />
The conceptual framework of this thesis is located in the academic fields of Education and Development and Policy Sociology. I have focused on the interaction between the broad delimitations set by the structural, economic and political dimensions in society on the one hand, and the political and policy dynamics that have given education policy its specific meaning on the other hand. The role of the government in enacting a specific policy vision has been at the centre of my analysis.<br />
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The government has effected a conservative vision with the adoption of the Growth, Employment and Redistribution (GEAR) macroeconomic strategy. GEAR has targeted the development of an export-based global economy along post fordist lines. Predicated upon an emphasis on fiscal discipline, the dominant policy orientation has supported equity but without an emphasis on redress. This approach has not provided the necessary basis for education reconstruction.<br />
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The National Qualifications Framework (NQF) and Outcomes-based education (OBE) embody a definite '/ision in terms of which education policy would be aligned with economic development. This vision is based on the false assumption that education should playa fundamental role in producing the sophisticated labour demands of a globally competitive economy. The logic of both GEAR and the NQF is internally inconsistent and the relationship between these two policy frameworks is unsustainable.
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Uitkomsgebaseerde onderwys vir leerders met verstandelik erg-gestremdheidDorfling, Pieter Stephanus 12 1900 (has links)
Thesis (MEd)--University of Stellenbosch, 2007. / ENGLISH ABSTRACT: Since 2001 an inclusive approach is being followed in education in South Africa.
According to this approach all learners must be taught in one education system and
according to the same curriculum, namely the National Curriculum Statement
Grades R to 9 (Schools). To ensure that this outcomes-based curriculum is relevant
and effective in the teaching of learners with a severe intellectual disability, it is
important to evaluate the curriculum and to adapt it if necessary.
Learners with a severe intellectual disability form a distinctive educational community
marked by their high need for continuous support, specific educational strategies and
appropriate learning content. In the past, these learners received their education
outside the mainstream of education according to an own, appropriate curriculum.
However, since 2004 they have been required to receive their education according to
the National Curriculum Statement Grades R to 9 (Schools).
The aim of this research was to establish the effectiveness and relevance of the
National Curriculum Statement Grades R to 9 (Schools) in the education of learners
with a severe intellectual disability. A mixed-method research design, which included
a literature survey, an empirical, as well as focus group interviews, was applied.
By means of the literature survey, the demands were determined that are made on
the curriculum by learners with a severe intellectual disability, their parents, the
community, and the work community. The demands that educators make on the
curriculum were determined by means of an empirical survey. This survey revealed
that outcomes-based education is not generally implemented in the 21 schools
included in this study. These findings formed the basis on which curriculum
evaluation criteria were developed and according to which the National Curriculum
Statement Grades R to 9 (Schools) was evaluated.
By applying these criteria it was established that in some instances the National
Curriculum Statement Grades R to 9 (Schools) does not comply with the demands of
the determinants. The deduction could however be made that the National
Curriculum Statement Grades R to 9 (Schools) has sufficient adaptable built-in
features to be effective and relevant for learners with a severe intellectual disability.
Recommendations were made on how best to make the necessary adaptations. / AFRIKAANSE OPSOMMING: In Suid-Afrika word sedert 2001 'n meer inklusiewe benadering tot onderrig gevolg.
Hiervolgens moet alle leerders binne een onderwysstelsel volgens een kurrikulum,
naamlik die Nasionale Kurrikulumverklaring Graad R tot 9 (Skole), onderrig word.
Ten einde te verseker dat hierdie uitkomsgebaseerde kurrikulum relevant en
doeltreffend is in die onderrig van leerders met verstandelik erg-gestremdheid is dit
noodsaaklik om die kurrikulum te evalueer en dienooreenkomstig die bevindinge aan
te pas, indien nodig.
Leerders met verstandelik erg-gestremdheid vorm vanweë hul intellektuele
vermoëns 'n duidelik herkenbare onderwysgemeenskap wat gekenmerk word deur
hul behoefte aan deurlopende ondersteuning, spesifieke onderrigstrategieë en
toepaslike leerinhoude. In die verlede het hul onderrig buite die hoofstroomonderwys
geskied aan die hand van 'n eie, toepaslike kurrikulum, maar sedert 2004 moet hul
onderrig ook volgens die Nasionale Kurrikulumverklaring Graad R tot 9 (Skole)
geskied.
Die doel van hierdie navorsing was om die doeltreffendheid en relevansie van die
Nasionale Kurrikulumverklaring Graad R tot 9 (Skole) vir leerders met verstandelik
erg-gestremdheid te bepaal. 'n Gemengde-navorsingsmetode-ontwerp wat 'n
literatuuroorsig, 'n meningsopname asook fokusgroep-onderhoude ingesluit het, is
gevolg.
By wyse van die literatuurondersoek is die eise bepaal wat leerders met verstandelik
erg-gestremdheid, hul ouers, die gemeenskap, en die werkgemeenskap aan die
kurrikulum vir leerders met verstandelik erg-gestremdheid stel. Die eise wat
opvoeders stel is deur middel van 'n empiriese ondersoek bepaal en dui aan dat
uitkomsgebaseerde onderrig nie algemeen aangewend word in die 21 skole in die
ondersoek nie. Aan die hand van hierdie bevindinge is kurrikulumevalueringskriteria
ontwikkel waarmee die Nasionale Kurrikulumverklaring Graad R tot 9 (Skole)
geëvalueer is.
By die toepassing van die kriteria is gevind dat die Nasionale Kurrikulumverklaring
Graad R tot 9 (Skole) in sekere opsigte nie behoorlik aan die eise van die
determinante voldoen nie. Die gevolgtrekking is gemaak dat die Nasionale
Kurrikulumverklaring Graad R tot 9 (Skole) egter genoeg aanpasbaarheidselemente
het om doeltreffend en relevant te wees vir leerders met verstandelik erggestremdheid.
Aanbevelings is gedoen oor hoe die aanpassings gemaak kan word.
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