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The case for critical thought : an investigation into contemporary determinist knowledge, its social effects, and the alternative offered by a 'mode 2' approach to teaching, learning and research.Skinner, Jane. January 2002 (has links)
This thesis is centrally concerned with the current nee-liberal world order and its effects
upon society. It is concerned to expose the contradictions and weaknesses within the
knowledge systems that underpin our political reality. It considers economics as the
determining discourse of neo-liberal politics, analytic biology as its determining
discourse of individual persons, and analytic and neo-pragmatist philosophy as its leading
systems of thought. In each case it finds a linear rationalism compatible with the
determinist materialism of noo-Darwinism, and indeed explicitly invoking Darwin. This
seems to vindicate Manuel Castells's fmding of this 'Knowledge Society' as driven by
'an abstract, universal instrumentalism'. The thought systems of this economic liberalism
have seen politics subsumed within economics, de-humanising most of the institutions of
the earlier Liberal tradition, to the detriment of both freedom and democracy. But it
disputes Castells's assumption that this is a necessary reality and finds in neo-liberal
education the exception to this dehumanising trend. Revitalised as 'Mode 2' knowledge
production, this form of teaching, learning and research is found to be ideally suited to
challenge the underpinnings of the very social order which initially produced it. The
thesis as a whole is designed to employ Mode 2 methods in order to support this
contention. Using this approach it seeks to demonstrate that in place of neo-Darwinism
the ideas of the South African natural scientist Eugene Marais, concerning the
significance of conscious thought itself within evolution, can provide a more convincing
epistemoloy than the behaviourism and materialism of analytic biology. It finds John
Maynard Keynes's acceptance of economics as a moral and not a natural science, more logically convincing and more inherently useful for social reconstruction than the current
mathematicisation of economic theory. Prevalent philosophical approaches appear to
serve only to reinforce the systems of thought already found (and found wanting) in
politics, biology and economics. But again these philosophies are shown to be vulnerable
to a Mode 2 critique, particularly employing the ontological understanding of the
contemporary pragmatist philosopher Joseph Margolis, whose strong version of
relativism allows for both bivalent and multivalent truth values more appropriate to
understanding the complex realities of ethical and democratic societies. / Thesis (Ph.D.)-University of Natal, Durban, 2002.
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The development and implementation of school governance policy in South African Schools Act (SASA) and the Western Cape Provincial School Education Act (WCPSA).Maharaj, Ameerchund January 2005 (has links)
The study was concentrated on the period following the first democratic elections for a new government in South Africa, that is, post -1994 up to the year 2000. The change from a system based on fixed apartheid ideology to a more open and democratic one meant that the political scene became more characterized by fierce competition and volatility. The aim of the research was to understand the nature of the contestation as it manifests itself in both the development and implementation of school governance policy at national, provincial and local levels in a climate of political change and turbulence.
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A critical evaluation of the South African policy on religion and education (2003)Prinsloo, Paul 30 June 2008 (has links)
In this critical evaluation of the National Policy on Religion and Education (Republic of South Africa 2003) , I will invite a multiplicity of voices and opinions from various disciplines and discourses - a Bakhtinian carnival of heteroglossic play .
As opposed to the official feast, one might say that carnival celebrated temporary liberation from the prevailing truth and from the established order; it marked the suspension of all hierarchal rank, privileges, norms, and prohibitions. Carnival was the true feast of time, the feast of becoming, change, renewal. It was hostile to all that was immortalised and completed (Bakhtin 1984:10).
In this time of postmodern carnival, official 'Truth' is constantly questioned and treated with suspicion and replaced by new and unofficial truths (Scott 1986; Hiebert 2003). God (if not religion) has been proclaimed dead and yet at the same time seems to be more alive than ever. This is a time when 'all the conventional norms and protocols are suspended, as the common life is invaded by a great wave of riotous antinomianism which makes everywhere for bizarre mésalliances' (Scott 1986:6).
And the presiding spirit of blasphemy finds its quintessential expression in the ritual of the mock crowning and subsequent decrowning of the carnival king - who is the very antithesis of a real king, since he is in fact often a slave or a jester. In short, everything is topsy-turvy, and the disarray thus engenders an uproarious kind of laughter (Scott 1986:6).
In his presidential address to the American Academy of Religion in 1986 titled 'The house of intellect in an age of carnival: some hermeneutical reflections', Scott (1986:7) explores the impact of the "multiplicity and fragmentation and diversity" facing 'the house of intellect', and identifies the challenge of not resorting to the safety of 'any sort of reductionism, [but] how to understand and interpret the multitudinous messages and voices that press in upon us, each clamouring for attention and for pride of place'.
After acknowledging the polyphony surrounding Religionswissenschaft on the one hand and on the other hand rejecting any hermeneutical attempts at a 'totalistic' synthesis, Scott proposes moving among the different 'modalities' of interanimation between [the various] modes of discourse' (Ricoeur quoted by Scott 1986:11). Scott (1986:15) closes his address by appealing for continued conversations and dialogue among discourses and 'scatterings' of truth (1986:15) as a hermeneutical method that would take the plurality and heteroglossia of this time in history seriously.
This thesis is an attempt - a personal but also a scholarly and academically responsible attempt - to plot many of the voices and contexts that would help to evaluate the specific understanding of the role of the study of religion in the broader contexts of citizenship in a postmodern age where nationalities, nation states and allegiances are constantly in flux and complex.
This thesis is also submitted as proof of the validity of my own voice as one of many voices in and surrounding the house of intellect in an age of carnival. / Religious Studies and Arabic) / D. Litt. et Phil. (Religious Studies and Arabic)
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An investigation of the key mechanisms that promote whole school development in a secondary school pilot project contextWestraad, Susan Fiona January 2007 (has links)
Providing relevant and quality schooling for all South African learners is the paramount goal of the South African National Department of Education. South Africa 's historical and current socio-economic contexts provide many challenges for both the Department of Education and schools in this endeavour to provide quality teaching and learning. These challenges impact directly and indirectly on what happens in the classroom. Since 1994 a plethora of education and training policy has been introduced in South Africa to redress historical imbalances; to introduce a new education and training framework and approach; and to provide guidelines, principles and procedures for addressing some of the challenges that impact on schools. The National Whole School Evaluation Policy provides the legislative framework for the establishment of a quality assurance process in South African schools based on accountability and support. The subsequent Integrated Quality Management System attempts to provide a framework for integrating school evaluation and performance measurement. Policy frameworks are in place to guide quality assurance and school improvement, however, the reality of implementing this at a grass roots level is particularly challenging. The General Motors (GM) South Africa Foundation, a non-governmental development organisation, established by General Motors (GM) South Africa, commenced with the piloting the Learning Schools Initiative to investigate some of the challenges of whole school development and evaluation. This research documents the Learning Schools Initiative's intervention with the initial two pilot secondary schools situated in Port Elizabeth (Nelson Mandela Bay) over a four-year period. It reviews the relevant school reform and school development literature and adopts a critical realist evaluative research approach to investigate the key mechanisms that promote whole school development and change in this context. In keeping with this approach, the results of the research are analysed and discussed within a context-menchanism-outcome configuration that involves the identification of the key mechanisms that bring about desired outcome/s in a specific context. Seven key generative mechanisms are identified as critical at a school and classroom level (i) school culture, (ii) school structures, (iii) effective leadership and management, (iv) personal growth and meaning, (v) restoration of relationships, (vi) professional development of educators, and development of capacity to work together, and (vii) support and accountability. The need to structure school development interventions around the triggering of identified key mechanisms is also identified as an important overarching mechanism. Suggestions are made for further research required to facilitate a deeper understanding of how to bring about meaningful change that results in quality teaching and learning in South African schools.
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An investigation into the present system of orientation for pupils entering high school under the jurisdiction of the Cape Education Department, leading to an orientation programmeHeath, John Lionel Potgieter January 1986 (has links)
No description available.
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The development of a system of non-formal education : implications for the regional services councils in the Republic of South AfricaSoer, J. W. A. (Jan Willem Adolf) 06 1900 (has links)
South Africa finds itself on the threshold of new
challenges taking place in virtually every :possible
sphere of life, i.e. the political, technological,
human, social, economic and cultural spheres. The
education system is also faced with these changes and
cannot be viewed in isolation, rut demands new
outlooks by educational planners and educationists.
Non-formal education f orns an integral part of the
provision of a system of education in' South Africa and
is also influenced by these challenges. In order to
make reasonable reconnnendations on how the challenges
- particularly those of education management - should
be approached by education planners and educationists,
the following were investigated:
* the role of and need for non-formal education in a
system of education provision in south Africa so as
to detenltlne the need to manage and administrate
non-formal education successfully
* the institutions which make the biggest
contributions to the provision of non-formal
education in south Africa, in order to point out
where problem areas exist, and the resultant
duplication, overlapping and fragmentation of
training
regional development and the role of regional bodies
such as the Regional Development Advisory
Conunittees, Regional Development Conunittees of the
National Training Board, Training Board for Iocal
Government Bodies and Regional services Councils
the utilisation of Regional services COUncils to
co-ordinate non-formal education at regional and
local levels
Based on the findings, an educational strategy is proposed to co-ordinate non-formal
education on recJional and local levels through Regional Services councils. / Educational Leadership and Management / D. Ed. (Educational Management)
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Business involvement with education in the Dzumeri rural communityMabunda, Nghenani Peter 06 1900 (has links)
Rural education in South Africa, particularly within the black communities,
has suffered neglect under Apartheid education policies. This has resulted
in an array of problems which continue to beset the country's education
system.
The community, through its various institutions, has a major role to play in
the whole education renewal process. The business sector is one such a
community institution, which is directly affected by the quality of school
education. Countries such as Britain and the U.S. provide excellent
examples of close co-operation between business and schools in an effort to
prepare pupils in accordance with the needs of the workplace.
The qualitative study conducted in schools, within the Dzumeri community,
showed that there is a dire need for business involvement with schools in
order to address important areas of mutual concern. It is finally
recommended that the government must formulate enabling policies, which
will promote business education partnership activities and ensure proper coordination at all administrative levels / Educational Studies / M.Ed. (Comparative Education)
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Partnerships in school governance : foundation for reform and restructuringMarishane, Ramodikoe Nylon 06 1900 (has links)
The aim of this study is to examine the role played by the state in developing
partnerships in school governance, to establish how school governance reform and
restructuring can enhance powers and functions of school governing bodies and to
identify the needs and problems of partners in school governance.
A literature study was conducted to investigate the role of the state in partnerships in
school governance and its implications for school governing bodies. Reference was
made to studies conducted in countries experiencing educational reform.
An empirical survey was conducted to establish the views of the state and school
governors. For this purpose, a questionnaire was sent to members of governing bodies,
while an interview was held with an official in the Department of Education.
It was found that the implementation of reform influences relationships and functions of
governing bodies and causes problems which the state should address. / Educational Leadership and Management / M.Ed. (Educational Management)
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Strategies used by subject advisors and facilitators to support lesson planning with an environmental learning focus : a case study of the Eastern Cape Neep-Get clusterMbambisa, Nomaledi Peggy January 2005 (has links)
Over the past ten years, South Africa has undergone substantial changes, following the advent of democracy. Key amongst these changes being the transformation of educational policy. These policy changes have introduced new structural frameworks within which we operate (including myself as a subject advisor) and new roles for educators. These policy changes affect all the levels of the education system, and have an impact at school level, where teachers are now responsible for learning programme development (including a focus on lesson planning). Lesson planning in an outcomes-based education framework is a challenging aspect of policy implementation. South Africa is faced with the challenges associated with policy change and implementation. The role of the subject advisors and facilitators who support the teachers to make sense of the curriculum is crucial, as they provide the interface between policy and practice. They are the people who work most with teachers, and have a responsibility for curriculum implementation. This study aimed to explore the strategies which are used by subject advisors and facilitators to support teachers develop lesson plans with an environmental learning focus. A qualitative case study was conducted in which I looked at how the support processes were provided by the subject advisors and facilitators in the Eastern Cape in particular the NEEP-GET cluster in the Makana district. The study employed a range of data producing techniques such as questionnaires, interviews, document analysis and observation. The data was analysed to report the findings. The research indicates that some strategies are used to provide curriculum and pedagogical support and guidance, but that these are superficially treated and others have not been attempted at all. This therefore shows that further growth in this area is possible amongst the subject advisors. Recommendations relevant to both the subject advisors and the Department of Education so as to enhance the support processes and professional development of subject advisors have been made.
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Onderwysers se beoordeling van die nuwe onderwysbedeling in Suid-AfrikaVan Loggerenberg, Gerhardus Daniel 04 November 2014 (has links)
D.Ed. (Education) / Please refer to full text to view abstract
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