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The political economy of educational provision in "white" commercial farming areas: findings from a case study conducted in the Ugie district in the north eastern CapeStretton, Natasha Anne January 1993 (has links)
The under-provision of education for black South Africans has reached crisis proportions. While the education for black people in general is discriminatory and unequal, black rural people suffer further deprivations as there is a serious imbalance in the allocation of resources and the provision of education between urban and rural areas. Black education in the rural areas has been historically neglected for political and socio-economic reasons and, as a consequence, rural blacks have limited or no access to education. The purpose of this' study is to examine an aspect of rural education; viz: black farm schools in the 'white' commercial farming areas. It is argued that the provision of farm schools is intricately linked to the labour requirements of farmers and consequently farm schools cannot be understood independently from the social relations within commercial farming areas. The impact of local decision-making on the process of farm schooling is also significant and is an important aspect of this study. This thesis explores the political and socio-economic processes that have structured the provision of education within a small farming community, looking specifically at the effects of particular interest groups on the provision of black farm schools. The study operates on three levels. The first level provides a theoretical framework within which rural education can be better understood. It is argued that the bias towards urban areas is reflected in the current theoretical debates on the role and function of education ·in South Africa. As these theories are generally incapable of explaining rural education, an alternative model is proposed. As education cannot be understood in isolation from the rest of society, the second level of the study locates farm schooling within the broader political and socio-economic systems. This is done from two perspectives. The first perspective focuses on black education in general, tracing aspects of its development and highlighting the impact .of economic interests, white political control and black resistances to this development. The neglect of rural education is also contextualised historically and politically. The second perspective looks at rural education at a macro-level. The historical origins of the farm schools system and the effects of the relationship between agricultural capital and the state, and between farmers and farm workers on the process of farm schooling is examined. The final level of the study focuses on the micro-situation and provides an in-depth analysis of the political and socio-economic dynamics which have impacted upon the provision and process of farm schools within a specific farming community. In an attempt to understand the types of issues effecting farm schooling in this area, the attitudes of farmers, farm workers, farm- children and farm school teachers towards education are investigated. Four main issues were identified and are discussed in depth, viz: I) factors effecting the provision of black farm schools; 2) the relationship between education and the economic structure of the area; 3) the value of education; and 4) socio-economic factors effecting education in the area.
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Hulpverleningsprogram vir die begaafde seun wat onderpresteer in die sekondere skool / A support programme for the gifted boy who underachieves in the secondary schoolRoos, Christina Alida 01 1900 (has links)
Summaries in Afrikaans and Engish / Hierdie studie handel oor 'n hulpverleningsprogram vir die begaafde seun wat onderpresteer in
die sekondere skool.
Navorsing toon dat aansienlik meer seuns as meisies met hierdie probleem worstel en gevolglik
word hulle voile potensiaal nie verwesenlik nie. Dit het 'n doeltreffende hulpverleningsprogram
in die brandpunt van die studie gestel.
Literatuurstudie toon dat baie bestaande hulpverleningsprogramme gerig is op
primereskoolleerders en dat Suid-Afiikaanse hulpverleningsprogramme beperk is.
Die doelstelling van die studie fokus op hulpverlening deur 'n interdissiplinere spanbenadering
aan die adolessente begaafde seun wat onderpresteer.
Die twee vraelyste vergemaklik identifisering van die eiesoortige probleme en behoeftes van die
kind en fokus op die funksioneringsbeeld van die kind-in-totaliteit. Hulpverleningsvoorstelle
word in die Akkumulatiewe BINGO-Plantabel vervat.
Hulpverlening geskied intensief op 'n een-tot-een-basis en moet ortodidakties en
ortopedagogies verantwoordbaar wees. Volgehoue bemoeienis met die opvoedeling lei tot
noukeurige evaluering van die leerder, asook van die hulpverleningsprogram / This study deals with a support programme for the gifted boy who underachieves in the
secondary school
Research shows that more boys than girls experience these problems and consequently their full
potential is not realised. Hence the focus on an effective assistance and support programme.
Literary studies show that many existing support programmes target the primary school pupils
and that South Afiican support programmes are limited.
The aim of the study focuses on assistance to the gifted adolescent boy who underachieves,
through an interdisciplinary team approach.
The two questionnaires facilitate identification of the unique problems and needs of the child
and focus on his totality. The Accumulative BINGO Plan chart contains suggestions for
assistance.
Support is intensive on a one-to-one basis and must be according to orthodidactic and
orthopedagogical principles. Continuous involvement with the educand leads to an accurate
evaluation of the learner and the support programme. / Educational Studies / M. Ed. (Orthopedagogiek)
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The development of secondary education amongst the Xhosas in the Ciskei during the period 1941-1968Bukwana, Eric Qayisile 01 1900 (has links)
The wars of dispossession and land claims amongst the various racial groups caused
dissatisfaction which led them to split from each other enabling the Whites to possess
greater part of the South African soil.
Because the Xhosas had their own system of education, the Whites felt that the Xhosas
had first to be anglicised in order to 'tame' them. Missionary institutions such as Lovedale,
Healdtown and St Matthews were established to Christianise the Xhosas.
The missionaries succeeded in their endeavour because the Xhosas started sending their
children to the missionary institutions already established and this influenced the Xhosas to
establish their own tribal schools that would cater for secondary education facilities.
The <Jovernmenr· subsidised the tribal communities to establish secondary schools in their
areas. Fifteen,secoodary schools were established enabling the communities to exercise control
over their own schools as the missionary institutions were controlled by the Cape Department
of Education. / Educational Studies / M. Ed. (History of Education)
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Krities-opvoedkundige ondersoek na die akademiese onderprestasie van afstandsonderrigstudente aan die Universiteit Vista / A critical educational investigation of academic underachievement of distance teaching students at Vista UniversityLombard, Ellen 11 1900 (has links)
Akademiese onderprestasie van universiteitstudente bly 'n aktuele vraagstuk en dit wil voorkom asof
'n oplossing in die verband navorsers steeds ontwyk. In die onderhawige studie is daar by wyse van
'n omvattende literatuurstudie, asook 'n empiriese ondersoek, aangetoon wat die aard en omvang
van die onderprestasieproblematiek op tersiere vlak is. Hierdie proefskrif illustreer teenswoordige
afstandsonderrigpraktyke, die aard en struktuur van VUDEC as afstandsonderriginstansie en 'n
verskeidenheid faktore wat akademiese prestasie be'invloed.
Die diversiteit en kulturele relatiwiteit van kennis, asook die wye interpretasiemoontlikhede van teks,
veroorsaak 'n radikale probleem wat onderrig in Suid-Afrika, 'n land met 'n verskeidenheid kulture
en gevolglike leerinhoudmoontlikhede, betref Die invloed van postmodemisme word toenemend
in verskillende vakke waargeneem, maar onderrig in hierdie land is steeds hoofsaaklik in die sfeer
van die modemistiese paradigma gelee.
Die kritiese teorie van Habermas, wat modemisme be!nvloed het, bevraagteken realiteit, sowel as
die geldigheidskriteria wat legitimiteit aan inhoud moet gee. Die hipotese wat gestel word,
veronderstel dat die hoe onderprestasiesyfers in afstandsonderrig moontlik toegeskryf kan word aan
die veronderstelling dat die meerderheid afstandsonderrigstudente 'n sosio-konstruktivistiese
denkraamwerk het, terwyl afstandsonderrig steeds hoofsaaklik positivisties is.
Die navorser stel die postmodemistiese paradigma as moontlike oplossing voor. Modemistiese
onderrig moet nie totaal afgeskaf word nie, maar moet verbeter word deur noodsaaklike veranderings
en aanpassings te maak ten opsigte van onderliggende persepsies van kurrikuluminhoud,
onderrig- en evalueringsisteme en die implementering hiervan. Tradisioneel dosentgesentreerde en
statisties gedefinieerde onderrig en evaluering moet met onderrigstrategiee vervang word wat
gedeelde verantwoordelikheid vir prestasie nastreef en waar minder klem op die onderwerping van
individue aan inhoudsgebonde onderrigpraktyke geplaas word.
'n Paradigmaverskuiwing na 'n postmodernistiese paradigma sal die weg vir afstandsonderriginstansies
baan om betertoegeruste leerders die wereld en toekoms in te stuur, deur 'n basis vir die
bereiking van voortreflikheid in en deur onderrig te bewerkstellig. / Academic underachievement at university level remains a topic of current interest and concern.
Despite unceasing efforts to combat student wastage, a solution in this regard appears to evade
researchers. In the present study an extensive literature study as well as an empirical investigation
was undertaken to shed light on the nature and extent of the problem. This thesis illustrates present
teaching practices, the structure and nature of VUDEC as a distance teaching institution, and a
variety of factors that influence academic achievement.
The diversity and cultural relativity of knowledge and the wide range of interpretative possibilities
of texts, cause a radical problem with regard to teaching in South Africa, which embraces a wide
range of cultures and learning contents. The influence of postmodernism has increasingly been
observed in different subjects, but teaching in this country is still largely located in the sphere of the
modernist paradigm.
The critical theory ofHabermas which influenced modernism, questions reality as well as the criteria
of validity which legitimize content. The hypothesis stated is based on the assumption that the high
dropout rate in distance education may be attributed to the fact that many distance learners work
within a socio-constuctivist paradigm of thinking, while teaching by distance educators is positivist
in nature.
The author holds up the postmodern paradigm as a possible corrective. The project of modernist
teaching should not be totally suspended, but should be improved by introducing essential adjustments
and changes in terms of underlying perceptions with regard to curriculum content, teaching
and evaluation systems, and the implementation of these. Traditional teacher-centred and
statistically defined teaching and assessment must be replaced by teaching strategies which
accomodate the shared responsibility of achievement, placing less emphasis on the subjection of
individuals to content-bound teaching practices.
The shift towards a postmodern paradigm will pave the way for distance teaching institutions to send
better-equipped learners into the world and into the future by creating a basis for the achievement
of excellence in and through education. / Curriculum and Instructional Studies / D. Ed. (Didaktiek)
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The strategic role of the Chief Information Officer during post-merger at institutions of higher learning: A CASE STUDYMoses, Alvino George January 2014 (has links)
Master of Technology: Information Technology
in the Faculty of Informatics and Design
at the Cape Peninsula University of Technology
2014 / Higher education institutions are considered mission central due to the amount of information processing. Consequently the demand for information provision had dramatically increased in modern times. Universities and other large organisations are immensely challenged to produce accurate information hence it is information centric environments with lots of dependencies.
This particular study followed a qualitative approach which includes interviews to collect the data which will assist the researcher to understand the problems of information retrieving from the IS and the strategic role of the CIO in higher education. Thematic networks were used to analyse the data and a list of themes were identified.
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School policy as a means of promoting guidance as a subject in the Daveyton high schoolsMotsabi, Soraya Chilly 11 February 2014 (has links)
M.Ed. (Educational Management) / The school is an educational institution that has been established in order to facilitate education. Prior to the establishment of schools, education was the responsibility of the parents and the community. Schools therefore came into existence when it was realised that parents could no longer cope with the specialised skill of transferring the increased knowledge necessary for the cognitive development of the child (Stone, 1988:22). The school is a means of handing down norms and a philosophy of life and is also an agent of the redevelopment and renewal of society (Stone, 1988: 18). Education is an existential necessity which is aimed at leading the child from nonadulthood to adulthood. Education which is a means to maturity formally takes place at a school. Therefore a school is seen as an institution for initiation of the development towards adulthood (Stone, 1988: 17). For the school to attain this objective, it has to consider the total person of the child, that is, a holistic approach towards education has to be adopted. Education has to transmit culture to the pupils in the service of the community from which it springs (Castelyn, 1985:49). Through the medium of its teaching, the school should educate the child to enable him to assume his role in civilized society as a mature adult. This can be achieved through the selection, ordering and presentation of subject matter in such a manner that the children acquire knowledge and skills that can be used to ensure a meaningful existence (HSRC, 1981a:11)...
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The role of the school management team in marketing the rural public secondary school in Malamulele area, Vhembe district, Limpopo ProvinceShivambu, Elton 28 July 2014 (has links)
M.Ed. (Educational Management) / Please refer to full text to view abstract
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The relative success of different English medium policies in black junior primary schoolsSouthey, Peter 18 February 2014 (has links)
M.A. (Applied Linguistics) / In June 1991 Parliament passed the following amendment to paragraph (b) of Section 3 of Act 90 of 1979: that the language or languages to be used as the medium of instruction at a school and the extent and duration of such use shall be determined by the Minister after consultation with the parents of pupils enrolled at that school, which consultation shall take place in the manner as prescribed. Act 90 of 1979 is the Education and Training act which legislates for black education under the control of the Department of Education and Training. The education epartments in the self-governing states tend to align themselves with DET policy, but the TBVC states have acted independently even though there have been correspondences between their policies and the DET's which might suggest otherwise. The amendment replaces the following wording of paragraph (b): that the universally accepted principle of mother-tongue instruction be observed: Provided that this principle shall be applied at least up to and including Standard two: Provided further that the wishes of the parents shall be taken into consideration in the application of this principle after Standard two, and also in the choice of one of the official languages as the medium of instruction where the mother tongue cannot be used as the medium of instruction after Standard two. The essential difference between the two is that the original wording prohibited the use of any medium other than the mother tongue before Standard 3 whereas the amendment does not. Both versions make prov1s1on for the wishes of parents to influence but not actually to determine language policy: the Minister reserves the right to do that. The 1991 amendment legislates in favour of the options listed in section 7.11 of the White Paper on the Provision of Education in the Republic of South Africa of 1983 quoted below, which in turn quotes at length from the report of the Education Working Party of the HSRC De Lange Commission. Paragraphs (a) to (e) acknowledge the desirability of mother tongue instruction and of developing African languages accordingly, but paragraphs (f) and (g) imply that the then current language medium policy of mother tongue for at least the first four years was not necessarily the best one, and that "pragmatic approaches to the language medium problem include the use of English from Sub A".
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Where leaders learn: constructions of leadership and leadership development at Rhodes UniversityAndrews, Rushda Ruth January 2011 (has links)
This thesis explores the Where Leaders Learn slogan of Rhodes University. It does this by means of an analysis of discourses constructing leadership and leadership development within the institutional context. The discourse analysis was made possible as a result of interviews with a range of people involved in leadership and leadership development at the University. The analysis revealed that leadership development is constructed as taking place within a highly structured system that enables instructional and managerial leadership but constrains transformational leadership. The discourses that give meaning and understanding to the construct of leadership draw heavily on position within a hierarchy. The discourse of functional efficiency is enabled through practices related to reward, recognition, succession planning and mentorship which all serve to replicate the existing leadership structures creating more of the same and in essence stifling the potential for emancipatory leadership. The analysis also shows that a discourse of collegiality serves to create a false sense of a common understanding of leadership in the light of evidence of uncertainty and contestation around the meaning of the slogan Where Leaders Learn and, by association, the very construct of leadership. The discursive process of understanding leadership and developing an institutional theory for the purposes of infusing this into a curriculum poses many challenges. Barriers to new ways of thinking reside within the researchers' ontological and epistemological commitments. This amplifies the need for a more reflective ontology towards leadership and its consequences, especially so in a multidisciplinary environment such as Rhodes University.
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Losing, using, refusing, cruising : first-generation South African women academics narrate the complexity of marginalityIdahosa, Grace Ese-Osa January 2014 (has links)
While existing literature shows a considerable increase in the numbers of women in academia research on the experiences of women in universities has noted their continued occupation of lower status academic positions in relation to their male counterparts. As the ladder gets higher, the number of women seems to drop. These studies indicate the marginalization of women in academic settings, highlighting the various forms of subtle and overt discrimination and exclusion women face in academic work environments. In this study I ask how academic women in South Africa narrate their experience of being ‘outside in’ the teaching machine. It has been argued that intertwined sexist, patriarchal and phallocentric knowledges and practices in academic institutions produce various forms of discrimination, inequality, oppression and marginalization. Academic women report feeling invisible and retreating to the margins so as to avoid victimization and discrimination. Others have pointed to the tension between the ‘tenure clock’ and the ‘biological clock’ as a source of anxiety among academic women. Where a masculinised presentation of the self is adopted as a solution to this dilemma, the devaluation of the feminine in the academic space is confirmed. However, experiences of academic women are not identical. In the context of studies showing the importance of existing personal and social resources, prior experience and having mentors and role models in the negotiation of inequality and discrimination, I document the narratives of women academics who are the first in their families to graduate with a university degree. These first-generation academic women are therefore least likely to have access to social and cultural resources and prior experiences that can render the academic space more hospitable for the marginalised. Employing Spivak’s deconstruction of the concept of marginalisation as my primary interpretive lens, I explore the way in which, in their narratives, first-generation academic women negotiate marginality. These narratives depict a marginality that might be described, following Spivak, as ‘outside/in’, that is, as complex and involving moments of accommodation and resistance, losses and gains, pain and pride.
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