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Below the surface : African learners' experiences of schooling in a predominantly Indian school in KwaZulu-Natal.Pillay, Thanjamah. January 2004 (has links)
This research explores the experiences of African learners in a school in which they constitute the minority. The aim of the study is to investigate how African learners perceive of their day to day experiences in an ex-House of Delegates school that still has a predominantly Indian learner population. The study was conducted in a primary school situated in a small suburb south of Durban. Ten African learners from grade seven were interviewed through semi-structured interviews in this qualitative study. This was followed by a focus group discussion with the ten respondents to further investigate specific issues and to serve as a debriefing since strong emotions had surfaced. Interviews were recorded on audiotape, and non-verbal indicators were recorded in the form of written notes. Non-participant observations were also conducted on the playgrounds. The content analysis method was used to analyze the data. Themes were identified and related to the conceptual framework of the study. The analysis revealed that learners experienced various exclusionary pressures as African learners in a predominantly Indian school. Unequal power relations are perpetuated through the intersection of race, class and ability as well as through a hidden curriculum. Racism as a form of oppression was evident in
the racist name-calling and racist stereotyping. There appears to be a lack of a caring pedagogy as African learners feel marginalized. The findings reveal the need for a whole-school policy on anti-racist education. In addition, educators need training to help them interrogate the cycle of socialization to which they have been exposed. The implications are specific to the context. The formulation of a whole-school policy on anti-racist education and an educator intervention program are some of the recommendations. / Thesis (M.Ed.)-University of KwaZulu-Natal, Durban, 2004.
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Responding to learner diversity in the classroom : experiences of five teachers in a primary school in KwaZulu-Natal.Singh, Sunitha. January 2004 (has links)
The principle of quality education for all learners is embedded in all policy documentsand legislation and this emphasis on quality education for all suggests that schools have to meet the diverse needs of all learners. However, throughout South African schooling contexts, there are many learners who face barriers to learning and participation in view of the fact that schools are unable to respond to the diversity of needs in the learner population. The issue is not how the learners adjust to the learning environment but whether the learning environment is flexible enough to accommodate the diverse needs of all learners. The responsibility of achieving the goal of a non-discriminatory education system lies heavily on the shoulders of classroom teachers. The purpose of this study is to examine how teachers at a primary school experience diversity within the classroom. The research was undertaken in a historically Indian boys' only state primary school in KwaZulu-Natal, with a learner population of almost 95% African, 4% Indian and the other 1% comprising White/Coloured learners. The focus of the study was the teachers. I
sought to investigate how teachers construct and respond to diversity in their classes. Within the context of the post apartheid South Africa, the classroom has become a microcosm of the 'rainbow nation', with teachers having to deal with many differences at varying levels within the classroom. How teachers interpret and respond to differences is likely to be subjective. In light of the fact that teachers' interpretations are subjective, for the purpose of this study, symbolic interactionism was used as a theoretical framework.
Qualitative research , methodology, which took the form of a case study was used. Teachers experiences were examined through semi-structured interviews, observations and document analysis. Throughout the study, there emerged the "them" and "us" syndrome in teachers. The study shows that while the teachers did not treat African learners unfairly, there are numerous exclusionary practices at the school. Very little attempt is made by the teachers to change their teaching behaviours in ways that make the curriculum responsive to their learners. In fact, very little was done to change the
ethos of the school, and African learners where expected to 'fit in' and become part of the existing culture of the school. There emerges from the study, a definite need to train teachers to think and work within a new frame of reference, that is, a human rights framework which constantly interrogates unequal power relations and inequalities that schools perpetuate. / Thesis (M.Ed.)-University of KwaZulu-Natal, Durban, 2004.
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African boys and gangs : construction of masculinities within gang cultures in a primary school in Inanda, Durban.Maphanga, Innocent Dumisani. January 2004 (has links)
This thesis explores the ways in which a group of boys who belong to gangs enact their masculinity. The focus is on African boys' construction of their masculinities within gang cultures at a primary school in Inanda, Durban. The school is an exclusively African co-educational school and predominantly African teaching staff. Data collection involved qualitative methods that primarily include observation and unstructured interviews. These research tools were used to investigate the interrelatedness between violence, gangs, and masculinities. This study demonstrates that young boys in gangs enact violent masculinities which are bound up with issues of race/ethnicity, gender, class, and context in the making of young gang cultures. The performance of violent gang masculinity produced the exaggerated quality of masculine protest, in which violence is employed as a compensation for perceived weakness. This study reveals that gang of boys are enacting masculinity that is oppositional to school's authority by contravening school rules and regulations in multiple ways. This research has indicated that modes of masculinities are shaped, constrained or enabled by gang cultures. Gang boys acted out their protest masculinity in multiple ways. They are anti-school authority, anti-social and undisciplined. The study also demonstrates that there are many socio-economic and political factors that impact negatively on the school such as unemployment, poverty, and violent gang crime. The social, economic and political contexts are therefore crucially important in understanding a multiplicity of masculine identities amongst gang boys at the school under study. Schooling is an important arena where masculinities are enacted in various forms including violent (gang) masculinities. The overall conclusion stemming from the research project is that attempts to reduce violent gang masculinities in the school need to include a gender strategy that tackles gender inequality. In South Africa this could form part of the Life Skills curriculum. Much greater attention needs to be given, in the life skills curriculum and through the ethos of the school as a whole, to promote gender equality and in particular models of masculine identity not predicated on force and violence. / Thesis (M.Ed.) -University of Natal, Durban, 2004.
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The family literacy practices of ten adult participants at the Tembaletu Adult Basic Education Centre in rural KwaZulu-Natal : a case study.Sokhulu, Thembinkosi M. January 2005 (has links)
This study examined the family literacy practices of ten adult participants who
attend the Tembaletu Adult Basic Education (ABE) Centre in rural KwaZulu-
Natal. The aim was to explore the influence of the ABE programme on these
practices? The concept of family literacy in this rural context was interrogated.
This is a qualitative case study, and the data collection techniques included
individual interview, focus group interviews, observation, and document analysis.
Findings revealed that women engaged in varied literacy practices in their homes.
Story telling was more common than reading to children. The participants in the
study for the first time are able to engage with their children in school related
literacy activities. The extent to which the participants and their children supported
each other in their literacy development was dependent on the levels of literacy.
The Adult Basic Education programme had a direct impact on the literacy practices in the families of the participants. The benefits reported by the participants included personal empowerment, enhanced self-image, and the acquisition of literacy life skills that are crucial to the health and well being of their families. The study highlights tensions between the content of adult programmes and family literacy practices valued by the participants. Other key issues that emerged in the study are: the link between family literacy and culture; gender and family literacy; family literacy in the context of HIV/Aids. The findings in this study valuable perspectives on emerging family literacy in a rural context - an area of study that is in its infancy in South Africa. / Thesis (M.Ed.) - University of KwaZulu-Natal, Pietermaritzburg, 2005.
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Constructions of gender and literacy practices in a primary school.Singh, Janitha. January 2004 (has links)
This study sets out to examine the process through which gender is constituted
in the English classroom in relation to the teaching of one comprehension lesson
at Springfield Model Primary School in KwaZulu-Natal. The study looks at one
lesson in-depth and delves into the representations of gender in the lesson.
Using qualitative methods and drawing from a comprehension passage entitled,
"Shining moon and his toy canoe" (Appendix 1) the study examines the ways in
which boys and girls in a grade 7 classroom made sense of the comprehension
passage and how that sense-making relates to their understanding of what it
means to be male and female. The study shows how resource materials (like the
prescribed comprehension, for instance) used in the English classroom articulate
young children's knowledge about gender and how they position themselves in
the discourses of gender. An analysis and examination of how the learners
understood the passage is undertaken, to see how gendered messages were
generated within the English lesson. An interview with the teacher was
conducted to examine how gender is constructed in the teaching of the
comprehensions lesson.
Two important findings are highlighted in this study. The text is an important tool
through which gender is elaborated. The boys and girls in this study positioned
themselves in contradictory ways to dominant perceptions about gender.
However, largely they draw on dominant ideas about gender and maintain the
status quo. The research also demonstrates further the ways in which the
teacher reinforces notions of 'masculinity' and 'femininity', despite her best
intentions. / Thesis (M.Ed.) - University of KwaZulu-Natal, 2004.
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Parental involvement in a rural residential special school : a case study.Ngwenya, Priscilla Thulisile. January 1996 (has links)
This study investigates the work that is currently being done to promote contact between home and school at a residential school situated in a rural area of KwaZulu- Natal. The school serves primary school children with physical disabilities between the ages of five and seventeen years. The subjects in this study were twenty five parents, teachers, learners, and support staff. The research methodology was in the form of a qualitative case study. Individual interviews, focus group interviews, observation as well as document analysis were used to investigate the nature and extent of parental involvement, the areas in which parents participated, and how the school supported parents and the learners. The results revealed that the school acknowledges the value of parents a partners, and has initiated a parent involvement programme. Parents are involved in structures created by the school, namely, a parent teacher association, parent groups in the communities, learner adoption scheme. However, findings revealed that in a number of important areas parents are not equal partners. These are school governance, curriculum decisions regarding their children, choice of school placement, and admission and discharge of their children. An important finding was that in residential schools, because parents are not part of the immediate school community the concept of "parents as partners" is difficult to achieve. Most rural parents live great distances away from the school. Time, distance, work commitments, family commitments, and financial constraints make participation almost impossible. An implication of this study is that if residential schools continue to exist there is a need for the school to take cognisance of the various contextual factors that influence parental involvement in such a setting. Schools should find creative ways to overcome barriers that may exist. Schools need to be aware of recent policy developments regarding the rights of parents, for example, the South African Schools Act. Issues such as parent participation in school governance, their right to choice, and their rights regarding educational decisions on their children, enshrined in policy documents need to be, addressed collaboratively with parents. Another important implication is that policy makers need to review the role of large residential schools in meeting the educational needs of children with disabilities, in particular the long term goal of children gaining full citizenship in their communities. / Thesis (M.Ed.)-University of Natal, 1996.
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Factors that explain gender based-violence [sic] amongst secondary school learners in the Inanda area.Nkani, Frances Nomvuyo. January 2006 (has links)
The prevalence of gender-based violence in South African schools has been
identified by the research and the Department of Education has
acknowledged its existence. However, little has been done to alleviate the
problem. Female learners are continually victimized by male learners at
school.
The purpose of this study was to examine the factors that explain gender-based
violence amongst learners from three secondary schools in the Inanda
area. Inanda is a predominantly informal settlement area on the outskirts of
Durban, in South Africa.
This study has largely focussed on female learners as victims of gender-based
violence perpetrated by male learners. Both quantitative and qualitative
methods had been adopted through which data was collected. School records
were reviewed and one perpetrator and the victim were chosen from each
school. The two participants were then, interviewed in order to get both
perspectives.
The data collected revealed that there are other kinds of gender-based
violence besides those that were identified from the records review. The
findings from the interviews outlined the factors that explain gender-based
violence in schools. In conclusion, some recommendations were made in the
light of the findings. / Thesis (M.Ed.) - University of KwaZulu-Natal, Durban, 2006.
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Gendered experiences : a study of four women heads in the department of commerce.Naidoo, Dayanathie. January 2002 (has links)
Social discourses and gender equality policies in South Africa has enabled the entry of
significant numbers of women into predominantly male domains of educational
leadership. In this study, the lived experiences, of four women heads of department in
four historically race classified schools in the Durban Metropolitan area, are explored.
This study probes the gendered experiences, in which, race and class are inextricably
interwoven, as heads of department in commerce and questions the extent to which their
leadership positions are a reflection of gender equality. Based on semi-structured
interviews with the research participants (black, coloured, Indian and white), this study
argues that despite occupying the status of head of department the research participants
still assume gender subjective roles. Although, some evidence exists of changing
patterns of these women's lives at different stages, the study reveals that the public and
private spheres of work and family are not separate entities; they intersect and impinge,
with particular implications for the position of women within the sphere of education
leadership. The study reveals that despite an overarching discourse of gender equality,
discourses of leadership are primarily about gender, race and class structure in the lived
experiences of the participants. The gendered experiences overall was such that they
inhibited these women from applying for further promotion. In effect, the study shows
that these women, irrespective of being educated and occupying positions of leadership,
are still in a state of subjugation and male domination. / Thesis (M.Ed.) - University of Durban-Westville, 2002.
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Exploring inclusion and exclusion in eduation : a case study of a rural primary school in KwaZulu-Natal.Naidoo, Gonasagaran Theeyaagaraj. January 1998 (has links)
The study explores barriers to learning and development experienced by learners at a rural school situated in Upper Tongaat, on the North Coast of KwaZulu-Natal. Qualitative research methodology, which took the form of a case study, was used. The barriers to learning that the learners at the school experienced were examined from the perspective of both the learners and teachers. Other social factors that may affect a
learner's development such as poverty, poor health and poor living conditions were also explored. The data was gathered through semi-structured interviews and participant observation. Although policy documents such as the White Paper on Education and
Training (1995) and the South African Schools Act (1996) emphasize the provision of quality basic education for all learners, the study found that learners at this rural school
continue to be marginalized. Factors in this schooling context, such as the poor physical environment, overcrowded classrooms, inadequate teaching resources, lack of ongoing professional development, and socio-economic factors such as poverty and poor health care, impede access to the curriculum. The major challenge at the school is how areas such as school organization, ethos, curriculum, teacher development and community involvement can be improved so that the barriers to learning and development can be overcome. / Thesis (M.Ed.)-University of Natal, 1998.
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Senior primary school educators' experiences of teaching functional and creative writing : a case study of a school in KwaZulu-Natal.Pillay, Vannessa Delphine. January 2011 (has links)
The Minister of Basic Education, Angie Motshekga, has stated that “the Annual National Assessment (ANA) results for 2011 are an indication that the education sector needs to focus even more on its core functions of quality learning and teaching”. ANA is the standardized national assessments for Languages and Mathematics in the intermediate phase (Grades 4-6) and in Literacy and Numeracy for the foundation phase (Grades One to Three). The Grade Six national average in Languages was 28%. Of these grade six learners, only 30% achieved above 35%. The Minister attributed these results to “an under-emphasis on the development of the basic skills for reading and writing”. In the school studied in this dissertation, the average percentage achievement in the ANA for learners from Grade Three to Grade Six was between 18% and 23% for languages. This data revealed that learners lacked basic writing skills.
This dissertation explores and describes the experiences of three educators when teaching functional and creative writing. Data was collected through in-depth interviews. The three educators teach English at the school. The school is situated in a low socio-economic area of Cato Manor, near Durban.
The findings indicate the need for educators to be specialists in the field of Languages and Mathematics in order to improve experiences of teaching and learning. Secondly, lack of sufficient resources, such as lack of the workbooks introduced by the Department of Education, hinder the teaching and learning process. Sustainability of professional development and teambuilding exercises leads to effective teaching and learning. Dewey (1933) revealed that reflection on experience leads to learning. Whole school reflective practice will improve experiences of the teaching and learning of creative and functional writing.
There is a close link between challenges and experiences. The researcher in this study is working from the perspective that all teachers have positive and negative experiences. On the other hand not all teachers face challenges when teaching functional and creative writing. / Thesis (M.Ed.)-University of KwaZulu-Natal, Edgewood, 2011.
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