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Environmental education in secondary schools in metropolitan Durban : opportunities and constraints in the use of the natural environmentChristian, Colin R January 1988 (has links)
Bibliography: leaves 168-177. / The study is placed in the context of the development of Environmental Education and the integral role of fieldwork in fulfilling its objectives. The requirements of teachers regarding the use of natural areas for environmental/ecological fieldwork were investigated by means of two surveys which used open-ended questions and numerical rating scales. An exploratory postal survey of school principals was used to investigate the current use of natural areas by schools and the relative importance of constraints upon fieldwork. It was found that, while most White schools made some formal use of natural areas, fewer Asian and Coloured schools did so, and fieldwork amongst Black schools was almost non-existent. Extra curricular fieldwork was primarily a phenomenon in White schools. Constraints varied in importance between schools in different education departments but overall a lack of teacher training in fieldwork was the major constraint. Interviews with a sample of teachers who had used natural areas provided detailed information on their environmental/ecological fieldwork requirements. Three hypotheses relating to factors influencing teacher choice of fieldwork sites were tested. In this regard it was found that certain intrinsic characteristics of natural areas, and the availability of teaching resources (including site-specific training and educational field officers) were important influences. Increasing transport costs, while often a secondary consideration, may increase the future demand for local fieldwork sites. The specific characteristics and facilities required of natural areas were investigated in detail. The study concluded that the Durban Metropolitan Open Space System has considerable potential to meet the environmental fieldwork requirements of schools. Towards this end a set of criteria for selecting appropriate natural areas, and a list of priorities for developing them, were established.
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The fostering of entrepreneurship at secondary schools in the north Durban regionNarain, Nalinee January 2003 (has links)
Dissertation submitted in partial fulfillment for the Masters in Technology: Entrepreneurship, Durban Institute of Technology, 2003. / The Department of Education has, since 1998, introduced entrepreneurship education in government schools, for the first time. One of the overall developmental outcomes of the curriculum, of which there are five, is to develop entrepreneurial capacities. Economic and Management Sciences, one of the eight learning areas, encourages learners to develop basic skills and knowledge needed to manage their lives and their environments effectively; to understand the basics of the economy and how it works, and develop basic entrepreneurship, financial management and planning skills to operate effectively in the economy / M
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The Chief Superintendent of Education Management as communication link between the districts and circuits of the EThekwini Region of the KwaZulu-Natal Department of Education and CultureNyembe-Kganye, Phumzile January 2005 (has links)
A dissertation submitted in
fulfilment of the
requirements for the degree
of
D.Iitt. in Communication
Science
University of Zululand,
2005 / The focus of this study is on effective communication that can be
used between the district and the circuit in order to optimise
communication. There are traditional forms of communication that
are still used by Departmental officials yet the information conveyed
through those forms of communication take too long to reach the
final destination and as a result thereof the information comes just
days before the deadline or sometimes way after the deadline. This
problem leads to a situation where the work is done in a haphazard
way just because people want to meet the dead line. New forms of
communication such as E-Mail can convey information within a split
of a second all over the wodd The findings reveal that some of the
Chief Superintendents of Education Management are not familiar
with some of the new forms of communication and therefore cannot
even confirm whether those forms of communication are useful or
not The Department of Education will therefore have to introduce
these new forms of communication at district level as well as at circuit level in order to optimise communication between the district and the circuit
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An analysis of policy development within the Centre for Adult Education at the University of Natal (1971-1991)Mackie, Robin Duncan Alfred January 1995 (has links)
Bibliography: pages 181-189. / The construction of macro level policy is made more difficult by the absence of a reservoir of analytical accounts which raise issues which policy at that level must address. This study is concerned with the development of policy within a very specific context and as such it is a modest and limited contribution to the development of that reservoir of theorised practice of adult education in South Africa. In this it is both a documentary record of the development of adult education at the University of Natal and an exploration of the dynamics of the policies which were evolved to direct that development. The study is thus a descriptive and analytical account of the work of the Centre for Adult Education at the University of Natal over the 20 year period from 1971 to 1991 set against the context of the broad development of adult education in South Africa in general and developments in university based adult education development in particular.
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An investigation into quality practices at private higher and further education institutions in the Durban Central Business DistrictRamlagan, Rabindutt January 2009 (has links)
Submitted in fulfilment of the requirements for the
Masters Degree in Technology: Quality,
in the Department of Operations and Quality Management,
Durban University of Technology, 2009. / Higher education institutions are faced with an increasing number of complex
challenges including implementing and maintaining a quality management
system. In addition, the transformation of higher education brought about further
regulations, especially to private higher and further education institutions.
Managing the change in private higher and further education became complex as
institutions were required to meet the Department of Education’s registration
requirements and the HEQC and Umalusi Council’s quality audit criteria
requirements.
Hence, this study reviewed related literature which represented sources of
information, to determine the nature of PHE and FET institutions. The literature
further scanned business quality tools and the SAEM and their applicability to
private higher and further education. It was established that the TQM philosophy
and the ISO 9001: 2000 quality standard, applied in an integrated system, was
suitable for higher education. The review identified the SAEM as a suitable model
to use as a basis for an integrated quality management system.
From the literature review, the nature of PHE and FET institutions and the
requirements of the HEQC and Umalusi Council were established. A significant
finding was that PHE and FET institutions did not have an internal quality
management system in place. This revelation led to the research investigation on
finding the needs and deficiencies of FET and PHEIs. A questionnaire, using
mainly open-ended questions, was designed and administered to FET and
PHEIs for this purpose. The responses revealed that some quality practices
were in place but, overall, the quality arrangements were inadequate. The results
of the research investigation and the principles of the business quality tools were
integrated into the SAEM’s principles. This process led to the formation of an
Integrated Quality Model. This Integrated Quality Model was recommended as an
internal quality management system for FET and PHEIs
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The role of the principal in the management of teacher stress in selected secondary schools in ChatsworthGovender, Magesvari January 2002 (has links)
Mini-dissertation submitted in partial compliance with the requirements for the Master's Degree in Technology: Education, Technikon Natal, 2002. / South Africa has been undergoing political change and this has impacted on education. There have been major shifts in education policy, structures and curriculum. Stakeholders in education and teachers, in particular, have had to cope with this new reality. As a result of the changes in education, teachers have been confronted with a variety of problems such as fewer resources, an increase in working hours and having to perform numerous administrative and fund-raising tasks. New school management structures have been established, class sizes have been altered and Outcomes-based Education has been introduced. Poor working conditions, increased workload, role conflict and ambiguity, the threat of redundancy and re-deployment, time pressures and pupil problems are additional stressors that teachers find themselves exposed to at school. These are but some of the stressors that have contributed towards teachers experiencing stress at school and which have impacted negatively on their work performance. However, at both the Education Department level as well as at school level, very little appears to be done to address the problem of teacher stress despite the negative impact that teacher stress has on the work performance of teachers. In order for schools to function efficiently and effectively, school management authorities will have to devise appropriate strategies to manage teacher stress. This study is confined to those aspects of teacher stress that impact negatively on teacher performance and that are within the scope of the principal's responsibilities at school. It Page vii investigates whether teacher stress is a management issue by examining its impact on the work performance of teachers at school, identifies school-based and school-related stressors and presents a set of recommendations that can be used by school principals to manage teacher stress in secondary schools. The findings of this study are also compared with the / M
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An investigation into quality practices at private higher and further education institutions in the Durban Central Business DistrictRamlagan, Rabindutt January 2009 (has links)
Submitted in fulfilment of the requirements for the
Masters Degree in Technology: Quality,
in the Department of Operations and Quality Management,
Durban University of Technology, 2009. / Higher education institutions are faced with an increasing number of complex
challenges including implementing and maintaining a quality management
system. In addition, the transformation of higher education brought about further
regulations, especially to private higher and further education institutions.
Managing the change in private higher and further education became complex as
institutions were required to meet the Department of Education’s registration
requirements and the HEQC and Umalusi Council’s quality audit criteria
requirements.
Hence, this study reviewed related literature which represented sources of
information, to determine the nature of PHE and FET institutions. The literature
further scanned business quality tools and the SAEM and their applicability to
private higher and further education. It was established that the TQM philosophy
and the ISO 9001: 2000 quality standard, applied in an integrated system, was
suitable for higher education. The review identified the SAEM as a suitable model
to use as a basis for an integrated quality management system.
From the literature review, the nature of PHE and FET institutions and the
requirements of the HEQC and Umalusi Council were established. A significant
finding was that PHE and FET institutions did not have an internal quality
management system in place. This revelation led to the research investigation on
finding the needs and deficiencies of FET and PHEIs. A questionnaire, using
mainly open-ended questions, was designed and administered to FET and
PHEIs for this purpose. The responses revealed that some quality practices
were in place but, overall, the quality arrangements were inadequate. The results
of the research investigation and the principles of the business quality tools were
integrated into the SAEM’s principles. This process led to the formation of an
Integrated Quality Model. This Integrated Quality Model was recommended as an
internal quality management system for FET and PHEIs
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"We sow the seed": perspectives of health educators at the Institute of Family and Community Health in Durban in the 1940s and 1950s.Vis, Louise. January 2004 (has links)
Health education is critical to the success of a community health program. Yet the
majority of research on health education is conducted from the point of view of
programme designers or evaluators. Where health educators themselves are the focus,
data is often generated through surveys, questionnaires, field notes, or quantitative
measures. Narrative accounts by health educators describing their activities and their
perceptions of programme efficacy are thus a neglected line of inquiry.
My thesis examines one group of health educators who trained and worked with
Sidney and Emily Kark at the Institute of Family and Community Health in Durban
during the 1940s and 1950s. The importance of health educators in the Institute's project
has often been acknowledged by key figures like the Kark, but few scholars have
highlighted the contributions of these paraprofessionals. As catalysts of change and
disseminators of knowledge, their role was encapsulated by health educator Neela
Govender: "So many things people can do to [become] aware of health problems, and
how much they themselves could be responsible for their own health ... that's not
something they can forget. They will pass it on to another generation, or influence each
other. We sow the seed, and it must grow, and spread".
In focusing on the health educators' role, I seek to integrate perspectives of
"history from below" to enhance previous analyses that concentrated on doctors and
government administrators as the main architects of the Institute of Family and
Community Health. To this end, I have collected testimony of health educators as a
valuable source of historical evidence, which not only uncovers a foot soldier's view of
what the Karks called a "practice of social medicine" but also illuminates various social,
political, and economic contexts underpinning health education in South Africa.
This study used oral history techniques to explore how retired health educators
perceived their experiences at the Institute. It thematically analysed their narratives to
gain a sense of their training, goals, methods and working conditions in segregationist and
apartheid-era South Africa. My interview subjects were predominantly women
whose work reflected the centrality of maternal, child, and family health to the Institute.
As intermediaries between the clinic and the community, they were integral to the
Institute of Family and Community Health's investigation of the links between health and
culture. The themes of race, gender and culture were as pertinent in the mid-twentieth
century as they are today in the delivery of health services; health educators' narratives
might provide insights into how such conceptual factors influence the operation of
community health programs in contemporary South Africa. The ways in which the
Institute's health educators became active agents in the face of oppressive circumstances
also contain potential lessons for their counterparts currently struggling to address an
HIV/AIDS epidemic with inadequate resources and governmental support. / Thesis (M.Med.Sc.)-University of KwaZulu-Natal, 2004.
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An investigation into the exercise of male power in middle management in Technikons in KwaZulu-Natal, with particular reference to verbal communicationTurnbull-Jackson, Carolyn Jeannette Anne January 1998 (has links)
Dissertation submitted in partial compliance with the requirements for the Masters Degree in Technology: Education (Management) at Technikon Natal / This study focused on the exercise of male power in middle management in technikons in KwaZulu-Natal, with particular reference to verbal communication. The glass ceiling, blocking promotions to senior positions, is a reality for women in technikons and the researcher explored the ways in which exploitation and marginalisation occur when sexism and power is wielded by males through verbal communication. / M
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Gesindheid van onderwysers in gewone skole teenoor leerders met spesiale onderwysbehoeftesWessels, Daniel 04 1900 (has links)
Summaries in Afrikaans and English / Die wereldwye neiging in die onderwys wat bekend staan as lnsluiting is
teweeggebring deur die reg van elke individu op onderrig, soos vasgele in die
Universele Verklaring van Menseregte van 1948, tesame met die hernieude
onderneming van die wereldgemeenskap' op die Wereldkonferensie oor
Opvoeding vir Almal van 1990 om daardie reg, ten spyte van individuele
•
verskille, te verskans. Aile aanduidings is dat Suid-Afrika ook die beleid van
lnsluiting sal aanvaar in die regering se pogings om die onderwys te
hervorm. Hierdie beleid van lnsluiting hou groot implikasies in vir die
onderwyser in, die gewone skole, aangesien hulle beida die voorwerp en die
. agent is van sodanige hervorming. Daar word aanvaar dat die onderwyser se
houding teenoor leerders in die algemeen 'n belangrike rol speel met
betrekking tot die sukses van die onderrig- en leergebeure in die klaskamer.
Hierdie houding word dikwels bepaal deur die · onderwyser se kennis van
leerders in die klaskamer en sy vaardighede met betrekking tot hul onderrig.
In die lig van die literatuurstudie, wat daarop dui dat onderwysers nie
voldoende opleiding ontvang om aan die behoeftes van leerders met spesiale
onderwysbehoeftes te voldoen nie, word in hierdie navorsing die houding van
die onderwyser in die gewone skool teenoor die leerders met spesiale
onderwysbehoeftes soos dit in die praktyk openbaar word bepaal. / The right of every individual to education, as enshrined in the 1948 Universal
Declaration of Human Rights, and the renewing of the pledge made by the world
community at the 1990 World Conference on Education for All to ensure that right,
regardless of individual differences, gave rise to the worldwide trend in education
known as Inclusion. All indications are that South Africa will also adopt the policy
of Inclusion as part of the government's efforts to reform education. The policy of
Inclusion has major implications for the teachers in the ordinary school, as they
are both the subjects and the agents of reform. It is generally believed that
teachers' attitudes towards learners plays a major role ·in the success of the
teaching-learning events in the classroom. These attitudes are often influenced by
..
the teachers' knowledge of the learners in their classrooms and their skill in
teaching them. In view of literature that suggests that teachers are not adequately
trained to meet the needs of learners, with special Educational needs, this study
undertakes to investigate the attitude of teachers in the ordinary school towards
learners with special educational needs, as it manifests in practice. / Educational Studies / M.Ed. (Ortopedagogiek)
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