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Die rol van die kurrikulum in private skole in die RSAErasmus, Lourens Jacobus 23 April 2014 (has links)
M.Ed. (Curriculum Studies) / This research focuses on the role the curriculum plays in the existence of certain types of private schools in the RSA. Private schools in South Africa currently number in excess of 500 and the number is increasing every year. The various private schools claim that they offer curricula suited to the specific needs of certain pupils. A structured interview was compiled and used to interview three different schools namely a volkskool (a people's school), a church school and an independent school. The responses received during the interview were then analysed and interpreted to reach certain conclusions and to put forward certain recommendations. It was inter alia concluded that: The volkskool (people's school) attaches importance to religion and ethnicity. The church school stresses the religious principles of a specific church. The independent school considers the economic demands of the world we live in as of importance. For a child to cope in the adult world he must be academically prepared and qualified. It was furthermore established that the processes of curriculum design and development do take place in private schools. This is inter alia evident from the specific subjects that are offered in certain private schools. While a subject like "Volksgeskiedenis" (History of the people) is offered at volkskole, Church History is taught at church schools, and independent schools concentrate on, for instance, Life Skills to prepare their respective pupils towards eventual choices of career. It is then concluded that to effect a stable education environment private schools should be given the greatest amount of freedom to compile their own curricula.
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Challenges faced by research coordinators in the Limpopo Provincial GovernmentMalindi, Ndivhuwo Edward 05 1900 (has links)
MPM / Oliver Tambo Institute of Governance and Policy Studies / See the attached abstract below
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An analysis of the constitution of a school subject through recontextualizing : the case of the NAC drama syllabus (1994)Hoadley, Ursula Kate January 1997 (has links)
This study sets out to develop a framework for the analysis of a school subject and uses as a focal study the NAC drama syllabus developed in1994. Drawing in the main on Basil Bernstein's theory of curriculum, an analysis is made of how a syllabus is constituted through recontextualizing, using the theoretical concepts of voice and identity, classification and framing, and hierarchy. The discourses that have been recontextualized in the formation of the syllabus are identified. Two sets of discourses are identified: educational policy discourses (namely the discourses of progressivism, utilitarianism and reconstruction and development) and educational drama discourses. The specialization of voice in the syllabus marks out the academic identity, and is an indicator of educational drama discourses evident in the syllabus. The specialization of identity marks out projected social identities, indicating the recruitment of educational policy discourses in the constitution of the syllabus. The field in which the syllabus is constructed is also examined, which following Bernstein is defined as the recontextualizing field. The syllabus writers, located in this field, act selectively on the educational policy and educational drama discourses in constituting the syllabus. The rules for selection in the development of the syllabus are examined, and these are related to the syllabus writers' situation within the recontextualizing field. It is argued that the syllabus writers are positioned subordinately within the field, and that this factor to a large extent regulates the operation of educational policy discourses as rules for selection in the drawing up of the syllabus .
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An investigation into knowledge and change in a Grade 9 environmental research projectWebber, Susan Marion January 2011 (has links)
This study considers a Grade 9 Integrated Environmental Research Project which was implemented as a vehicle to induce knowledge-based change in learners. It was noted that change did not occur as hoped, and this study was undertaken to review the Grade 9 Project in order to improve it and to probe the apparent gap between knowledge and action. The study generated evidence on the learning processes within the project. This revealed a number of contradictions and tensions which limit change initiatives within the local environment. Notable here was a contradictory mandate between undertaking a research-based change project and responding to the rubric of assessment which was not linked to the research done. It was found that faced with this dual mandate, learners chose to focus on the assessment-laden mandate as this was the ultimate agenda that would reap the reward within the traditional school environment. The study examines the gap between knowledge and practice to probe ways in which to close this gap in the context of an environmental research assignment. The outcome is a recommendation that we as the project designers review the evidence of tensions and contradictions revealed in the study to reflect on the underlying purpose of the project and reshape it in light of recent literature on the challenges of social learning and change.
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Exploring pedagogical innovation in core curriculum serving first year students in a South African UniversityPorteus, Kimberley Ann January 2013 (has links)
This study explores the potential for critical pedagogical innovation to expand student learning activity, meaning making and learning agency of first year undergraduate students. The study is located in a larger critical project. Rather than looking to support ‘unprepared’ students to better adapt to the current culture of higher education, the larger critical project looks to the generative potential of new students to elaborate the structure of higher education itself over time. The study emanates from a process of reflective self-critique of one higher education institution in South Africa serving a student population with little access to educational advantage. The emerging critique was located at the interface of institutional practice, student learning activity and the meaning making processes mediating the two domains. This critique gave birth to the pedagogical innovation at the centre of this study. The pedagogical innovation took the form of an activity system, with three sets of pedagogical tools mediating the system: tools to expand the learning practice of students, symbolic tools to expand the critical meaning making toolkit available, and tools designed to build a new learning community better aligned with interactive learning activity. This study is an intervention case study, theoretically grounded in the work of activity and socio-cultural theorists. The pedagogy was embedded within a semester long credit-bearing core course for entering first year students. The study follows the experience of the 652 students participating in the 2010 pilot experience. Upwards of 70% of students suggest that their reading (76%) and writing (71%) practice had changed by the end of the course. Over 80% indicated that the course made them better readers (85%) and writers (84%.) Students suggest that they read and write more and enjoy reading and writing more. They suggest that as motive expanded, activity of reading and writing expanded, complimentary activity expanded (e.g. expression and critical engagement), and participation across a number of domains expanded. Students with less historical access to educational advantage made stronger claims about the pedagogical toolkit than students with more access to educational advantage. This study suggests that under the right conditions, critical pedagogy focusing on student learning activity and meaning making can expand learning practice and meaning making of first year undergraduate students, contributing to an expanding claim on learning agency. It tentatively suggests that this type of learning architecture is well aligned for appropriation of students with less access to historical socio-educational learning privilege, but remains sensitive to the situated nature of historic disadvantage (for example, in campus sites.) The study points to the specific potential of three toolkits: toolkits to mediate expanded learning activity, toolkits to expand meaning making, and toolkits designed to directly reconstitute the learning community itself. The study concludes by extracting some lessons for critical pedagogical innovation serving first year studies into the future. It points to the importance of the domain of learning activity and meaning making, and suggests the kind of changes within the culture of higher education required to better unleash innovation in this area. It points to the generative potential of methods that better combine students and lecturers within pedagogical innovation processes. The study concludes by pointing to the relatively unoccupied area of critical research, whereby the work to expand the learning activity of first year students is aligned to the potential of students to elaborate the structure of higher education itself over time. The study points to three specific research areas: research building stronger pedagogical tools for first year students; research to better understand the critical meaning making project of students; and research to better understand the transformation of the pedagogical inheritance within higher education.
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Assessment and automatic progression of learners in the foundation phaseMoime, Winnifred Motsei 11 1900 (has links)
Changes in Education usually brings along with it problems of curriculum
implementation, such as assessment, evaluation and curriculum design. One of the
major problems is how learners are going to be assessed for progression and how the
teachers are going to adapt to these new approaches.
In this research the focus was on the following problems:
Are the new assessment criteria met by the facilitator?
Can the opinions/ideas and attitudes of facilitators be transformed?
Do facilitators understand the new assessment criteria and how to use them?
To find out how knowledgeable the educators are on assessment criteria and
what the educators average attitudes are towards the new assessment criteria.
In the empirical research data was gleaned by means of questionnaires. Thereafter,
correlation coefficient was used to determine the correlation between variables and the
t-test and chi-square test were used to test the null hypothesis. / Psychology of Education / M.Ed. (Psychology of Education)
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Evaluating the effectiveness of Umalusi council for quality assurance in general and further education and training as a public entity in the South African education regulatory systemThomas, Jeremy Ralph 31 March 2008 (has links)
The South African government like most governments around the world create
public entities to perform functions on its behalf and achieve particular
objectives ranging from facilitating investments, delivering services or
providing goods and advice. These public entities receive annual funding
either whole or in part from the national fiscus and report to parliament through
their respective Ministries. In the 2005/6 financial year government funded
Umalusi 7, 69 million rands through direct transfer payments from the
Department of Education, excluding any indirect payments from other
governmental structures. Many public entities, about three hundred and thirty
odd or so in South Africa, were promulgated to ensure and improve service
delivery to the nation. However, they were not intended to be seen as an
extension of their reporting departments. This research work evaluates the
effectiveness of Umalusi in the education regulatory system and seeks to find
ways to improve public entity effectiveness using the South African Excellence
Model (SAEM) as the base tool to measure organisational effectiveness. A
brief conclusion to this study is that Umalusi as a public entity, is adequately
meeting its intended purpose. This is confirmed through its annual reports
having never received a qualified audit since its inception. This research
triangulates the results of the South African Excellence Model, the
Questionnaire to senior education officials and the Auditors' Reports to confirm
that Umalusi is effective as a public entity in the South African regulatory
system. / Busniness Management / M.Tech. (Busniness Administration)
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The role of integrated quality management system to measure and improve teaching and learning in South African further education and training sectorDhlamini, Joseph Thabang 12 1900 (has links)
Since 1994, South African education system has been undergoing continuous transformation which had an impact on the quality of teaching and learning. There appeared to be a huge underperformance in the High School and FET College learners which for many years forced Universities to embark on bridging courses in order to enroll new students. Furthermore, a misalignment of college’s National Technical Diploma (NATED) programmes that did not afford college graduates an opportunity to register with Universities nor Universities of Technology brought about the questioning of the quality of teaching and learning in the FET College sector. Tabling the unified quality improvement plans in education in South Africa, the Education Ministry introduced an integrated approach to measure teaching and learning with the view of identifying improvement strategies. However, the implementation of this integrated tool called the Integrated Quality Management System had educators and managers attaching ambiguous meanings to the system. The IQMS instrument is meant to be a dependable quality assurance tool to measure and improve the quality of teaching and learning. The ambiguity lies with educators and managers referring to IQMS as a means to acquire 1% pay progression and the possible return of the old apartheid systems’ inspectorate. This research study was promulgated by a concern on the effectiveness and efficiency of implementing the IQMS instrument to measure the quality of teaching and learning in South African FET sector. In exploring literature on the concept of quality teaching and learning in the FET sector in South Africa, the researcher identified that similar trends of integrating quality management systems in education are being followed globally. The difference to the South African system is the attachment of the salary progression of 1% as an incentive to performance. In view of the
introduction of the new system of education and training, the researcher realized that ‘short cut’ processes were followed in preparing educators to be able to offer new education programmes using the OBE system of teaching and learning. That appeared to be another shortfall to the adequacy of implementing IQMS as a quality assurance instrument to measure the quality of teaching and learning in the FET sector in South Africa.
In addition, there appeared to be conflicting trends in the FET sector where the same sector provided curriculum 2005 programmes for schools which differed from college programmes offering National Certificate Vocational {NC(V)}. Both sectors were expected to use IQMS as a tool to measure the quality of teaching and learning with the view of enhancing improvement thereof. Furthermore, the end product of the FET sector for both schools and colleges is the Further Education and Training Certificate (FETC). Unfortunately, it was difficult for the education department to achieve its objectives because time frames to prepare educators and the critical element of providing adequate human resources for the implementation of IQMS could not be met through Umalusi the national quality assurance body for the sector.
The FET Sector which is expected to deliver Education and Training to produce quality students for HE sector and the world of work is faced with shortfalls of quality delivery. The driving force of this research study was to explore the dependability and adequacy of implementing IQMS as a quality assurance instrument to effectively and efficiently measure the quality of teaching and learning to meet the expected outcomes. It is in this regard that the researcher through empirical evidence realized that IQMS did not have theoretical grounding hence there are no principles, procedures or processes that govern the implementation of this very important system.
In addition, the empirical evidence from the qualitative study proved that quality delivery of teaching and learning has been monitored using diverse assessment practices. A variety of assessment tools like the TQM and QMS which exist in FET Colleges with the summative IQMS in FET Schools of which the three practices are premised around Quality Management. Quality Management refers to a process where quality delivery in a school, college or any other organization is systematically managed to maintain the competence of the organization. It is in this regard that TQM, QMS and IQMS refer to Quality Assurance Practices in any organization that is geared to effective and efficient client relations. / Teacher Education / D.Ed. (Education Management)
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Conceptual framework for an advertising balanced scorecard : case of the mobile network communication industry in South AfricaAyingono Moussavou, Sandra 12 1900 (has links)
Thesis (MComm (Business Management))--Stellenbosch University, 2008. / Measuring advertising effectiveness has become an increasingly important issue due
to the substantial sums of money invested in the advertising industry. The purpose of
this research was to design an Advertising Balanced Scorecard (ABSC), which is an
adaptation to the advertising field of the managerial Balanced Scorecard (BSC). The
ABSC was developed to identify a balanced pattern between the perspectives leading
to effectiveness, namely strategy, execution, media and creative, in order to measure
and control advertising effectiveness. This study reviews the South African mobile
communication industry and Vodacom in particular. It examines Vodacom’s
successful marketing and advertising strategy with a special attention given to iconic
advertising by the use of a character such as Maurice the meerkat. After investigating
the elements of Vodacom’s award winning advertisements, a balance between
strategy, execution, media and creative could not be isolated systematically.
However, when fewer perspectives were involved balance could be reached. The
results therefore confirm the complexity of advertising effectiveness measurement
and indicate that measurement of advertising effectiveness is possible when focus is
placed on fewer perspectives.
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Implementering van ‘n personeelprestasiebestuurstelsel deur maatskaplikewerkbestuurders in diens van Departement Maatskaplike OntwikkelingNolan, Tassia 03 1900 (has links)
Thesis (M Social Work (Social Work))--University of Stellenbosch, 2009. / The primary objective of this study is to establish a holistic view of performance
managementsystem in the Provincial Government and to assess the extent of
implementation and the application of performance management, together with the
challenges facing the social work managers in this regard. Furthermore it sought to
identify the gaps and key priorities required for effective and efficient performance
management processes. The study was preceded by a comprehensive literature
study whereby the necessisty and purpose of performance mananagement were
identified. Furthermore the valuable aspects and the characteristics of performance
management in social work have been described. The persons involved in the
performance management system were investigated tot determine the nature and
scope of the performance managegement system that are implemented.
The importance of the participation of both the supervisor (manager) and the social
worker was determined. The report highlights the importance of a process approach
and uses it as a lens for understanding performance management system. It indicate
the change in focus from performance evalution to performanance management,
which focuses less on productivity or the input or physical activities applied in
achieving the results or outputs as such, but rather on the extent to which predetermined
objectives/goals are effectively and efficiently met through the
measurement of outputs/results against agreed-upon performance standards.
An empirical study wat undertaken where both qualitative and quantitative
methodologies were applied to achieve the objective of the research. The
quantitative methods comprised out of a questionnaires purely for and data collection
and the qualitative approach entailed the open-ended questions in the questionnaire.
It sought to identify the gaps and key priorities required for the implentation of an
effective and efficient performance management processes. The report highlights the
importance of a developmental approach in applying the performance management
system.
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