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Management of the implementation of internal continuous assessment at Western College in GautengSebetlene, Selaelo Peter January 2017 (has links)
A research report submitted to the Faculty of Law and Management University of Witwatersrand, in 25% fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Management (in the field of Public and Development), 2016 / The National Certificate: Vocational (NCV) qualification was introduced at Technical and Vocational Education and Training (TVET) colleges in 2007 to enable students to acquire necessary skills and knowledge that would prepare them effectively for the world of work. The NCV is an outcomes-based curriculum and its introduction was accompanied by a general shift to outcomes-based teaching and learning approaches, as well as a rigorous assessment and moderation regime, particularly with regards to the internal assessment (ICASS) component. The shift required lecturers to adopt multi-dimensional assessment of skills, knowledge, understanding, attitudes, values and dispositions when assessing students. The report released by Umalusi in 2014 pointed out a number of factors that negatively affect the implementation of ICASS at some TVET colleges.
The aim of the study was to explore the factors that constrain or enhance the implementation of the ICASS component of the NCV at TVET colleges. Literature related to the research topic was consulted and, subsequently, document analysis and semi-structured interviews were used to determine ICASS practices applied at Western College (Westcol) for TVET. ICASS requirements as per NCV-related policies and the current ICASS practices at the college were compared to determine the factors that (including those cited by Umalusi) hinder or promote ICASS implementation.
The findings reflected that lack of resources (mainly financial and physical resources, as well as under-qualified and unqualified lecturers at the college) hinder the effective implementation of the ICASS component in some subjects at the college. Furthermore, the quality of the assessment elements was of great concern. Most interviewees reported that: some of the ICASS tasks in various subjects were of poor quality; there was lack of or poor moderation of tasks; portfolios were incomplete and there was a lack of structured remedial intervention after tasks were conducted. Interviewees attributed the above situation to increased lecturers’ workloads and students’ poor class attendance. The research recommends that the college build capacity for ICASS implementation through the provision of resources, and the training and development of lecturers, as well as partnerships with industries and other institutions to complement and strengthen the college’s limited resources and to apply knowledge management practices so that the college can leverage and benefit from the knowledge it currently possesses, to improve the implementation of the internal assessment component. / XL2018
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Assessment and automatic progression of learners in the foundation phaseMoime, Winnifred Motsei. January 2001 (has links)
Thesis (masters)--University of South Africa, 2001.
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Disability profiles and needs of disability grant recipients in Kleinmond, Western Cape, South Africa / Annette Freig.Frieg, Annette 12 1900 (has links)
Thesis (MPhil (Rehabilitation))--University of Stellenbosch, 2000. / ENGLISH ABSTRACT: The South African National Census (1996) reports a disability prevalence of 6,6% in
South Africa. In November 1999 the government paid out 635 881 temporary or
permanent disability grants. Legislation is in place to allow the Department of Social
Services to administer the grants. For this study demographic information of disability
grant recipients in a semi-rural area was sought in order to improve understanding of
disability and to assist in service delivery. The study was executed in Kleinmond, a
coastal town in the Western Cape with a population of 3 918, where 189 people
reported a disability during the 1996 census.
Objective
The objective of this study was to determine the disability profile, caregiver utilization
and needs of disability grant recipients in Kleinmond, Western Cape, South Africa.
METHODS
A descriptive survey was the study design of choice. The study population consisted
of recipients of a permanent disability grant who collected their grants at the
Kleinmond Post Office in June 1999.
In order to capture the necessary information, a questionnaire was developed based
on the disability catalogue of the International Classification of Impairment, Disability
and Handicap (ICIDH) of the World Health Organisation. Pilot studies were conducted
and the researcher interviewed 29 grantees during the main study in Kleinmond in
June/July 1999. Repeatability of the questionnaire was tested. Ninety six percent of
the responses were the same on the second visit to four randomly selected grantees.
Data was analysed with the statistical software package STATISTICA.
RESULTS
The response rate was 90% (29/32). The mean age of the mainly male grantees was
42 years (range: 18 - 64). Most grantees were single, but the majority stayed with
someone else. Ninety three percent (27/29) were unemployed while 69% (20/29) felt
they were able to work. Most grantees took regular medication and the majority
accessed health services at the primary level local clinic. Twenty five grantees (86%or 25/29) reported multiple disabilities, while one person did not fit into any of the
categories. The most common disability category was situational disability (82% or
24/29). Nineteen persons with disabilities (66% or 19/29) relied on help which was
mainly given by the parents. Assistance was needed with activities such as collecting
the disability grant, shopping and managing money. With regard to needs of grantees,
most found it important to have the clinic closer to their homes (52% or 15/29), to
increase the amount of the disability grant (76% or 22/29) and to raise awareness of
disability in the community (69% or 20/29).
CONCLUSION
Most disability grant recipients in this study reported problems in many of the seven
disability categories of the ICIDH, i.e. multiple disabilities. This is consistent with the
assumption that only severely disabled people qualify for a permanent disability grant
in South Africa. This might explain why the majority of the grantees utilized a
caregiver for some tasks. Needs with regard to health and social services of this
defined group of persons with disabilities in Kleinmond will be brought to the attention
of the authorities, who are planning a new community centre and clinic. / AFRIKAANSE OPSOMMING: Volgens die Nasionale Sensus opname van 1996 is die prevalensie van ongeskiktheid
in Suid- Afrika 6.6%. Bevindinge dui aan dat 635881 individue 'n ongskiktheidstoelaag
ontvang. Hierdie toelae word volgens wetgewing deur die Departement van
Maatskaplike Dienste ge-administreer. In hierdie studie is demografiese inligting van
individue wat 'n ongeskiktheidstoelaag ontvang ingesamel in 'n poging om insig in
gestremdheid en dienslewering aan gestremdes te verbeter. Die studiepopulasie het
bestaan uit individue wat 'n ongeskiktheidstoelaag in die Wes-Kaapse kusdorp
Kleinmond ontvang. Kleinmond het 'n populasie van 3 918 waarvan 189 individue
ongeskik is volgens die 1996 sensus.
DOEL
Die doel van die studie was om 'n ongesiktheidsprofiel van individue in Kleinmond te
bepaal, asook te evalueer of hulle versorgers benodig het en om hulle behoeftes te
bepaal.
METODOLOGIE
Daar is gebruik gemaak van 'n beskrywende studie. Die studiepopulasie het bestaan
uit aile individue woonagtig in Kleinmond wat 'n permanente ongeskiktheidstoelaag
ontvang het en dit by die poskantoor afgehaal het.
Data is deur middel van 'n vraelys ingesamel. Die vraelys is gebaseer op die
ongeskiktheids katalogus van die Internasionale Klassifikasie van Gebrek,
Ongeskiktheid en Gestremdheid (ICIDH) van die Wereld Gesondheidsorganisasie. Die
vraelys is getoets deur middel van loodsstudies. Die betroubaarheid van die vraelys is
ook getoets deur tydens die navorsing dieselfde vrae tydens 'n tweede besoek aan vier
kandidate te stel. Hierdie vier individue is ewekansig geselekteer en 96% van die
response het ooreen gestem met die van die eerste besoek.
Data is verkry van 29 individue gedurende Junie/Julie 1999. Data analise is met behulp
van STATISTICA, 'n statistiese sagteware pakket, gedoen.RESULTATE
Die responskoers was 90% (29/32). Die meerderheid van die studiepopulasie was
manlik met 'n gemiddelde ouderdom van 42 jaar (rykwydte: 18 - 64). Individue was
meerendeels ongetroud en het wonings met ander persone gedeel. Uit die
studiepopulasie was 93% (27/29) individue werkloos. Van hierdie groep het 69%
(20/29) egter gevoel dat hulle wei een of ander vorm van arbeid kan verrig. Bykans aile
individue uit die studiepopulasie het gereeld medikasie gebruik. Die plaaslike prirnere
gesondheids kliniek is deur die meeste individue benut vir gesondheidssorg. Meeste
individue (86% of 25/29) het meer as een ongeskiktheid gehad en een persoon het nie
in enige van die kateqoriee ingepas nie. Die ongeskiktheid wat die mees algemeenste
voorgekom het was situasie-gebonde ongeskiktheid (82% of 24/29). Hulp is hoofsaaklik
deur ouers verskaf en 66% individue (19/29) het van hulp gebruik gemaak. Hierdie hulp
was meestal nodig met aktiwiteite soos die afhaal van die ongeskiktheidtoelaag, die
doen van inkopies en die bestuur van persoonlike finansies.
Die studiepopulasie het 3 groot behoeftes uitgespreek naamlik 'n kliniek nader aan
hulle wonings (52% of 15/29), 'n verhoging in die ongeskiktheidstoelaag (76% of 22/29)
en .n groter bewustheid van ongeskiktheid in die gemeenskap (69% of 20/29).
Samevatting
Baie van die individue uit die studiepopulasie het ongeskikthede in meer as een van die
ongeskiktheidskategoriee aangedui. Hierdie bevinding is in ooreenstemming met die
aanname dat in Suid-Afrika slegs individue met erge ongeskiktheid n
ongeskiktheidstoelaag ontvang. Dit kan moontlik ook verklaar waarom die meerderheid
van die populasie versorgers benodig het vir die uitvoer van sekere take.
Die behoeftes van hierdie studiepopulasie sal onder die aandag van die plaaslike
owerheid, wat tans besig is met die beplanning van 'n nuwe gemeensskapssentrum en
kliniek, gebring word.
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A pilot emperical investigation into student perceptions of service quality at the Department of Management of the University of the Western Cape.Combrinck, Theodore Peter January 2006 (has links)
This pilot research survey was undertaken as a result of the need to assess the service quality within Higher Education in general and the Department of Management at UWC in particular. This report focuses on the complexities of measuring service quality in higher education. The quality of service delivery within education is becoming more important as the competition for students increases.<br />
The literature was searched to find a suitable measure with a sound theoretical structure. This measure was then adapted for the department.<br />
<br />
In a preliminary way this instrument was then applied to students in the department and initial results are reported on.<br />
The results revealed that undergraduates overall were uncertain in their attitude to the service quality in the department. On the other hand, postgraduate students tended to rate the service quality rather more negatively (p < / 0.004). Furthermore there were no gender differences except for tangibles (p = 000.5).<br />
<br />
This pilot study could serve as a pilot study of the service quality in an academic environment. It is the main contention of this report that students themselves should be part of defining quality.
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Narratives of assessment: the newsletter as case study.Scheepers, Jacqueline Norma January 2005 (has links)
<p>The purpose of this thesis was to evaluate success of an integrated newsletter assignment for first year Human Resource Management students as an authentic and meaningful form of assessment by tracing and deciphering the narratives of the role-players. The study also examined the role that the newsletter can play regarding experiential learning, which is an essential component of teaching and learning at technikons in South Africa.</p>
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The social consequences of industrial accidents : disabled mine workers in LesothoArkles, Rachelle Susan January 2016 (has links)
No abstract provided / GR 2016
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The contribution of Randomised Control Trials (RCTs) to improving education evaluations for policy: evidence from developing countries and South African case studiesMohohlwane, Nompumelelo Lungile January 2016 (has links)
A research report submitted to the Wits School of Education, University of Witwatersrand, in
partial fulfilment of the requirements for the degree Master of Education
Submission 17 October 2016 / As access to formal schooling has expanded all over the world, there is acknowledgement that
the quality of learning in many schooling systems, including South Africa, is extremely weak.
Nationally representative samples of South African children participated in the PIRLS 2006 and
pre-PIRLS 2011 studies, along with 48 other countries as a benchmarking exercise to measure
the literacy levels of primary schools according to international standards. The PIRLS 2006 study
indicated that more than 80% of South African children had not yet learned to read with
meaning by grade 5. The pre-PIRLS results provided a new baseline of reading literacy levels for
Grade 4 learners in South Africa, 29% of Grade 4 learners that participated did not have the
rudimentary reading skills required at a Grade 2 level. Learners tested in African languages,
particularly Sepedi and Tshivenda, achieved the lowest performance overall and were
considered to be educationally at risk (University of Pretoria, 2012).
The context in which schooling takes place is key in understanding learner performance in
South Africa. After decades of differential provision of education on the basis of race, the
education system has been overhauled since the early 1990s. The South African government
has introduced several initiatives and policies to address these systemic imbalances. All things
considered, South Africa’s learner performance has remained poor, even relative to several
poorer countries in the region.
There is a wealth of research describing weaknesses in the education system. However, going a
step further and identifying resources and practices that actually improve learner performance
is central to improving education planning, policy and ultimately classroom practice. Rigorous
evidence on classroom-based practice and resources that will have a measurable effect on
learner performance in a developing country like South Africa is limited. The most significant
shortfall of non-experimental evaluation methods (including qualitative and many quantitative
approaches) is the absence of a valid estimate of the counterfactual – what outcomes would
have been obtained amongst programme beneficiaries had they not received the programme.
This often leads to the reporting of large positive effects of programmes being evaluated.
By using a lottery to allocate participants to an intervention and a control group, the
Randomised Control Trial (RCT) methodology constructs a credible ‘counterfactual’ scenario –
what might have happened to those who received an intervention had they not received it. This
study provides a systematic literature-based argument on why RCTs should be part of the
methodological options education researchers and policy makers consider in developing
countries such as South Africa. Both the strengths and limitations of RCTs are discussed in light
of the debate on RCTs and evaluation methods in education, as well as the technical critique of
the methodology. The main critique of external validity is also elaborated on with efforts that
may be taken to diminish the limitations discussed.
In addition, the study illustrates the value of RCTs using data from two South Africa RCTs on
early grade reading interventions through a secondary analysis of the RCT data. The first case
study in Chapter 4, is the Reading Catch-Up Programme (RCUP) conducted in Pinetown,
KwaZulu-Natal. The main findings of the RCUP evaluation were that although learners in
intervention schools improved their test scores between the baseline and the endline
assessment, the learners in comparison schools improved by a similar margin. The results
should contribute to a sobering realisation that the effects of the various interventions
introduced by education stakeholders including NGOs and government are not obviously
positive or more importantly, different from normal schooling. This points to the need to
evaluate programmes before they are rolled out provincially or nationally, using RCTs and other
rigorous methods.
The new analysis of data in this study explores the so-called “Matthew Effect” - the notion that
initially better-performing children typically gain more from additional interventions and from
schooling itself. The data from the RCUP RCT indicates that children with higher baseline test
scores benefited from the intervention, whereas children with very low English proficiency at
the outset did not benefit from the programme. Although females significantly outperform
males in the reading tests used, there was no clear evidence of a differential effect of the
intervention by gender. The Matthew Effect therefore seems to be driven by prior knowledge
and not gender or any other characteristic that was measured in the data.
The second case study in Chapter 5, is the Early Grade Reading Study (EGRS) conducted in the
North West province. The EGRS may be seen as a more extensive follow-up to the RCUP to
answer some of the unanswered questions. For example, will an early grade reading
intervention that is implemented over a longer duration (two years) have an impact? Can
intervening right at the start of school be a strategic point to intervene? Can a Home Language
literacy intervention have lasting educational benefits?
In conclusion, although the policy formulation and evaluation process should draw on research
using a variety of methods, the policy process will certainly be impoverished if there is a lack of
research meeting two core criteria: interventions and findings that are relevant to the larger
schooling population; and the precise measurement of the causal impact of interventions
and/or policies. This study makes a clear literature-based argument on the contribution of
internally valid methods, specifically RCTs in fulfilling these criteria and illustrates this with two
case studies of RCTS. The study also provides a demonstration of the insights that are possible
through secondary analysis founded on the richness of RCT data. / MT2017
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An investigation into the social sciences in the general education and training band : teachers' views and pedagogy as in relation to integration.Iyer, Leevina. January 2011 (has links)
Since the advent of democracy in 1994, there have been several turning points in South African education. One of the key changes has been the conception of Social Sciences (SS) – a learning area under the National Curriculum Statement of 2002. The structure of SS has undergone a significant change with regard to evolving from Human and Social Sciences (HSS) to its current state – SS. The DoE claims that the SS curriculum is the result of integration – a concept which has been widely accepted in the international community.
The aim of this study was to investigate the views and pedagogy of SS teachers with reference to the concept of integration. I engaged in qualitative research and employed the interpretivist paradigm when analysing my data. Research instruments included semi-structured interviews, a picture identification session and a critical discourse analysis (CDA) of key SS policy documents which inform SS pedagogy. Data were analysed through the method of open-coding.
The study concluded that integration has a multitude of meanings, and the conceptualisation and implementation of it differs from teacher to teacher. Integration has now become a generic concept which can be applied to socio-political, economic, educational and environmental spheres of the SS curriculum. For this reason I argue that the SS curriculum may not be foregrounded by the concept of integration, but rather an alternate disciplinary collaboration/s such as interdisciplinarity, pluridisciplinarity and multidisciplinarity. The different disciplinary collaborations has been investigated and applied to the SS curriculum within the South African educational context. / Thesis (M.Ed.)-University of KwaZulu-Natal, Edgewood, 2011.
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A pilot emperical investigation into student perceptions of service quality at the Department of Management of the University of the Western Cape.Combrinck, Theodore Peter January 2006 (has links)
This pilot research survey was undertaken as a result of the need to assess the service quality within Higher Education in general and the Department of Management at UWC in particular. This report focuses on the complexities of measuring service quality in higher education. The quality of service delivery within education is becoming more important as the competition for students increases.<br />
The literature was searched to find a suitable measure with a sound theoretical structure. This measure was then adapted for the department.<br />
<br />
In a preliminary way this instrument was then applied to students in the department and initial results are reported on.<br />
The results revealed that undergraduates overall were uncertain in their attitude to the service quality in the department. On the other hand, postgraduate students tended to rate the service quality rather more negatively (p < / 0.004). Furthermore there were no gender differences except for tangibles (p = 000.5).<br />
<br />
This pilot study could serve as a pilot study of the service quality in an academic environment. It is the main contention of this report that students themselves should be part of defining quality.
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Narratives of assessment: the newsletter as case study.Scheepers, Jacqueline Norma January 2005 (has links)
<p>The purpose of this thesis was to evaluate success of an integrated newsletter assignment for first year Human Resource Management students as an authentic and meaningful form of assessment by tracing and deciphering the narratives of the role-players. The study also examined the role that the newsletter can play regarding experiential learning, which is an essential component of teaching and learning at technikons in South Africa.</p>
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