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Ideology challenged : aspects of the history of St Columba's high school (1941-1990) and their application to an oral history project in the high-school classroomFernandez, Mario January 1998 (has links)
Bibliography: p. 164-188. / In a number of senses, this dissertation represents something of a challenge to orthodoxy. In the first instance, it breaks with the traditional triumphalist approach to South African school-history writing by attempting to place the history of St Columba's High School within its socio-political context. It examines the nature of its unique ethos, and attempts to trace the complex interaction between this ethos and the external societal pressures it was subject to, especially those generated by the protracted South African political crisis beginning in 1976. In doing so, its historical research component relies, unlike some earlier, pioneering South African works in this field (which might be termed the social history of education) largely upon primary sources, especially oral evidence. In the second place, it investigates the challenge from below, especially on the part of students, to the "official ideology" (or ethos) of St Columba's that developed :from the watershed year of 1976, specifically in the areas of governance, discipline, student representation, politics, and the teaching of history. It finds that, though the traditional authoritarian, hierarchical ethos remained largely intact by the end of the 1980s, it had been modified by pressures on the ground, and that the challenge to achieve a more liberal, participatory dispensation at St Columba's was set to continue into the 1990s, spearheaded now by a committed cohort of teachers. Thirdly, it employs the popular-history technique of oral history both as an appropriate technique for exploring the challenge from below to the official ideology of St Columba's, and as an unorthodox pedagogical strategy in the senior-secondary classroom for deepening students' understanding of the nature of history, improving their attitude towards its study, and developing in them, at least at a rudimentary level, some of the skills of the historian. It describes the implementation of an oral history project in the senior high-school classroom, and concludes that this is a most efficacious way of achieving the desired ends and, indeed, other positive results not anticipated.
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“The voice of the people” : personal reflections on the impact of the 1985 classHoughton, Barbara Delaney January 2000 (has links)
Includes bibliography. / This dissertation is divided into two parts as required for the coursework Masters degree in History Education. Part I is a study of a high school community's participation in a regional and nationwide class/school boycott, from July 1985 to January 1986. It analyses how this event affected the community, and how the community responded to the authoritarianism of apartheid rule at critical moments during the course of the boycott. A key factor identified, is the solidarity of the community, which was responsible for its ultimate victory, albeit a small one, against the minority-elected apartheid state. The account provides evidence that this solidarity was the key and most effective weapon used by the school community during the 1985/6 class/school boycott period. It was evident when school communities re-opened their schools closed by the state in September 1985, in the discussions on the postponement of the 1985 final examinations, by the parental support shown for suspended and dismissed teachers in December 1985, and finally, on the day when teachers were allowed to return to their posts in January 1986. The primary source of data for the study is oral interviews conducted by the researcher. Questions were asked about the daily issues, events, emotive responses, ordeals experienced and decisions made when students from the oppressed community used the one weapon at their disposal, namely the boycott, to protest against the inequalities within the education system and South African society. Interviewees included staff, students, parents and members of political and teacher organisations associated with the school, referred to as Central High. during the 1985/6 boycott period. The answers elicited provided the evidence on which to construct an historical account of how ordinary men. women and children engaged in a struggle and challenged oppression at a local, community level. Part II comprises learning materials for a module of history on the 1985/6 class/school boycott, developed for learners at Grade 9 level. Current learners in South African schools were not even born in 1985. They need to know this history because it is their history. The materials contribute to the history of resistance in South Africa which is currently being taught and learnt at school level. The module has been constructed on the principles of source-based history teaching and the notion that learners learn history by "doing" what historians do. It provides a selection of historical skills, values and knowledge to enable a reconstruction of the history contained in Part I in the classroom. The approaches used include the search for evidence on the 1985/6 class/school boycott from source materials by understanding, critically examining, analysing, reasoning, detecting bias, interpreting and communicating answers to the questions and/or problems posed.
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From narrative to severed heads : the form and location of white supremacist history in textbooks of the apartheid and post-apartheid eras : a case studyDa Cruz, Peter January 2005 (has links)
Includes bibliographical references. / This dissertation reveals the enduring willingness of South African history textbooks to legitimate white supremacy. During the apartheid era, a historiographic mythology bearing the stamp of officialdom was propagated by history textbooks. This mythology constituted the era's "white history" - that version of history which serves to legitimate white supremacy in South Africa. Though in specific instances the old mythology has been forsworn, white history survives in the post-aparheid textbooks. The tenets of white history are now delivered individually and indirectly by way of severed heads (primary of secondary sources) that, once recovered and reassembled by student learners, constitute the familiar grand narrative. Two historiographical myths promulgated during apartheid are taken as emblems of white history and adopted for the purposes of study as units of analysis. Their form and location are then traced through one prominent publisher's history textbooks of the apartheid and post-apartheid eras. The demonstrated survival of white history in post-apartheid history education is traced to the white stipulations placed upon the post-apartheid curriculum during the reconciliation process. The contemporary trend of progressivist education enabled the phenomenon pedagogically through emphasis on a zealously learner-centred, interactive approach.
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Recent developments of the official curriculum for history in Hongkong Anglo-Chinese secondary schoolsAu Yeung Wong, Nim-chi, Cecilia. January 1987 (has links)
Thesis (M.Ed.)--University of Hong Kong, 1987. / Includes bibliographical references (leaf 365-370). Also available in print.
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An investigation into the language difficulties encountered by F.2 students in studying history in an Anglo-Chinese secondary schoolChu, Lina. January 1990 (has links)
Thesis (M.Ed.)--University of Hong Kong, 1990. / Includes bibliographical references (leaf [67-68]). Also available in print.
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The radical and nonconformist influences on the creation of the dual system of universal elementary education in England and Wales, 1866-1870Raffell, Roland Constantine January 1993 (has links)
In a study of the genesis of the 'dual system' of universal elementary education in England and Wales, obtaining at the present, it is easy to be influenced by the received view that the 1870 Elementary Education Act was a wise and judicious measure, albeit a move of limited potential, by W. E. Forster and the Liberal ministry of 1868, under William Gladstone.Educational historians, in the main, while setting out the importance of the 1870 Elementary Education Act, tend to expound an established opinion that the legislation was predominantly the work of Forster, who was ably assisted by an unwritten alliance between the Conservative Party and the Established Church. However, in order to understand fully, the developments leading up to the act itself, it is necessary to appreciate the little recognised, fundamental influences and pressures initiated by both radicals and nonconformists on the final outcome, and the resultant antagonisms in the struggle for universal elementary education, especially those political and religious controversies which were characterised by the wider debate of the years between 1866 and 1870.It is my purpose in the study to trace the developments of events over this period, and to give just deference to the specific details, preferences and campaigning that would set up the right conditions for the successful passing of legislation in 1870. In this respect, I contend that the final, amended bill, as passed by Forster, was the result of a four year agitation, and only really emerged in 1870, and in the form that it did, because of the radical and nonconformist influence. In qualifying this, it is not my purpose to support the ideas and philosophies of those protagonists, but rather to justify their importance as catalysts in the development of legislation, and in the moulding of the significant clauses which established the bill as a compromise. The act of 1870 was only successful because of the continued pressure and influence of the radicals and nonconformists in their challenge to the, hitherto, voluntary system of elementary education.The major part of this study is concerned with events between the latter part of 1866 and August, 1870 which saw the passing of Forster's education bill. This period saw the growth of both the Manchester Education Aid Society and the Birmingham Education Society; attempts at legislation for the reform of elementary education in both the House of Commons and the House of Lords on four occasions between 1867 and 1868; the collapse of the voluntaryists under Edward Baines; the passing of the second reform bill, which enabled Gladstone to form a radical and reforming ministry; the creation of the National Education League as a truly nationwide pressure group, and its adversary the National Education Union; and ultimately, the planning of the education bill and its passage on to the statute book.
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A comparative study of the history program in English and American secondary schoolsSolis-Cohen, Rosebud Teschner, January 1939 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Pennsylvania, 1939. / Bibliography: p. 151-172.
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The evolution and evaluation of the history curriculum of the secondary schoolMcLellan, Mary Carmel, January 1900 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Cincinnati, 1925. / Bibliography: p. 126-127.
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An investigation into the language difficulties encountered by F.2 students in studying history in an Anglo-Chinese secondary school /Chu, Lina. January 1990 (has links)
Thesis (M. Ed.)--University of Hong Kong, 1990. / Includes bibliographical references (leaf [67-68]).
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An investigation into the declining number of students opting for history at the certificate of education level in Hong Kong /Cheng, Sinn-man. January 1900 (has links)
Thesis (M. Ed.)--University of Hong Kong, 1994. / Includes bibliographical references (leaf 149-154).
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