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The effectiveness of the social condition of education in an Indian pre-primary school.Singh, Sundrakanthi. January 1987 (has links)
No abstract available. / Thesis (M.A.)-University of Durban-Westville, 1987.
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Educational management in Indian secondary schools in Natal.Dayaram, Manhurlal. January 1988 (has links)
No abstract available. / Thesis (M.Ed.)-University of Durban-Westville, 1988.
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A sociological study of the educational and career routes of a group of Indian secondary school students in the Durban area : the transition from school to work.Naicker, Subramunian Anand. January 1988 (has links)
This longitudinal study on the transition from school to work
of a group of Indian school-leavers from two co-educational
schools in Durban is an attempt to analyse the processes underlying
the construction of educational and career routes. It
deals with the lived experiences of boys and girls from different
social-class backgrounds within the school, the family, and
the work situation. This passage from school to work, which
also includes the experiences of unemployment, is examined
against the background of social interactions in micro settings,
as well as the influences of social, structural and cultural
forces. In particular, the career pathways are studied within
the context of the cultural background of Indians, and their
socio-historical location in the South African society as a
minority and an intermediate status group in a racially-divided
society.
As the students proceeded through the last three years at school
and into the first few months of work various qualitative,
field research methods were used to get some insight into the
changing and complex nature of the transitional process. These
methods included participant observation, focus sed and unfocussed
interviews, and discussions. Such qualitative research methods
were valuable for an understanding' of the meanings and values
on which the students' actions were based.
The structural and interpretive analysis of the family, the school, the labour market, and a patriarchal, capitalist, apartheid society points to the significance of ideological values, hegemony, class relations, racial, gender, and political and economic influences on the construction of educational and career identities. The analysis also indicates the close relationship
which exists on the one hand between the cultural interpretations
and practices of various social actors; and on the other
hand, the structural conditions in which these are located.
The findings provide some account of how social-class relations
are continued and sustained via related and different inequalities
such as race and gender. Race, class and gender exist side
by side in this reproduction process. By focussing on the close
relationship which exists between the actions and decisions
of the students, and the structures of society, this study
attempts to bridge the gap between structural and interpretive
explanations. The students' interpretations of their educational
and career choices are brought into a closer relationship with
the structures of society. / Thesis (Ph.D.) - University of Natal, Pietermaritzburg, 1988.
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Failing boys : poor achievement and the construction of masculinity of six Indian boys in a secondary school in Chatsworth, Durban.Maduray, Manimagalay. January 2004 (has links)
This research project investigates the ways in which six Indian boys who have been officially proclaimed failures in grade 11 construct their masculinity in Meadowlands
Secondary School, a predominantly Indian technical secondary school in a working class area of Chatsworth. The way in which failing Indian boys construct their
masculinity is under-researched in South Africa. When boys are officially declared academic failures by the school, they often take other ways to validate their masculine identities. This study focused on the complex relationship between their academic failure and the formation of their masculinities.
Drawing from semi-structured in-depth interviews with six boys who failed grade 11 in 2003 and are currently repeating grade 11 in 2004, the study shows the complex
relationship between school failure, and the formation of boys' masculinities in three areas. These areas are the formal academic dimension of schooling, the informal social dimension of schooling and outside school activities.
The major fmdings from the interviews indicate that boys construct their masculinity by resisting the demands placed on them in schools and engage in disruptive
activities. They find alternate power and prestige in wearing brand name clothes,
wearing jewellery, carrying cellular phones, having girlfriends, clubbing, taking drugs and joining gangs. They find school boring and equate academic achievement with
being feminine and thus being gay and resist doing school-work. They are thus able to construct their masculinities in ways that are anti-school and anti-authority.
The study concludes by suggesting that failing boys at MSS are in trouble and that schools and teachers must be more alert to why failing boys behave in the ways that they do. At MSS it is suggested that the school encourages the development of sport
as a way of exposing boys to different ways of being a boy. / Thesis (M.Ed.)-University of KwaZulu-Natal, Durban, 2004.
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An investigation into the suitability of the National Bureau Group Test for five-and-six year-olds as an instrument for measuring school readiness among a group of Indian children in Durban.Ramphal, Anandpaul. January 1972 (has links)
This study was primarily intended to ascertain whether there was any test already in existence in South Africa which was entirely suitable as a test of school readiness for Indian children. If there were no such test, could an existing test not be modified to make it suitable for use with Indian children? Or would an entirely new test be indicated? As a secondary, though intimately related matter, it was decided to discover to what extent factors such as schooling, socio-economic status and sex affect an Indian child's readiness
for school. An examination of the existing group tests of school readiness in this country, showed that the National Bureau Group Test for Five-and-Six-Year-Olds (N.B.G.T. 5/6) was the one which was most likely to be suitable for use with Indian children. This test was therefore chosen for a more detailed study. In pursuit of the secondary aim it was decided to use two
additional tests - the Raven Coloured Progressive Matrices (1947) and the Peabody Picture Vocabulary Test - so as to provide a broader basis for the conclusions than the N.B.G.T. 5/6 by itself would have provided. The total sample of 156 six-year-old children, chosen from the Western Area of Durban, comprised three groups:
(a) Schoolers (N = 60) : At the time of testing this group had had about six months of formal schooling.
(b) Preschoolers (N = 48) : At the time of testing these children were attending a play-centre.
(c) Nonschoolers (N = 48) : At the time of testing these children had had no schooling, either formal or of the play-centre type.
Each of these three groups consisted of an equal number of boys and girls. In each of these sub-groups there was an equal number of children of each sex from the high and the low socio-economic groups. A random selection procedure was used through-
The study of the primary aim involved quantitative and qualitative analyses of the data. Spearman's rank-order correlation coefficients and z-tests were computed. In the case of the secondary aim the statistical procedures included the use of 2 x 2 and 3 x 2 x 2 analyses of variance in addition to
t-tests and product-moment correlations. The results of the study were as follows:
General Aim (a) : The N.B.G.T. 5/6, unmodified, is unsuitable as a test of school readiness for use with Indian children.
General Aim (b) : (i) Experiences related to the classroom learning situation, formal or otherwise, exert an influence on a child's readiness for school.
(ii) Socio-economic factors have a marked influence on a child's readiness for
school.
(iii) A child's sex does not have any influence on a his readiness (or unreadiness for school).
It was recommended that every opportunity for the advancement of preschool education among Indian children should be seized. This would compensate to some extent for the missing stimulation of a good home, an important factor for the promotion of school readiness. / Thesis (M.Ed.)-University of Durban-Westville, 1972.
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