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Operationalizing a Reading Culture at Rio Hondo Junior HighManning, Victoria Nicole 08 1900 (has links)
A rural Rio Grande Valley school has continuously performed below the state average on the reading portion of the State Assessment of Academic Readiness. One of the concerns expressed amongst teachers and staff is the student’s lack of desire to read for pleasure or for academic purposes. This study examines the attitudes of students and staff in towards reading by focusing on the school’s reading culture. A mixed methods approach consisting of interviews, participant observation, a focus group, and a survey was employed in this study. The study found that the teachers and students maintained two polarizing perceptions of their reading culture. Based on these findings the following recommendations were made: create a literature-centered curriculum, increase and vary the selection of school library books, and align teachers’ perception with the students’ perception to create a unified reading culture.
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A genealogical study of South African literature teaching at South African universities : towards a reconstruction of the curriculumChetty, Rajendra Patrick 11 1900 (has links)
The colonial history of South Africa and its legacy of cultural
and linguistic domination have resulted in a situation where the.
literatures of the majority of South Africans were relegated to
the margins of institutional, social and cultural life.
Exclusion (of local writings) was the principal mode by which
power was exercised within university English departments. It
is within this context that this study posits lacunae and
challenges for the reconstruction of the South African literature
curriculum.
Although various approaches have been used by English
departments during this decade to include South African
literature in the curriculum (pluralism, inter-disciplinary
studies, alternate canon formation, canon rejection, eclecticism,
elective programmes, etc.), the curriculum continues to repeat
the established norms and values of colonial/apartheid society,
it avoids confronting the ideological construction of traditional
English literature and is a revamping or upgrading of the
programmes offered during the colonial/apartheid era.
The genealogical study uncovers the production, regulation,
distribution, circulation and operation of statements, decentres
discourse, and reveals how discourse is secondary to systems of
power. Chapter Four explores both theoretical and methodological
underpinnings for the reconstruction of the South African
literature curriculum deriving from the critical educational
approaches of Freire, Giroux and Apple, the discursive approach
of Foucault and the post colonial reading strategies of
Zavarzadeh and Morton.
The teaching of South African literature would best be served by
working within a critical paradigm, having as its objective the
goals of critical educational studies. Chapter Four also
includes a review of the curriculum in local practice through a
curriculum impact study using empirical research based on the
1996 English literature syllabi of South African universities as
well as the findings of the surveys conducted by Malan and Bosman
in 1986 and Lindfors in 1992.
Chapter Five posits recommendations for curriculum reconstruction
with the main focus on the intervention of radical strategies
that would lead to a new conflictual reading list. The objective
is to put the canon under erasure by problematising the concept
of literariness. Such an approach also reveals the power/
knowledge relations of culture, ideologies that dominate the
discipline and the institutional arrangements of knowledge. / Curriculum and Instructional Studies / D.Ed. (Didactics)
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Exploring the role of technology in moving rural based educational institutions from resourced based to resourcefulness basedMorgan, Christina M 30 April 2008 (has links)
ICT (Information Communication Technology) has enormous potential to positively impact educational institutions in developing countries. This thesis presents the results of a five month participatory study conducted in Bushenyi, Uganda on the impact ICT and ICT training had on a local primary school. This research specifically investigated the benefits and the problems associated with ICT in education, as well as, the impact of culture, training methods and research methodology.
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Exploring the role of technology in moving rural based educational institutions from resourced based to resourcefulness basedMorgan, Christina M 30 April 2008 (has links)
ICT (Information Communication Technology) has enormous potential to positively impact educational institutions in developing countries. This thesis presents the results of a five month participatory study conducted in Bushenyi, Uganda on the impact ICT and ICT training had on a local primary school. This research specifically investigated the benefits and the problems associated with ICT in education, as well as, the impact of culture, training methods and research methodology.
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The promotion of unhu in Zimbabwean secondary schools through the teaching of Shona literature : Masvingo urban district, a case studyViriri, Eunitah 11 1900 (has links)
This study examines the extent to which the teaching of Shona novels can be used to
promote unhu (humanness) in Zimbabwean secondary schools where there has been a
call for the teaching of cultural values. The school syllabi for Shona make this position
abundantly clear. For that reason, anchoring the discussion on the role of literature in
Africa as expounded by African scholars such as Ngugi wa Thiong’o (1981), p’Bitek
(1986) and Achebe (1989) among others, the study observes that literature plays an
important role in moulding character through advancing unhu. For instance, as Achebe
(1989) argues that the novelist is a teacher, the study therefore locates literature as a
life-affirming and life-extending affair. The discussion of the role of literature as a
potential conduit for expressing unhu takes place within the theoretical confines of
Afrocentricity, an African-centred theory that places the interests of Africa at the centre
of any analysis involving African people. The selected novels namely Pfumo Reropa
(1961), Kunyarara Hakusi Kutaura? (1983) and Ndafa Here? (2007) are therefore
interrogated from an Afrocentric point of view. The three novels are representative of
different historical epochs in Zimbabwe’s cultural trajectory. In addition, they have
featured quite prominently on the school syllabi for Shona. Through a combination of
interviews and critical analysis of the novels, the study crucially observes that the proper
teaching of literature can effectively transform the thinking of learners thereby locating
them in their own cultural platforms. However, for this to happen, teachers must be
properly trained in order that they develop an appreciation of the value of literature in
imparting unhu among learners. As a result, the study thus proposes sufficient
conscientisation of teachers and learners on the concept and practice of unhu be
systematically carried out. At the same, there is need for greater planning in
constructing a more informing syllabus, as well as the deliberate inclusion of texts that
canonise unhu. / African Languages / D. Litt. et Phil. (African Languages)
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A genealogical study of South African literature teaching at South African universities : towards a reconstruction of the curriculumChetty, Rajendra Patrick 11 1900 (has links)
The colonial history of South Africa and its legacy of cultural
and linguistic domination have resulted in a situation where the.
literatures of the majority of South Africans were relegated to
the margins of institutional, social and cultural life.
Exclusion (of local writings) was the principal mode by which
power was exercised within university English departments. It
is within this context that this study posits lacunae and
challenges for the reconstruction of the South African literature
curriculum.
Although various approaches have been used by English
departments during this decade to include South African
literature in the curriculum (pluralism, inter-disciplinary
studies, alternate canon formation, canon rejection, eclecticism,
elective programmes, etc.), the curriculum continues to repeat
the established norms and values of colonial/apartheid society,
it avoids confronting the ideological construction of traditional
English literature and is a revamping or upgrading of the
programmes offered during the colonial/apartheid era.
The genealogical study uncovers the production, regulation,
distribution, circulation and operation of statements, decentres
discourse, and reveals how discourse is secondary to systems of
power. Chapter Four explores both theoretical and methodological
underpinnings for the reconstruction of the South African
literature curriculum deriving from the critical educational
approaches of Freire, Giroux and Apple, the discursive approach
of Foucault and the post colonial reading strategies of
Zavarzadeh and Morton.
The teaching of South African literature would best be served by
working within a critical paradigm, having as its objective the
goals of critical educational studies. Chapter Four also
includes a review of the curriculum in local practice through a
curriculum impact study using empirical research based on the
1996 English literature syllabi of South African universities as
well as the findings of the surveys conducted by Malan and Bosman
in 1986 and Lindfors in 1992.
Chapter Five posits recommendations for curriculum reconstruction
with the main focus on the intervention of radical strategies
that would lead to a new conflictual reading list. The objective
is to put the canon under erasure by problematising the concept
of literariness. Such an approach also reveals the power/
knowledge relations of culture, ideologies that dominate the
discipline and the institutional arrangements of knowledge. / Curriculum and Instructional Studies / D.Ed. (Didactics)
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