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The efficacy of teachers in a number of selected schools in KwaZulu-NatalRangraje, Ismail. January 2002 (has links)
Submitted in fulfilment
of the requirement for the degree
DOCTOR OF EDUCATION
in the
Department of Psychology of Education
of the
Faculty of Education
at the
University of Zululand, 2002. / The aims ofthis research were:
• To detennine the status of teacher efficacy in a number of
selected schools in KwaZulu-Natal.
• To suggest a number of recommendations for the improvement
of teacher efficacy in these schools.
The life-world of the teacher involves a complex network of
relationships with himself, with ideas, with objects and with others.
Teachers are achievement oriented. Most teachers strive to realise their
full potential through self-actualisation.
Various studies have been conducted on teacher efficacy to determine
the different dynamics that influence teacher motivation, teachers'
professional esteem, thinking, decision-making, and classroom
discipline and management. Results have shown that teachers with a
high sense of efficacy are generally strongly motivated and satisfied
with their jobs, persevere when faced with obstacles, maintain good
classroom discipline, and attempt to bring out the best in their students.
Conversely, teachers with a low sense of efficacy give up easily when
faced with obstacles, are afraid to accept challenges, feel inadequate in
the classroom, and harbour feelings of guilt and trepidation when their
students perform poorly.
For the purpose of the empirical investigation, a structured
questionnaire "vas used. Teachers from schools in the City of Durban
District were asked to complete the questionnaire. An analvsis was
done of the 150 completed questionnaires that were returned.
The data obtained was processed and interpreted by means of
descriptive and inferential statistics. The null hypothesis, namely that
there is no relation between the teacher's experience of the teaching
situation and his efficacy, that is, the power to produce the effect
wanted, has to be accepted.
In conclusion, a summary and certain fmdings emanating from the
literature study and the empirical investigation were presented. Based
on these findings, the following recommendations were made:
• Teachers need to be developed professionally. Proactive
professional development programmes should be designed to
extend the personal strengths of teachers. Professional
development provides opportunities for teachers to acquire new
skills and attitudes which can enhance their efficacy.
• Teaching conditions need to be reformed. This involves
transforming the microsystem, mesosystem, exosystem, and
macrosystem. Teachers need to undertake initiatives which are
designed to improve their efficacy. At the same time, school
management and education authorities need to improve working
conditions so that more effective teaching can take place.
• Teachers need to be satisfied \vith their jobs in order to perform
effectively. The workload of teachers needs to be reduced
considerably to enable them to focus more on particular tasks.
Furthermore, teachers reqmre greater incentives to motivate
them to perform more effectively.
• Stress in the workplace needs to be reduced if teachers are to
perform optimally. The onus rests on all role players to make a
concerted effort to control the level of stress in the workplace
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The effects of teacher absenteeism in KwaZulu Natal Secondary schoolsMkhwanazi, Bhekinkosi Bhekizenzo. January 1997 (has links)
Submitted to the Faculty of Education in fulfillment
of the requirements for the degree of
Master of Education
in the Department of Didactics at the University of Zululand, 1997. / The aims of this study were :
• to investigate the effects of teacher absenteeism on secondary school pupils in KwaZulu Natal.
• to suggest in the light of the findings obtained didactically justifiable guidelines for reducing the absenteeism rate among secondary school teachers.
To address these problems information was collected from school principals through interviews and questionnaires. Analytical methods were also used to collect information regarding the effects of teacher absenteeism on secondary school pupils. In order to curb the problem of disjunction caused by an overemphasis on empirical research, this study also concentrated on a literature review in which recent sources on classroom management were used to identify criteria for effective classroom management, with specific reference to disruptive behaviour caused by the absence of teachers in the classroom. The study identified the following didactic criteria: democracy, conflict resolution, effective learning environment, motivation and order. These theoretical findings were blended with the empirical findings to analyse the effects of teacher absenteeism on the quality of teaching-learning actions in the schools included in the sample.
The findings revealed that teacher absenteeism had the following major effects:
• ignorance of pupils' names and achievements
• demotivation among pupils
• fighting and other forms of violence such as intimidation, defiance and vandalism
• truancy
• incomplete work programmes and poor performance
• drunkenness and other forms of substance abuse by pupils
• failure to do homework and assignments an increase in the drop-out rate
• cheating in the examination
The recommendations flowing from the research included, inter alia, that the Department of Education should establish a clear code of conduct regarding teacher absenteeism and a definite procedure to ensure that principals as well as teachers honour this code of conduct. Measures should be introduced to (a) combat the problem of teachers who fake sickness to absent themselves from duty and (b) compel principals to be more strict in keeping attendance registers, not only for pupils, but also for teachers. Since three of the most common causes of teacher absenteeism appear to be the attendance of funerals, part-time studies and long distances teachers travel between homes and schools, the dissertation contains several recommendations to alleviate problems in these areas.
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Tradition and change in the domestic environment of the unplanned urban settlements : a case study: Natal, northeast BrazilBrazão-Teixeira, Rubenilson. January 1990 (has links)
No description available.
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Soils and land-use planning in the Howick Extension Area.Scotney, Derek Michael. 29 January 2014 (has links)
No abstract available. / Thesis (Ph.D.)-University of Natal, Pietermaritzburg, 1970.
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Strangers in a strange land : undesirables and border-controls in colonial Durban, 1897-c.1910.MacDonald, Andrew. January 2007 (has links)
This dissertation investigates the regulation of cross-border mobility and the formation of Natal, and nascent South African, immigration policy in the late colonial period. Natal's immigration technologies were at the very vanguard of a new global migration regime based on documentation and rigorous policing of boundaries. Essentially a thorough examination of the workings of the pre-Union Immigration Restriction Department (1897-c.191 0), I offer a historical analysis of state capacity to regulate and 'embrace' immigration along Natal's formative borders and points of entry, focusing on the port-town of Durban, whose colonial urban proftle forms a subsidiary focus of the project. This involves going beyond a mere study of policy and legislation - instead I have made a close and historically attentive study of the actual mechanisms of regulation and inclusion/exclusion and where these routinely failed, were subverted or implicated in economies of fraud and evasion. Through this, I build upon and deepen legal studies of immigration restriction by considering the practical and, to some degree, lived experience of restriction. I lay the groundwork by contextualizing the specific contours of 'undesirability' in turn of the century Durban. I point to a number of moral panics and a sense of crisis that engulfed officials in the town, referring in turn to merchant and 'passenger' Indians, wartime refugees, maritime labourers and poor whites, amongst others, moving to and through a regional and Indian-Ocean economy. I then turn to the 'technologies of exclusion' in two streams: 'paper-based' technologies of pass regimes, domicile certificates and education/language tests, and secondly more explicit forms of confinement, surveillance and patrol through police-guard systems and detention policies. An important aspect of the question that I consider turns on the growing capacity of the state to arrest and intern during and following the South African war. By the end of the war in 1902, progress would in practice be underwritten by a new climate of professional, technical and managerial agency that also percolated through state bureaucracies. 'Technological' and bureaucratic proficiency provided a legitimate and unproblematic guise for highly politicized state intervention and forms the origins of the 20'h century South African immigration administration. / Thesis (M.A.)-University of KwaZulu-Natal, Durban, 2007.
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Agronomic performance of wild mustard in an intercropping with green beans.Phiri, Nathan. January 2005 (has links)
Wild mustard (Brassica spp.) is used as an edible wild leafy vegetable by indigenous people
in South Africa. The potential of wild leafy vegetables in agriculture is not well understood,
because there is generally no agronomic research on their production practices. The objective
of this study was to examine the performance of three wild mustard species (herein referred
to as I, K and M) over four cropping seasons in an intercropping system with green beans
(Phaseolus vulgaris L. cv. Imbali). The crops were grown with and without organic fertiliser
under dryland conditions at two sites (The University of KwaZulu-Natal Research Farm,
Ukulinga and in a rural area of Umbumbulu, KwaZulu-Natal within the farmers' locality)
during autumn, winter, spring and summer of 2004 to 2005. Plant development (leaf number,
plant height and fresh biomass) during the first six weeks after sowing and seed yield were
used to determine agronomic performance of each species. Nutrient status of the rhizosphere
soil was determined at 42 days after sowing for each species to determine what effect
growing the species would have on mineral availability. Wild mustard production
significantly (P < 0.01) performed better at Ukulinga than Umbumbulu. Polyculture was
beneficial for wild mustard leaf accumulation and green bean production as determined by
land equivalent ratios greater than one for all species combinations, regardless of fertiliser
application. Cool environmental conditions occurring in autumn and spring were more
favourable (P < 0.05) for wild mustard and green bean biomass accumulation than summer
and winter conditions. However, wild mustard seed yield was highest in winter compared
with autumn and spring, and there was no measurable seed production in summer. Soil
analysis results at 42 days after sowing showed an increase in P, K, Cu and Mg in the
rhizosphere of wild mustard without organic fertiliser. Polyculture improved Zn, Cu, Mn and
K in wild mustard leaf tissue. It is concluded that wild mustard can be grown as a leafy
vegetable throughout the year, but it requires cool environmental conditions to enhance seed
yield. Species M significantly yielded better biomass and seeds than species I and K during
all the seasons. However, species K performed the least in all aspects. / Thesis (M.Sc.)-University of KwaZulu-Natal, Pietermaritzburg, 2005.
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Measuring the impact of crop production on household food security in KwaZulu-Natal using the coping strategies index (CSI)Ngidi, Mjabuliseni Simon C. January 2007 (has links)
Crop production is widely promoted as a solution to food insecurity, but its real impact on
household food security has not been measured in South Africa. Small-scale production is a
common practice for many rural poor households of South Africa. While agriculture may
play a major role in reducing food insecurity, agricultural growth alone cannot solve the
problem of food insecurity at household level. South Africa is food secure at the national
level, but available data suggest that between 58.5 and 73 percent of South African
households experience food insecurity.
This study set out to measure the impact of crop production on household food security
among sampled households in two communal regions, Umbumbulu and Maphephetheni, of
KwaZulu-Natal, to establish whether participation in food production improved household
food security. Household surveys which explored the types of crops produced, food
consumed, income obtained from crop sales and the food security situation, were carried out
at Umbumbulu and Maphephetheni respectively (n = 200 and n = 68). The types of crops
produced were investigated using crop production seasonality charts, while the household
food security situation was measured using the Coping Strategy Index tool.
The main findings of the study indicated that household gardens provided food for household
members, but did not provide sufficient quantities to meet year-round consumption
requirements. Most sampled households relied largely on purchased foods. More than 80%
of the food consumed by households came from purchases, 4% and 13% came from own
production in Umbumbulu and Maphephetheni respectively. Among the households surveyed,
58% and 89% were below the poverty line for Umbumbulu and Maphephetheni respectively.
Umbumbulu and Maphephetheni’s largest household income contributions came from wages
or salaries. Social grants were the second most important source of household income. As
participation in crop production alleviated food shortages somewhat, its contribution to food
security cannot be ignored. A study needs to be conducted to investigate whether
participation in both farm/non farm activities reduces the number of households below the
poverty line. Government should provide extension officers to monitor and evaluate the
impact of gardens on household food security. To guide the design and implementation of
commercial and home gardens, households need to develop clear and consistent policies,
strategies, processes and procedures, and (a sound) monitoring and evaluation framework. / Thesis (M.Sc.)-University of KwaZulu-Natal, Pietermaritzburg, 2007.
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The practice, constraints and perceptions of improving soil quality through manure application : a case study of three smallholder farmer groups.Naidoo, K. D. 23 August 2010 (has links)
Land degradation and soil nutrient depletion have become serious threats to agricultural productivity in sub-Saharan Africa. Soil fertility depletion in smallholder areas has been cited as the fundamental biophysical cause of declining per-capita food production in Africa. Manure application is a well established and known practice, but not effectively used among South African smallholders. This study investigated the practice, constraints and perceptions of improving soil quality through manure application through a case study of three smallholder farmer groups. Three groups from rural areas of KwaZulu-Natal (Mkhambatini, Mooi River and Richmond) were selected to participate in the study. Participatory methodologies were used to identify and clarify the study problem. Three participatory focus group discussions, one per area, were conducted with farmers at the study sites to discuss farming methods, experience and perceptions of manure use, manure management practices and constraints farmers experience with manure use. Force Field Analysis was used for each group to explore for forces against and in support for manure use. Random soil and manure samples were collected for laboratory analysis to determine fertility levels. Some farmers indicated that soil fertility was low. However, half the sample perceived the land to be productive to some extent. The study showed that 40 per cent of farmers reported improved soil fertility following the application of manure. Due to the limited availability of livestock manure, farmers prefer to use both livestock manure and commercial fertilisers. Furthermore, the study found that except for young farmers (20 per cent of the sample), farmers had not received formal training and very limited extension advice on composting and manure use and management. The study participants were aware of the consequences of declining soil fertility and were attempting to improve soil quality. However, low livestock numbers and poor management led to inadequate amounts of manure, and, limited access to information on manure and compost use. Unless better knowledge of optimal soil nutrient management practice is acquired by the farmers, soil fertility levels will continue to decline, further reducing production potential and rural household food security. Government needs to revisit extension support to meet the needs of smallholders and offer training on sound soil management, sustainable production methods, composting and livestock management. A handbook with graphic detail should be accompanied to provide smallholders with information and advice on how to manage soil fertility. / Thesis (M.Agric.)-University of KwaZulu-Natal, Pietermaritzburg, 2009.
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An evaluation of the perceived benefits and constraints of community gardens established by the KwaZulu-Natal Department of Agriculture and Environmental Affairs.Thamsanqa Philangenkosi. January 2008 (has links)
This study provides feedback from the Extension Officers and community garden members involved in community garden projects of the KwaZulu-Natal Department of Agriculture and Environmental Affairs, by investigating the contribution of community gardens to household food security. The investigation included interviews with 61 Extension Officers from the Bergville, Hlanganani, Eshowe, Vryheid and Mbumbulu districts and 106 community garden members from 31 community gardens in the Bergville and Hlanganani districts. It was found that the people involved in community gardens were older persons, with little or no education. Those involved in community gardens were unemployed and relied on pensions, remittances and selling handicrafts to purchase garden inputs. The average household dependency ratios were 4, 5 and 5, 5 persons per active household member in Hlanganani and Bergville, respectively. Community garden members were mostly females, but most community garden members’ households were male-headed. The community garden members indicated that the most important reason for producing vegetables was for household use. Extension Officers were not satisfied with the state of community gardens and the relationship between the regional and district offices. Community gardens do not reflect the effort put in by the Extension Officers. The Extension Officers want to be involved in determining research priorities and be regularly informed about research findings and policy changes made at the regional level. The Extension Officers would like to see all government departments working together towards the development of communities. Extension Officers believe that if the government departments pool their resources, they would be able to serve the communities better than when each department works alone on community garden projects in the same community. Despite the initial funding of community gardens by the KwaZulu-Natal Department of Agriculture and Environmental Affairs, there were many factors limiting production of vegetables in community gardens. The limiting factors included poor soil fertility; small garden plot sizes; low water availability; high start-up costs and poor management of the community garden finances. The community garden members were positive about the contribution of community gardens to their lives. The benefits were in the form of information about vegetable production, cropping practices and the availability of fresh vegetables that provided nutritious food and allowed them to buy other household requirements instead of vegetables. Community garden projects have a potential role to play in the lives of many rural people if the following concerns raised by the Extension Officers are addressed: the relationship between the offices at district level and the regional level improves; the establishment and maintenance of sound channels of communication between the district field staff and the regions; research support is received from the regions; and government departments work together. The KwaZulu-Natal Department of Agriculture and Environmental Affairs should not only focus on providing infrastructure for projects but should also ascertain that the proposed project achieves the objectives of both the community garden members and the Department of Agriculture and Environmental Affairs and that the beneficiaries are trained before the project is handed over. / Thesis (M.Sc.)-University of KwaZulu-Natal, Pietermaritzburg, 2008.
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Reporting violent conflict in Kwazulu-Natal : an assessment of selected sources for conflict research.Louw, Antoinette. January 1995 (has links)
The main aim of this study was to investigate which factors are likely to affect the
probability that events of violent collective action are reported by the press in
KwaZulu-Natal. The study hypothesised that the likelihood of violent conflict events
being reported by the press is affected by certain characteristics of the events
themselves, such as their intensity and size, and by the environment in which
events occur, such as their physicai location and the prevailing political context.
The study was limited to the KwaZulu-Natal province where levels of violent
collective action have been the highest in the country over the past decade. This
province is also home to many violence monitoring agencies, which constituted an
important alternative source of information against which the reporting trends of the
newspapers in the province could be compared.
The main source of information used in this study was the Conflict Trends in
KwaZulu-Natal project's database of collective action events, which comprises
events reported by both the press and the monitoring agencies. Data on a total of
3990 violent conflict events was analysed during 1987, 1990 and 1994, in the form
of comparisons between the reporting tendencies of the press and the monitors.
Interviews were also conducted with reporters and editors of the daily newspapers
in KwaZulu-Natal, as well as with selected monitoring agency staff members.
These interviews provided valuable information about how these media operate,
and the factors which constrain their violence reporting activities. The most support was found for the argument that the political context influences
violence reporting by the press. Analyses suggested that in all three years studied,
the press contribution to the database decreased as monthly levels of violent
conflict increased. This was explained in relation to the prevailing political context.
The results also showed that reporting trends changed over time. In the earlier
years, the press did not appear to be more inclined to report events of larger size
and intensity, or events which were close to the newspapers' base. In 1994,
however, this trend was reversed.
There also was no clear evidence that the States of Emergency impacted
negatively on press reporting of violence in terms of the variables studied. In
addition, the study concluded that both the press and the monitOring agencies had
made important separate contributions to the database on violent collective action.
It is, therefore, vital that systematic studies of violent conflict in KwaZulu-Natal
make use of multiple sources of data. / Thesis (M.A.)-University of Natal, Durban, 1995.
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