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Implications of continuous assessment for effective teaching and learning in a learner-centred curriculumRamakhanya, Ephraim Takalani Happy 07 December 2012 (has links)
Department of Curriculum Studies and Educational Management / PhD (CS)
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An analysis of early childhood development programmes in South AfricaBridgemohan, Radhika Rani 11 1900 (has links)
This study constitutes an attempt to describe and analyse the quality of
selected early childhood development programmes in South Africa, and
provide criteria by which the quality of programmes could be assessed.
The need for, and importance of, providing quality early childhood
development programmes is highlighted. The influence of educational
pf:lilosophies on programmes is recognised, hence the total development
of the child and educational philosophies related thereto are discussed.
Factors and components within programmes that contribute to high
quality are explored. Moreover, criteria by means of which quality early
childhood development programmes may be assessed, are provided. In
this regard criteria for the formulation of aims, selection and the
organisation of content, assessment, role of the teacher and parent
involvement in programmes are suggested. It is against these criteria
that selected early childhood development programmes in South Africa
are described and analysed.
programmes conclude the study. / Curriculum and Instructional Studies / M. Ed. (Didactics)
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Building Yesterday's Schools: An Analysis of Educational Architectural Design as Practised by the Building Department of the Canterbury Education Board from 1916-1989Williams, Murray Noel January 2014 (has links)
This thesis considers the nature of primary, intermediate and district high school buildings designed by the Building Department of the Canterbury Education Board from its consolidation in 1916 until its termination in 1989. Before 1916, the influence of British models on the CEB’s predecessors had been dominant, while after that date, Board architects were more likely to attempt vernacular solutions that were relevant to the geographic situation of the Canterbury district, the secular nature of New Zealand education and changing ideas of the relative importance of the key architectural drivers of design i.e. function and form. One development, unique to Canterbury, was that for a short period, from 1924-29, a local pressure group, the Open Air Schools’ League became so powerful that it virtually dictated the CEB’s design policy until the Board architects George Penlington and John Alexander Bigg reassumed control by inflecting the open-air model into the much acclaimed veranda block. The extent to which Board architects had the freedom to express themselves within a framework of funding control exercised by the Department of Education was further circumscribed by successive building codes that, at their most directive, required national standardisation under the 1951 Dominion Basic Plan and to a slightly lesser extent under the1956 code and associated White Lines regime. Following World War 2, the use of prefabricated structures had prompted the recognition that better designed relocatable rooms could hold the key to a more flexible and effective allocation of resources in an environment increasingly subject to rapid demographic change. By the end of the period, the exploitation of new construction technologies and modern materials led to the dominance of the relocatable CEBUS buildings in Canterbury schoolyards. A concurrent development was the response of architects A. Frederick (Fred) McCook and John Sinclair Arthur to the Department’s call to design more flexible spaces, i.e. open planning, to facilitate a change in pedagogical method. Other issues raised in this study are the CEB’s solutions to the challenges of building on the West Coast, and the recurring need to ensure structural integrity in a region where there was a continuous risk of seismic activity.
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An analysis of early childhood development programmes in South AfricaBridgemohan, Radhika Rani 11 1900 (has links)
This study constitutes an attempt to describe and analyse the quality of
selected early childhood development programmes in South Africa, and
provide criteria by which the quality of programmes could be assessed.
The need for, and importance of, providing quality early childhood
development programmes is highlighted. The influence of educational
pf:lilosophies on programmes is recognised, hence the total development
of the child and educational philosophies related thereto are discussed.
Factors and components within programmes that contribute to high
quality are explored. Moreover, criteria by means of which quality early
childhood development programmes may be assessed, are provided. In
this regard criteria for the formulation of aims, selection and the
organisation of content, assessment, role of the teacher and parent
involvement in programmes are suggested. It is against these criteria
that selected early childhood development programmes in South Africa
are described and analysed.
programmes conclude the study. / Curriculum and Instructional Studies / M. Ed. (Didactics)
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