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Educational policy in a post-apartheid South Africa : an exploratory study of the needs of the Indian communityRasool, Mohamed Hoosen Abbas 09 1900 (has links)
Recent events have brought about the realization that purposeful
advancement in South Africa depends on wide-ranging educational
reforms consistent with the demands of a complex multicultural
society. This necessitates the development of theoretically-sound
policies informed by, and grounded in, the specific historical
and cultural milieu in which it is to be conceived. Within this
context, a particular concern is that little is known about the
educational needs of the Indian community at this juncture. This
concern is also evinced by a multitude of interests within this
minority group.
Al though this investigation focuses on Indian responses to
dominant policy orientations, it conceptualizes the South African
education dynamics in its entirety and interrelatedness and not
as a conglomerate of isolated parts. In sum, this dissertation
endeavours to examine some critical concerns as it affects the
provision of education for people of Indian origin in a postapartheid
South Africa. / Educational Studies / M.Ed. (Comparative Education)
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Socio-spatial change in the post-apartheid City of Tshwane metropolitan municipality, South AfricaHamann, Christian 09 1900 (has links)
The premise of the research concerns negative spatial legacies and questions doubting the existence of the true post-apartheid city in South Africa. The study describes the socio-spatial structure of the functional urban core of the City of Tshwane Metropolitan Municipality (CTMM). An empirical analysis, a unique segregation-desegregation classification, a relative socio-economic classification and three continuity-discontinuity hypotheses was used to compare past and present socio-spatial characteristics. Structural racial-residential segregation is evident along with high levels of socio-economic inequality. Spatial polarisation of societal attributes has created a clear north-west and south-east divide in the study area. The study area is described as one with a central-south citadel (inhabited by the wealthy) and a dynamic periphery (diverse but relatively deprived). Current socio-spatial characteristics can be attributed to strong spatial legacies, ineffective policy interventions and underlying socio-spatial influences that inhibit true inclusivity and equality in the study area. / Geography / M. Sc. (Geography)
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Free State higher education discourses : analysing the positioning of learning guidesHongwane, Vussy Alby January 2007 (has links)
Thesis (Ph.D Ed.) -- Central University of Technology, Free State, 2007 / Since the advent of multicultural democratic governance in 1994, transformation has become crucial in South African higher education. This study is focused on the current discourses in Free State higher education institutions, especially after the mergers of the formerly black institutions and their white counterparts. The learning guide has been used to capture those debates, hence the location of its positioning between the dominant and the dominated discourses. The realisation that African culture and knowledge was being sidelined to the margins of the centre of knowledge production at higher education institutions necessitated this study.
The study was qualitative, and has used Buskens-Meulenberg’s Free Attitude Interview (FAI) as an instrument to collect data. The in-depth interview with open-ended questions was used to put into practice Buskens-Meulenberg’s FAI and collect data from the respondents. In-depth interviews with-open ended questions were employed to obtain data from the nine academic respondents who constituted the sampled population. The instrumentation and the mode of data collection were important for this study because of their compatibility with critical theory and qualitative research, giving a “voice” and “space” for the voiceless – the subaltern culture, the formerly and still marginalised and peripheralised, the excluded – to be heard.
Textually Oriented Discourse Analysis (TODA) was used in the analysis and interpretation of the texts through which the findings mentioned below were arrived at.
The study was able to uncover the importance of the Africanisation of higher education in South Africa which seemed to be excluded in the agenda of the powers that be on the transformation of higher education.
Critical theory was essential for this study because of its emancipatory underpinnings. The quantitative paradigm could not be used because of its tendency to maintain the status quo, which in the context of this study could entrench and perpetuate the exclusion and marginalisation of the subaltern culture from the centre of knowledge production.
The study has taken care of the basics of TODA, namely ensuring that “textual or conversational structures” derive their framework from the cognitive, social, historical, cultural, or political contexts and in this way has prevented the interpretation of texts based only on surface structures and meanings of isolated and abstract sentences, especially from experts of the dominant discourse. This helped the study to obtain the following findings from the respondents:
(i) Although the dominant discourse was diplomatic about benefiting financially from the compilation of learning guides, all indicators essentially pointed towards the existence of monetary gains from the process, even though the guides were purported to be less expensive compared to textbooks. (ii) Learning guides were only effective to the extent of helping students pass their courses, but on the other critical outcomes as outlined in the resource-based learning method document, they were lacking (see Chapter Four). (iii) The dominant discourse generally felt that it would be impossible for all the different cultures of South Africa to be incorporated into the curriculum of higher education. However, for the dominated culture, inclusion of indigenous knowledge systems in curriculum was non-negotiable and fundamental to any meaningful transformation of higher education in South Africa.
(iv) The learning guide was regarded by the dominant discourse as neutral in the current debates in Free State higher education. The dominated discourse thought otherwise. In Chapter Four the dominated discourse clearly substantiated their position of learning guides as a tool for domesticating the dominated culture for the maintenance of the status quo.
Considering the above findings, the study concluded that higher education transformation still had a long way to go before it bore any meaningful fruits for the downtrodden and poor people of South Africa, who happen to be Black. Under the present arrangement African culture will be dominated, demolished and diminished, and Eurocentricism will continue to reign supreme. A constant inflow of black academics with higher education qualifications (Ph.D.) may eventually tip the scales of justice may provided they continue with emancipatory discourses among the subaltern culture.
In view of the above findings and conclusions, the study recommends that policy makers should intervene and formulate African cultural friendly policies as a matter of urgency and stop being advocates of Eurocentricism. In the same way that there are assessment mechanisms for quality control and assurance, there should be mechanisms for assessing higher education institutions on transformation issues. This can assist in a swift integration of the two cultures at the merged institutions for the emergence of a new African Institutional Identity. Moreover, this can only happen if African intellectuals establish Indigenous Knowledge Systems as a centre and a space for the subaltern and alternative “voice” to be heard.
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Transformational challenges facing contemporary social work : a exploratory studyCock, Lorraine 11 1900 (has links)
The release of ex-president Nelson Mandela on 10 February 1990, introduced transformation in South Africa. The road to transformation, in a post apartheid era, placed pressure and demands on the social work profession and the professionals. Change was inevitable (Lesnik 1997:164) while the inequities and the disparities of the past had to be eliminated and replaced with transformed services.
This study explores the transformational challenges experienced in contemporary social work practice at The Department of Social Development, Johannesburg, South Africa.
A non-probability sample was selected (Babbie and Mouton 2004:166). A combination of the qualitative and the quantitative approaches, with more emphasis on the quantitative approach was utilized. Questionnaires were used for data collection and analysis was done according to the framework as described by Tesch in De Vos et al., (1998:343). The transformational challenges were identified and guidelines are drafted to assist in addressing the identified challenges. / Social Work / M.Diac. (Social Work)
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Doing liberation theology in the context of the Post-Apartheid South AfricaMakhetha, Lesekele Victor 11 1900 (has links)
The author strongly holds- in the thesis- that the Theology of liberation can inspi re the
poor of South Africa to uproot the post-1994 socio-economic and political evil structures
which continue unabated to impoverish them.
The introductory chapter studies the reasons which motivated the author to write the
thesis. It further discusses the method, the format and the limitations of the thesis.
Chapter one focuses on the author's understanding of the Theology of liberation, and its
historical background.
Chapter two discusses the relationship between the Theology of Liberation and black
theology, while chapter three contemplates on the possibility of the creation of what the
author calls, An African Theology of Liberation.
Chapter four studies the relationship between the Theology of liberation and the Social
Teachings of the Catholic Church as taught by the pope and his council. The study of this
relationship is extremely difficult because of the on-going, and seemingly insurmountable
ideological differences between the two parties. The author suggests, as a solutio n, that
each party seriously considers and recognizes the contextual limitations of its theology.
Chapter five focuses on the implementation of the Theology of Liberat ion into the South
African situation. The author highly recommends the inclusion of the veneration of the
ancestors of Africa, as a perfect instrument by means of which the Theology of Liberation
can succeed in achieving one of its major aims, which is to convert the poor to be leaders of
their own liberation.
The concluding chapter suggests concrete ways through which the Theology of Liberation
can be kept alive and relevant within the South African situation. / Philosophy, Practical & Systematic Theology / D. Th. (Theological Ethics)
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Challenging the hand : critical confrontations of female craft and animal artefact in post-apartheid visual artWhitehead, Johanna Jacoba (Hanje) 12 1900 (has links)
Thesis (MA)--Stellenbosch University, 2012. / Please refer to full text for abstract.
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Pedagogical practices in a higher education context : case studies in environmental and science educationLe Grange, Lesly L. L. 07 1900 (has links)
Thesis (PhD) -- Stellenbosch University, 2001. / Stellenbosch University. Faculty of Education. Dept. of Curriculum Studies. / ENGLISH ABSTRACT: My study investigates opportunities that may currently be available to enable the transformation
of post-apartheid teacher education. I examine two case studies of my own professional practice.
The first case study involves in-service education work that I performed with teachers in a local
community, Grassy Park. The second case study represents work I performed with students in a
pre-service education programme at the University of Stellenbosch. My study aims to:
• Critically examine the implications of social issues, particularly environmental issues, for
pedagogical practices generally and for South African pedagogical work in particular.
• Critically review the changing socio-historical determinants of pedagogical practices in South
African teacher education.
• Investigate changing pedagogical practices by describing and reflecting on work done in my own
professional contexts as a science/environmental teacher educator at a historically Afrikaner
university.
With respect to teacher education, Pendlebury (1998) argues that we are seeing shifts in public
space, evaluative space, pedagogical space and institutional space from insulated space (hidden
from public scrutiny) to a more porous space. In this study I am concerned with pedagogical
space that, in Pendlebury's (1998:345) terms determines 'who may learn (or teach), how and
what they learn (or teach), when and for how long and where'. I use these categories of
Pendlebury (1998:345) together with Turnbull's (1997) perspectives on knowledge production as
conceptual tools to frame my analyses of the cases. Although a significant part of my study
focuses on classroom practices, I take pedagogy to have a much broader meaning that
incorporates in Hernandez's (1997:11) terms 'all spaces in which knowledge is produced and
identities are formed'.
This research report offers a brief insight into the complexities of change at the micro-level of
classroom practices. But, importantly also contextualises these micro-level pedagogical practices
within broader socio-historical determinants and provides praxiological comments on postapartheid
education policies. The research also initiates an investigation into the social
organisation of trust in post-apartheid South Africa. / AFRIKAANSE OPSOMMING: In hierdie studie ondersoek ek die geleenthede vir die transformasie van onderwyseropleiding in
die post-apartheidsera. Ek bespreek twee gevallestudies uit my eie professionele praktyk. Die
eerste gevallestudie handel oor die indiensopleiding van onderwysers in Grassy Park, 'n
plaaslike gemeenskap. Die tweede gevallestudie handel oor die werk wat ek met studente in 'n
voorgraadse onderrigprogram aan die Universiteit van Stellenbosch gedoen het. Die studie het
die volgende ten doel:
• 'n Kritiese ondersoek na die uitwerking van sosiale aspekte, met die klem op
omgewingsaangeleenthede, op opvoedkundige praktyke in die algemeen en op die Suid-
Afrikaanse opvoedkundige praktyk in die besonder.
• 'n Kritiese oorsig oor die sosio-historiese veranderinge wat deeI vorm van die opleiding
van Suid-Afrikaanse onderwysers.
• 'n Ondersoek na veranderende opvoedkundige praktyke aan die hand van 'n beskrywing
van en refleksie op my eie professionele werk as dosent in die
wetenskap/omgewingsopvoeding aan 'n historiese Afrikaanse universiteit.
Ten opsigte van onderwyseropleiding beweer Pendlebury (1998) dat verskuiwings in die
publieke ruimte, evaluerende ruimte, pedagogiese ruimte en institusionele ruimte, plaasvind van
'n afgesonderde ruimte (verberg vir publieke waarnemimg/evaluasie) na 'n meer deursigtige
ruimte. In hierdie studie fokus ek op die pedagogiese ruimte wat, volgens Pendlebury
(1998:345), bepaal 'who may learn (or teach), how and what they learn (or teach), when and for
how long and where'. Ek gebruik Pendlebury (1998: 345) se kategoriee saam met Turnbull
(1997) se perspektiewe oor kennisproduksie as konseptuele raamwerk vir my analise van die
twee gevallestudies. Alhoewel 'n beduidende gedeelte van my studie op klaskamerpraktyke
fokus, moet die term pedagogie(k) volgens my 'n veel breer betekenis verband gesien word om
ook Hernandez (1997: 11) se 'all spaces in which knowledge is produced and identities are
formed' intesluit.
Hierdie navorsingsverslag lig die komplekse aard van transformasie op die mikro-vlak van
klaskamerpraktyke toe. Van groot belang is ook die kontekstualisering van opvoedkundige
praktyke op mikro-vlak binne die breer sosio-historiese veranderlikes en lewer praktykverwante
kommentaar op die opvoedkundige beleid van die post-apartheidsera. Die navorsing dien ook as
vertrekpunt om sosiale vertroue in die post-apartheids-Suid-Afrika te ondersoek.
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The profits of the past : nostalgic white writing of post-apartheid South AfricaLombard, Erica January 2015 (has links)
Drawing on relevant theory from memory studies, literary criticism, sociology, reception studies and book history, this thesis examines the prevalence of nostalgia in white South African writing of the post-apartheid period. It identifies the numerous and remarkably conventional texts by white authors that proliferated in this time which might be described as nostalgic, arguing that these constitute a key genre of post-apartheid South African literature. In seeking to offer an explanation for why these nostalgic forms predominated in this period, this study takes into consideration the full "communications circuit" of a book i.e. the life-cycle of a book from production to consumption. Consequently, it employs an interdisciplinary framework to examine nostalgic literature from the perspectives of both the producers and consumers of texts. It is argued, ultimately, that post-apartheid nostalgic writing was particularly involved in the protection of certain formulations and structures of whiteness at individual, collective and institutional levels. The argument unfolds in three phases, each of which explores the value of nostalgia and nostalgic white writing in a different but related sphere: namely, literature, memory, and the market. The first phase of the argument provides a literary critical reading of the generic hallmarks of these novels, considering a range of representative texts, including works by Mark Behr, André Brink, Justin Cartwright, J. M. Coetzee, Lisa Fugard, Christopher Hope, Jo-Anne Richards, and Rachel Zadok. The second examines the allure of nostalgia and nostalgic books for the writers and readers of this literature, drawing on sociological studies of post-apartheid white South African identity and reader-response theory to analyse a selection of online and print reviews by readers. In the third phase, the thesis utilises a book historical approach to investigate the influence of various literary markets and the publishing industry, both local and global, in shaping the nostalgia trend.
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Soweto township youth experience of unemploymentOluwayemisi, Messigah Georgina 01 1900 (has links)
Background: The South African youth is confronted by unemployment. Ironically, even
the youth of Soweto Township experience the harsh realities of unemployment, despite them
playing a significant role to fight the apartheid regime. Therefore, the study explores the
experiences of the youth of Soweto with regards to unemployment.
Method: This study adopted a qualitative research approach and case study design. The
purposive sampling method was used to select the sample. The sample consisted of ten
unemployed youth of Soweto Township. The unstructured interview was utilised to collect
data.
Results: One of the main findings in this study was the fact that unemployment has impacted
negatively on young people in Soweto Township. Unemployment has led to psychological
effects and isolation amongst the jobless youth of Soweto.
Conclusion: There is a need for great job opportunities for the youth in South Africa to
grow the economy. This could also reduce crime among young people since it is well known
that some of the young people have engaged in criminal activities due to unemployment. / Psychology / M.A. (Psychology)
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Wandering away from apartheid : A study on interracial bridging social capital in South African small-town societyHaglund, Agnes-Cecilia January 2019 (has links)
Trust, cooperation and equal value. The purpose of the current study has been to present evidence of interracial bridging social capital between groups and individuals in South African small-town society. An ethnological field study has been executed by searching, observing and interviewing citizens at various meeting points in civil society where interracial interaction is taking place. The collected empirical data will be evaluated in relation to established theories regarding the importance of social capital in relation to political prospering of liberal democracies. This will be done in order to answer the question: in what way and in which spheres of South African society can evidence of bridging social capital be found? The discussion and conclusion will be dependent on to what extent bridging social capital is taking place in conjunction with interracial meetings. The research will be divided into three phases. The first phase will be presenting the idea of the research and the preparation of how it is going to be performed. The second phase demonstrates the execution of data gathering with the theories at its core. Finally, the third phase of the essay will be carried out by discussing the results and how it contributes to the existing science base (George and Bennet, 2005, p. 73). In conclusion, the study showed that bridging social capital is possible to find primarily in the spheres of education and Christian parishes close to communities where the middle and upper-class live.
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