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An investigation into the effective functioning of the Section 20 school funding system : the case of the Tshwane school districts.Matlhwale, Joseph Mantlongwane. January 2015 (has links)
M. Tech. Cost and Management Accounting / The South African school system mainly consists of private independent schools and public ordinary schools. Public schools are divided into Section 20 and Section 21 schools. Section 21 schools are financially self-managed, whilst Section 20 schools' finances are centrally managed by their respective provincial education departments. The only means of income for Section 20 schools in South Africa is an annual fund allocation from the government, which is based on an annual "paper budget" submitted by each school. This study investigated the effective functioning of the Section 20 school funding system in the Tshwane North, Tshwane South and Tshwane West districts of the Gauteng Province in South Africa.
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Die invloed van Skriftuurlike beginsels op doeltreffende bestuur in openbare skoleVan der Riet, Willem Anton 12 September 2012 (has links)
D.Ed. / At present parents, learners and staff from various cultures, faiths, interests, language needs, learning and cognitive style needs have admission to the same schools. Apart from this, the manner in which a Christian principal manages the school and his management behaviour are to a large extent determined by his belief framework. This, however, presupposes that the Christian principal should be knowledgeable about the various cultural groups in order to display a positive attitude towards these groups. At the same time it is true that each child, regardless of race, colour, faith, culture, sex, age, belief and ethnic origin can be admitted to any school of his/her choice (Botha, 1990 : 41; Bouwer, 1995 : 48; Bray, 1998 : 18). The Christian principal should seriously consider the mission, code of conduct and ethos of his school for all learners to feel welcome. Living by one's beliefs has become a sensitive matter and should be approached with care within a new education system. Perhaps a principal should adapt his management strategy with a diversity of language, faith and culture in public schools in order not to give offense to people who are different-minded. This, however, does not imply that the Christian principal should remain silent about his faith, for he should rather act with wisdom and insight in order to proclaim the gospel of Jesus Christ (compare Romans 1 : 16). This is just one of the many problems confronting a Christian principal in public schools which gave rise to the motivation for this research. In an effort to overcome the above problems, the following aims were formulated for this study as an inquiry into ; the degree to which the management skills of the Christian principal are influenced by Scriptural principles (traditional management values); the attitude required to realise in practice the understanding of the will of God in order to display the personality traits which are given to the reborn Christian by the Spirit of God and which are related to traditional management values; specific personality traits required from a Christian principal in accordance with the will of God in order to manage effectively; and educators' experience and opinions of specific management values (moral values) in educational management, in order to determine whether principals whose management approach rests on Scriptural principles can indeed manage effectively in public schools.
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Relating experiences of non-Christian educators in predominantly Christian schools in Kwa-Zulu [sic] Natal from a social justice perspective.Harms, Yasmin. January 2006 (has links)
This research study deals with educators' experiences and daily encounters
within two diverse school settings. Educators from both schools are from diverse
religious, racial and cultural backgrounds. The study focuses on issues of social
groups based on religious affiliations and was guided by theories of oppression
and social justice.
The following questions were the focus of the study:
1. What have been the experiences of non-Christian educators in a
predominantly Christian school around religion?
2. What caused these experiences to be constructed in a way they did?
3. To what extent have the experiences of non-Christians at the school been
similar to earlier experiences in relationship to religion in their lives?
4. To what extent are the experiences of non-Christians evidence for
describing their situation as one of 'religious oppression'?
A qualitative approach was used. Semi-structured interviews were conducted at
one school and questionnaires were completed at the second school, as the
researcher was unable to interview educators because of time constraints. The
results of the research indicated that educator experiences differed from one
school to the next. Although it is not possible to make a judgement about
religious oppression based on such limited contexts, there is significant evidence
of social exclusion based on religion at the one school. At times these issues are
caught up in racial and gender issues, or issues between non-Christian religions.
However, at the second school educators experienced a high degree of
inclusion.
The research raises questions about the ways in which schools in South Africa
are addressing the constitutional and policy requirements concerning the
acceptance of religious diversity. / Thesis (M.Ed.) - University of KwaZulu-Natal, Durban, 2006.
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Die behoefte aan burgerlike opvoeding in Suid-Afrika : 'n politiek-wetenskaplike ontleding van kurrikulum 2005Van der Westhuizen, Zulandi 11 September 2012 (has links)
M.Litt. et Phil. / The purpose of this study is to determine the need for civic education and the degree to which this need is addressed in Curriculum 2005. (Curriculum 2005 is the new education curriculum, implemented in state schools since 1998.) As a young democracy, one of the challenges South Africa faces is to consolidate democracy. Part of this challenge is to establish a culture of political tolerance. Civic education, implemented in schools, is a method to achieve these goals. In the rationale of Curriculum 2005, it is stated that ". . . the child is given opportunities to grow and develop as an active citizen, contributing constructively to the building of a democratic, non-racist, non-sexist and equitable society." (Foundation Phase: Draft Policy/Phase Document, 1997) Intentionally or unintentionally, Curriculum 2005 appears to be the Department of Education's answer to the need for civic education in South Africa at this stage. The degree to which this need is fulfilled needs to be determined, as well as the shortcomings and where and how it can be improved. For civic education to be successful and effective, broad criteria were identified for the content; the method; the approach; resource materials and teacher education. This study found that there is a fair degree of elements of civic education in Curriculum 2005. There are, however, five main problems that may hinder the effectiveness of civic education. The first is the method. Civic education is not taught as a separate subject, but interwoven in mainly the social learning area. The second obstacle is the content. Thirdly, the majority of teachers who have to teach civic education lack sufficient ability and knowledge, as they did not receive training in this field. A fourth point is the budget constraints. On the one hand time and money is needed to develop a civic education programme, while on the other hand, there are some urgent needs to upgrade and expand physical infrastructure in schools. Lastly, the lack of sufficient and appropriate resource material for teachers, probably poses the single biggest obstacle for the successful implementation of civic education. The Department of Educuation did not provide official textbooks or guidelines, and the sourcing of material for discussion and examples is left to the teacher's own discression. Although there is a clear need for civic education in South Africa, and the intention to fulfil this need seems to be present in Curriculum 2005, the means to achieve this goal are absent. The combination of these five points leads to the conclusion that if the results of civic education could be measured, any form of success and effectiveness in Curriculum 2005, would be nothing more than pure coincidence.
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An investigation into the management and implementation of no fee school policy on the access of education in Limpopo Province, Vhembe District : a case study of Mudaswali CircuitMusandiwa, Fhatuwani Freddy 10 January 2014 (has links)
MPM / Oliver Tambo Istitute for Gverment and Policy Studies
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The leadership role of school management teams in marketing schoolsMbonambi, Herbert Bonginkosi January 2006 (has links)
Submitted in fulfilment of the requirements for the Degree MASTER OF EDUCATION in the Department of Educational Planning and Administration of the Faculty of Education at the University of Zululand, 2006. / This study examines the leadership role of School Management Teams (SMTs) in marketing schools in the Lower Tugela Circuit in KwaZulu-Natal.
School managers currently face the major challenge of finding innovative ways of attracting learners to their institutions. With at least part of their budget derived from school fees and private donors, they need to ensure solid learner enrolment numbers and good pass rates. To address this issue, SMTs are expected to employ business and marketing principles in their management plans. SMTs are faced with the task of changing educators' mindsets and perceptions with regard to marketing. They are required to inculcate a competitive spirit among educators and create partnerships with industries to attract sponsorships. Furthermore, SMTs need to ensure that the needs of their learners are satisfied.
An empirical investigation was undertaken to assess and evaluate the role of SMTs in marketing their schools. Data was solicited from a sample of SMTs by means of questionnaires. Both open and closed-ended questions were used. The following are key findings of the study:
• Some schools lack teacher development programmes to capacitate educators to market their schools effectively.
• School Governing Bodies (SGBs) are not sufficiently involved in school marketing decisions.
• Some schools have not established partnership with business and industry.
On the basis of these findings, the following recommendations were made:
• SMTs must be tasked with developing programmes to capacitate educators to market their schools effectively.
• SGBs should be involved in a greater capacity in school marketing decisions.
• SMTs should bridge the gap between schools as education service providers and business/industry as the ultimate consumer of these services, by marrying the business/industry knowledge and skills requirements with relevant school curriculum design.
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A critical evaluation of the South African policy on religion and education (2003)Prinsloo, Paul 30 June 2008 (has links)
In this critical evaluation of the National Policy on Religion and Education (Republic of South Africa 2003) , I will invite a multiplicity of voices and opinions from various disciplines and discourses - a Bakhtinian carnival of heteroglossic play .
As opposed to the official feast, one might say that carnival celebrated temporary liberation from the prevailing truth and from the established order; it marked the suspension of all hierarchal rank, privileges, norms, and prohibitions. Carnival was the true feast of time, the feast of becoming, change, renewal. It was hostile to all that was immortalised and completed (Bakhtin 1984:10).
In this time of postmodern carnival, official 'Truth' is constantly questioned and treated with suspicion and replaced by new and unofficial truths (Scott 1986; Hiebert 2003). God (if not religion) has been proclaimed dead and yet at the same time seems to be more alive than ever. This is a time when 'all the conventional norms and protocols are suspended, as the common life is invaded by a great wave of riotous antinomianism which makes everywhere for bizarre mésalliances' (Scott 1986:6).
And the presiding spirit of blasphemy finds its quintessential expression in the ritual of the mock crowning and subsequent decrowning of the carnival king - who is the very antithesis of a real king, since he is in fact often a slave or a jester. In short, everything is topsy-turvy, and the disarray thus engenders an uproarious kind of laughter (Scott 1986:6).
In his presidential address to the American Academy of Religion in 1986 titled 'The house of intellect in an age of carnival: some hermeneutical reflections', Scott (1986:7) explores the impact of the "multiplicity and fragmentation and diversity" facing 'the house of intellect', and identifies the challenge of not resorting to the safety of 'any sort of reductionism, [but] how to understand and interpret the multitudinous messages and voices that press in upon us, each clamouring for attention and for pride of place'.
After acknowledging the polyphony surrounding Religionswissenschaft on the one hand and on the other hand rejecting any hermeneutical attempts at a 'totalistic' synthesis, Scott proposes moving among the different 'modalities' of interanimation between [the various] modes of discourse' (Ricoeur quoted by Scott 1986:11). Scott (1986:15) closes his address by appealing for continued conversations and dialogue among discourses and 'scatterings' of truth (1986:15) as a hermeneutical method that would take the plurality and heteroglossia of this time in history seriously.
This thesis is an attempt - a personal but also a scholarly and academically responsible attempt - to plot many of the voices and contexts that would help to evaluate the specific understanding of the role of the study of religion in the broader contexts of citizenship in a postmodern age where nationalities, nation states and allegiances are constantly in flux and complex.
This thesis is also submitted as proof of the validity of my own voice as one of many voices in and surrounding the house of intellect in an age of carnival. / Religious Studies and Arabic) / D. Litt. et Phil. (Religious Studies and Arabic)
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Effective marketing strategies for township schools in the Gauteng ProvinceMpofu, Ian 01 1900 (has links)
This Mixed Method Research Project examines the possible marketing strategies that can be used to market township schools in the Gauteng province, within an increasingly competitive educational system. These strategies are investigated within the largely unbalanced infrastructural and resource dichotomy that exists between most township schools and the former Model C schools; the results of which has seen among many other challenges, the ever increasing learner migration from the township schools to the former Model C suburban schools. This pedagogical manuscript adopts a case study approach while simultaneously integrating the influences of established research paradigms like pragmatism and enterpretivism. Within the attempt to find the best marketing options for township schools, the project also consciously attempts to identify the challenges (and possible solutions) that the said schools face as they try to market themselves. The benefits of implementing the marketing matrix within the education product are henceforth highlighted within the narrative of the project. / Educational Leadership and Management / M. Ed. (Education Management)
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A critical linguistic analysis of the discourse on religious observances in public schools to establish the hegemonic influence of colonial religious observances and their effect on school populationsGovindsamy, Loshini January 2016 (has links)
Submitted in compliance with the requirements for the Doctor’s Degree in Language Practice, Durban University of Technology, Durban, South Africa, 2016. / Even after political liberation in South Africa, a mismatch exists between the principles of freedom of religious observance taught in Religion Education and the actual religious observances in public schools. Anglican hymns, prayers and observances are still being used in schools where the religious ethos has changed from one of Christianity to include Hinduism, Islam and Judaism, as well as Shembe and Zionist religions. The Draft Policy on Religion Education stipulates that there should be a distinction between home religions and the school’s official religious instruction. School religious observances, particularly observances which reflect the oppressive nature of past colonial impositions, should not give offence to learners from other religious denominations, or belittle their own practices. This thesis investigates the hegemonic influence of colonial religious observances and their possible effect on school populations. Within a critical linguistic approach, which explores the ways in which language both sets in place and reflects the relations of power implicit in social functioning, a critical discourse analysis was carried out on current and topical media texts reporting on contentious issues involving religious observances in schools. Community members were also consulted by means of surveys and interviews so as to provide an overview of the social context of the wider community within which the schools were situated. The resulting data could then be used to triangulate data obtained from the discourse analysis, and either confirm, modify or challenge the latter. The results suggest that, not only is there a strong hegemonic influence present in schools, as a result of the lingering vestiges of traditional colonial Christianity, but that modern Christian movements are also beginning to exert a persuasive influence on non-Christian populations. The issue of religious observance in schools is a highly complex and potentially controversial issue, but one which merits study in view of the fact that the stakeholders’ right to freedom of religious observance may be violated on a daily basis. / D
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Sir William Milton : a leading figure in public school games, colonial politics and imperial expansion 1877-1914Winch, Jonathan R. T. 03 1900 (has links)
Thesis (PhD)--Stellenbosch University, 2013. / This investigation is aimed at providing a better understanding of William Milton’s influence
on society in southern Africa over a period of more than thirty years. In the absence of any
previous detailed work, it will serve to demonstrate Milton’s importance in restructuring the
administration, formulating policy and imposing social barriers in early Rhodesia – factors
that will contribute to the research undertaken by revisionist writers. It will also go some way
towards answering Lord Blake’s call to discover exactly what the Administrator did and how
he did it.
Milton’s experiences at the Cape are seen as being essential to an understanding of the
administration he established in Rhodesia. Through examining this link – referred to by
historians but not as yet explored in detail – new knowledge will be provided on Rhodesia’s
government in the pre-First World War period. The Cape years will offer insight into
Milton’s working relationship with Rhodes and his involvement in the latter’s vision of the
region’s social form and future. They will also shed light on Milton’s attitude towards people
of colour.
Cricket and rugby are key themes running through Milton’s life. The study will
illuminate much about the creation of South African sport at a time when the public school
games ethic was important in the nature of empire. Milton made an enormous but
controversial contribution to the playing of the games, club culture, facilities, administration,
international competition and who was eligible to represent South Africa.
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