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Die ontwikkeling en implementering van 'n rehabilitasieprogram vir nywerheid- en verbeteringskoleVan Zyl, Maria Johanna Alleta 20 August 2012 (has links)
D.Ed. / The number of learners sentenced at the children's court and criminal court to reformatory and industrial schools increase annually. The nature of the offences by children is becoming more serious. Today offences like armed robbery, murder, rape and dealing in drugs are common, as opposed to a few years ago when offences like aggressive behaviour, shoplifting, and refusal to do homework or attend school were the norm in these cases. Learners who are sentenced to reformatory and industrial schools must be rehabilitated. This implies that these schools should have a rehabilitation programme in place. The researcher is the manager responsible for reformatory and industrial schools in the Mpumalanga Department of Education. It is in this capacity the researcher noted that these schools do not have suitable rehabilitation programmes available for these learners. The aim of the research was to establish themes to be included in rehabilitation programmes for reformatory and industrial schools. The research design is qualitative, explorative and descriptive. The research method is divided into three phases. The first phase applied a situational analysis to establish the themes of the rehabilitation programme. In phase two the information obtained was organised into categories and subcategories. The following main themes were identified: • problematic view of the self; • problematic view of parents of the learner; and • problematic view of the future. The third was to develop a rehabilitation programme and implement it at the reformatory and industrial schools in the Mpumalanga Province. The development of the programmes was based on the developmental approach. This approach ensures that the focus is placed on the strong positive aspects of the learner during the rehabilitation programme. The learners develop skills to identify their own problems and to solve the identified problems. The aim of the rehabilitation programme is to achieve the following: • the learner must demonstrate an understanding of his/her problematic situation; • the learner must form new meanings; • reformulation of norms and values need to take place; and • self-acceptance and a focus on the future must take place. For the successful implementation of the rehabilitation programme the researcher acts as the provincial coordinator. A provincial multidisciplinary team consisting of the following people assists the provincial coordinator: principlas from reformatory and industrial schools and the psychologist of each school. The personnel members of each school are utilised as facilitators of the rehabilitation programme. The rehabilitation programme is presented to groups of learners. Techniques like story telling, dramatisation, group work, competitions, and games are used in this programme. The learner starts the rehabilitation programme the day he/she is admitted to the school. The programme is complete when the learner is rehabilitated and ready to be placed back in the community. This occurs when he can accept himself and is able to strive towards realistic future expectations and success.
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Reformatories and industrial schools in South Africa: a study in class, colour and gender, 1882-1939Chisholm, Linda 09 December 2014 (has links)
Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of the Witwatersrand, Faculty of Arts, 1989. / This dissertation explores the establishment of reformatories and industrial
schools in South Africa between 1882 and 1939. It focuses on the political and
economic context of their emergence; the social and ideological construction of
delinquency and the child in need of care; the relationship of the class, colour
and gender divisions in the reformatory and industrial school system to the wider
racial and sexual division of labour in a colonial order, and the implications and
significance of the transfer of these institutions from the Department of Prisons to
the Department of Education in 1917 and 1934 respectively
Thematically, the study is divided into three parts. Part One composing
chapters one. two. three, four, five and six situates the reformatory and industrial
school in their political and economic, social and ideological context. Beginning
with the origins of the reformatory in the nineteenth century Cape Colony it then
shifts focus to the Witwatersrand where the industrial revolution re-shaped and
brought into being new social forces and institutions to deal with children defined
as delinquent or in need of care. It also examines the place of the reformatory
and industrial school in relation to the wider system of legal sanctions and
welfare methods established during this period for the white and black working
classes by a segregationist state.
Part Two comprising chapters seven, eight, nine and ten contrasts and
compares social practices in the institutions in terms of class, colour and gender
between 1911 and 1934. Included here is a consideration of the different
methods of discipline and control, conditions, education and training, and
system of apprenticeship provided for black and white, male and female inmates
Responses of inmates to institutionalisation are explored in the final chapter of
this section.
The third section comprises chapters eleven (a) and (b) and chapter twelve
These chapters expand on themes developed in earlier sections for the period
1934-1939. Shifts in criminological thinking and changing strategies towards
juvenile delinquency in the nineteen thirties are considered in chapters eleven a)
and b). The final chapter examines the nature and significance of the changes
brought about particularly by Alan Paton in the African reformatory, Diepkloof,
between 1934 and 1939
The conclusion provides an overview of the main arguments of each section.
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