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An exploratory analysis of alternative approaches in distance learning programmes for nurses.Kortenbout, Wilhelmina Petronella. January 1995 (has links)
An exploratory retrospective study conducted on two differing educational programmes, both of which were for the diploma in community health nursing. The aims of the study were: i) To propose a conceptual framework in order to compare distance learning programmes in community health nursing. ii) To describe and compare two such programmes based on this framework: one content-based and the other community / problem based. The research design used case study methodology, after the development of a model for the education of professional nurses which was derived from literature. The constructs of the model were used as propositions in a case study protocol. The four constructs were each made up of two elements and each element consisted of the poles of a continuum by which that feature in a programme could be identified. The constructs were: a) The Conceptual Programme which included the elements of Base and Structure; Base being either institution or community and structure either content or process. b) The Student with elements of Professional or Personal attributes. Professional attributes were either empowered or disempowered and personal either self directing or passive. c) The Context which had Components and Relationships as elements. The former comprised either limited formal health services or all-embracing health related sectors, whilst the latter specified relationships would either be seen
as linkages with unilateral formal communications or partnerships where collegial relations impacted on both parties involved. d) The Concrete Resources included both human and material resources. Human resources were either limited or additional and material either limited or varied.
Application of the Conceptual Programme analysis demonstrated that programme A was institution and content based whilst programme B was community / problem (process) based. Programme documentation and student assignment and projects were analyzed in terms of the remaining three constructs. An interview with a tutor for each programme followed after they had read the case reports. A third interview was then held with a key person who had overseen both programmes and read case and interview reports in order to validate both content and the use of the model as
framework for analysis. The following trends emerged: i) The content programme was associated with more disempowered and passive
students as those were defined in this study. ii) The content programme also used more limited formal health sector settings for learning and in this linkage type relationships dominated although three instances of partnerships did occur, and some community based groups were used by students. iii) The content programme used one tutor per contact session for lectures with students and, cost, in 1991 currency, R150 per student to deliver. iv) The community / problem based programme showed a stronger trend to empowered and self directing students with several clear instances being documented. v) There was a greater variety of settings used for learning in this programme. vi) Several instances of partnership relationships occurred despite the limited contact time between students and communities or health settings. vii) The community / problem-based programme needed two facilitators per contact session at a cost of R1130 (1991) as small group discussions were the main strategy for learning.
viii) Student evaluations of both programmes showed that students viewed them in much the same way despite the differences that were found. This indicates that student evaluations on their own provided insufficient evidence about the nature of a programme. ix) The community / problem based programme cost about 20% more to deliver than the content programme out of a total expenditure of R186 000 (1991 value). x) The model was revised to collapse professional and personal attributes into one element and to add another element 'metacognition' to the construct
student. 'Access' was also recommended as an additional construct with elements of barriers and supports. This new model needs to be tested and reviewed by peers. The revised model for the education of professional nurses could be a useful yardstick for evaluating existing
educational programmes, selecting newly proposed programmes and guiding policy formation. / Thesis (Ph.D.)-University of Natal, Durban, 1995.
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Development and testing of a model for implementation of recognition of prior learning.Khanyile, Thembisile. January 2001 (has links)
The Minister of Education's public statement In August 1999, that South African citizens should mobilize and build an education and training system for the 21'st century . among other things emphasized the application of procedures for recognition of prior learning as part of the restructuring process. On the other hand the resolution taken by the South African nursing Council at the beginning of 2000. that enrolled nurses should be upgraded through the process of recognition of prior learning further increased the urgency for nursing education institutions to develop and implement RPL policies In South Africa, Recognition of Prior learning (RPL)is seen as an appropriate approach to offer equity and redress of past imbalances in the education and training system. The purpose of the study was to develop and test an appropriate model that could be used for Recognition of Prior Learning for nurses. To test the model, it was implemented in a form of pilot projects by three institutions. It was important for the model development to identify and involve all the stakeholders of the nursing education system. An appropriate design for the study was a multiphase decision oriented evaluation research . Stuffelbeam's Context. Input, Process and Product evaluation model was used to guide the research process. The first phase was the development of the model which involved the Context evaluation. During the context evaluation phase, the Education Committee of the South African Nursing Council and the evaluative researcher developed the guidelines for the RPL process. These were refined by the stakeholders during the regional workshops. The results of this phase was the RPL guidelines. The second phase was the Input and the Process evaluations. Each institution had to make planning decisions for Implementation. The result was RPL policies for each institution Thereafter. the three institutions Implemented the RPL guidelines to specific target groups of nurses that were identified for the purpose of the pilot project. Data collection instruments varied according to the phase of the model development. Checklists were used to measure the extent to which each Institution had followed the RPL guidelines Dunng the Product (evaluation) phase. candidates' scores were compared with those of other candidates who accessed the specific programs through the traditional entry routes. According to the results all RPL candidates were successful In the programs they aimed at accessing DUring the testing phase after access, the RPL candidates compared favourably with other the other candidates who accessed the programs through traditional routes . The result indicate that the self- directed approach used during RPL helped the candidates in the actual programs. A process onented and competency- focused model was developed through an inclusive process. Nursing education Institutions and policy makers can use the model to structure and evaluate RPL implementation in nursing education institutions in South Africa. / Thesis (Ph.D.)-University of Natal, Durban, 2001.
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Teachers' dominant discourses of barriers to basic education in an HIV and AIDS context.Ramiah, Padmini. January 2006 (has links)
This study is situated within a poststructuralist paradigm and uses qualitative methods to examine how teachers map and make sense of intersecting barriers to basic education embedded in their specific schooling contexts and communities, in particular, in a context in which HIV/AIDS prevalence is high. The study examines how teacher constructions of their experiences of teaching in a particular context shape their taken for granted understandings of the intersecting barriers to basic education. In other words, it explored how teachers position themselves within historically constructed discourses about their learners and the community in which they teach, and how these shape their understandings of barriers to basic education. The participants were thirty-six teachers (ten males and twenty six females) from five schools in the Richmond Municipality. Focus group interviews were used to access participants understanding and experiences' of barriers to schooling in the context of HIV and AIDS. Within the focus group sessions, participatory techniques were used as a means of drawing out sensitive information from participants, namely, a ranking exercise and the vulnerability matrix. The findings in the study suggest that the teachers relied on a deficiency framework as a basis for understanding the intersecting barriers to basic education in an HIV and AIDS context. Five key themes relating to this framework emerged: a discourse of detachment; silences; difference as deficit; normalisation discourse; and a discourse of caring. / Thesis (M.Ed.)-University of KwaZulu-Natal, Pietermaritzburg, 2006.
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An investigative study into ways of incorporating road safety education in the revised national curriculum statement in the further education and training band.Govender, Muniamma. January 2004 (has links)
This research focuses on how Road Safety Education can be incorporated into the Revised National Curriculum Statement in the Further Education and Training Band.
Education is based on theories about how learners learn, what influences that learning
and what is effective practice. Such theories are based on research. Educational research
may be seen as a systematic attempt to gain a better understanding of the educational
process, generally with a view to improving its efficiency.
Varied view points are obtained when qualified individuals with common or divergent
backgrounds are brought together to explore a problem, to provide information or to
valuate the merits of a proposition. I chose to interview the Heads of Department of the
existing learning areas in order to explore their attitudes and opinions towards the
incorporation of Road Safety Education in the Revised National Curriculum Statement.
The interview focused on their understanding of this curriculum, implementing it, Road
Safety Education and how it can be incorporated into this curriculum.
Questionnaires and interviews are a way of getting data about people by asking them
rather than by observing and sampling their behaviour. For this study the 50 grade 11
learners were presented with carefully selected and ordered questions in a combination of
closed and open form. This enabled the learners to answer freely and fully in their own
words and their own frame of reference concerning the incorporation of Road Safety
Education in the Revised National Curriculum Statement.
This research was prompted by the high fatality rate in the country as a result of road
accidents. An in-depth analysis of documents, provided by the KZN Department of
Transport, were undertaken. This researcher found that documents provided information
about aspects of road safety, proper road usage, and other factors that contribute to the
high fatality rates on our roads, aspects that could not be observed because they had taken
place before this investigative study had occurred.
Each year, publication of the figures for road accidents bring fresh disappointments
especially for those who have striven so hard for an improvement. The time has now
come for us to recognise that the conventional road safety programmes of the past years
are incapable, no matter how delicately applied, of yielding anything but marginal
improvements. What is surely needed is some new approach with a potential for huge
improvements. Road safety should be about education and not about prosecution.
Educational programmes must be undertaken to overcome existing areas of ignorance
and to initiate a process of change concerning road safety. It is therefore imperative that
the Revised National Curriculum Statement incorporates a comprehensive, compulsory
Road Safety Education Programme. / Theses (M.Ed.)-University of KwaZulu Natal, 2004.
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Beyond learning to read : an evaluation of a short reading intervention in the Ilembe District of KwaZulu-Natal.Mackie, June Margaret. January 2007 (has links)
Thesis (M.Ed.)-University of KwaZulu-Natal, Pietermaritzburg, 2007.
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Growing social justice educators : how do we improve our practice as social justice educators?Quin, Jane. January 2006 (has links)
In this study I am aiming to improve my practice as a Social Justice Educator of educator-students, basing my methodology primarily on Jean McNiff's (2002) approach to self-reflective action-research. The self-reflective action-research requirements mean that the study is necessarily an iterative process. I construct tools from within my praxis that has informed my work as a social justice educator. I apply these tools to the work of students (that has been informed by my praxis) to evaluate how well this same praxis lives up to its purpose. Through the same process I seek to improve the tools with which to better frame and name the praxis, for its improvement. From my own and collective writing, working, learning and reading experiences I have aimed to do this by constructing a Trajectory Model describing an understanding of social justice education to apply to the Self-Reflective Action-Research (SR-AR) Reports of our Advanced Certificate in Education (ACE) students. I use this process to draw conclusions about the Trajectory Model and indications of social justice educator practice. The Trajectory Model - containing the Critical Elements for indicating social justice education-praxis - is the model I construct for and in this research - for use in our ongoing developmental praxis as social justice educators. The Trajectory Model, for social justice education, is constructed - and hence understood through - a series of layered models of informing concepts and theories. The Trajectory Model is my attempt to describe the standing; yearning-imagining-dreaming; gazing; seeing; thinking-naming and framing; and doing subjective being for social justice - in a way that is communicable and usable to articulate indicators of what I - in this contextual space, time and community of practice - understand to be critical in being a social justice educator 1. The trajectory Model discussion focuses particularly on three Critical Elements: Position and Stance; Indigenous Knowledge Construction; and Agency and Praxis. They are to be 'read' as being embedded within 'imagination and yearning' for a socially just, non-oppressive society - and they all imply self-reflexivity as an integral aspect of their existence. Thus while there are six numbered elements or aspects in the Trajectory Model, it is the three 'intersecting circles' (of the model diagram) that I name to be the central or Critical Elements - the other three being contextualising or 'embedding' 'aspects' rather than 'elements'. Through this process I came to the following primary conclusions: The method of researching the reports was inadequate for the purpose of drawing any but the most tentative conclusions about growth of social justice practice from the work contained in the reports. However, they proved of some value in students' self-reflections on their own social justice praxis. Through the process of engagement and analysis, indications emerged that the constructed tools have value for the purpose of facilitating analysis and articulation of social justice educator praxis through the provision of a conceptual structure to name and frame the work. This has beneficial implications for social justice educator pedagogical development with regard to both praxis and research possibilities for our community of practice as social justice educators at UKZN in the future. The self-reflexivity and collective engagement of the research process in this study has helped to strengthen my practice as an educator of social justice educators, primarily through improving definition and mapping of critical elements in educating for social justice, as I understand it, in relation to current understandings and practiecs in the literature. 1. The discussion in the Introduction to this study, on the reason for using an alternative set of words to the "dreaming, seeing, being" terminology, pertains. / Thesis (M.Ed.) - University of KwaZulu-Natal, Pietermaritzburg, 2006.
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Tracing the use of pedagogical content knowledge in Grade 6 mathematics classrooms in KwaZulu-Natal.Ramdhany, Virendra. January 2010 (has links)
The aim of this study was to explore the concept of pedagogical content knowledge, or PCK, and its use in the practice of teaching. Teacher knowledge is a significant factor in determining learner gains in all school subjects. However, little is known about the role of the different types of knowledge that teachers are supposed to possess in particular in a developing world context. PCK was introduced by Lee Shulman in 1986 and has since been the subject of much research in teacher education. Pedagogical content knowledge is thought to be a highly specialised form of teacher knowledge that intertwines subject matter (content) knowledge and general pedagogic knowledge.
In this study, I examined the levels of PCK of 39 mathematics teachers; I tried to determine how they used PCK in their teaching of mathematics; what determined their PCK; and to what extent PCK influenced the mathematical achievement of their learners. The methodology that I used was lesson observation of 42 video-recorded grade 6 mathematics lessons from various schools in the greater Umgungundlovu district of Pietermaritzburg in KwaZulu-Natal. These schools were selected through random stratified sampling to participate in a larger regional achievement study, designed to investigate the factors which influence learning in schools. I was part of a research team that analysed the videos of the mathematics lessons, with the intention of getting the ‘big picture’ of mathematics teaching and learning in South Africa. Using the data from my observations, I developed a PCK instrument and attempted to measure the teachers’ PCK. I then tried to link these PCK scores to other variables in my study, which included a teacher’s test and learner tests. I tested the consistency of my instrument and the teachers’
PCK scores appeared fairly consistent across lessons, but that more research is needed to interrogate that.
My initial findings suggested that all teachers possess PCK in some form, though their observed PCK levels were limited. The opportunity to develop proficiency, the use of examples and some engagement with learners’ prior knowledge though mostly in the form of checking homework were the areas most prevalent. The focus was mostly on procedural aspects. Only a minority of the teachers used representations, showed more than one method, displayed longitudinal coherence or engaged in more substantial ways with learner thinking (misconceptions and errors).
Crucially, it emerged that a sound teachers’ knowledge of mathematical content was necessary for a high PCK rating, but there was no significant relationship between teachers’ PCK and learner gains in mathematics. It is likely that there are other factors which have a greater impact on learners’ learning than effective teachers, factors such as the socio-economic backgrounds of the learners. Given the random sampling of the schools in the study, and various attempts to ensure consistency in my coding and analysis, I hoped that these results would be valid for the greater KwaZulu-Natal area. However, because I used mainly the video analysis of lessons, and only a part of the teachers’ test, to determine the teachers’ PCK, it is possible that I may not have been able to get the full picture of the teachers’ PCK as I would have if I had also interviewed them.
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Rural educators' implementation of the National Curriculum Statements' arts and culture learning area : the educators' narratives.Peat, Beth Maureen. January 2009 (has links)
I am employed by the Department of Education as a Senior Education Specialist, / Thesis (M.Ed.)-University of KwaZulu-Natal, Durban, 2009.
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Maths anxiety and communication apprehension as barriers to learning mathematics.Moodley, Savathrie. January 2011 (has links)
As learners progress through the educational system their interest in mathematics
diminishes. Although mathematics is designed to challenge learners, it has produced
a high number of failures. Mathematics is most often measured by speed and accuracy
of learners’ computation with little emphasis on problem solving and pattern finding.
Whilst there are not many opportunities for learners to work on rich mathematical tasks
that require divergent thinking as well. Such an approach limits the use of creativity in
the classroom and reduces mathematics to a set of skills to master and rules to
memorise. In doing so, causes many learners to become anxious and apprehensive.
Thus their curiosity and enthusiasm for mathematics disappear, as they get older.
Keeping learners interested and engaged in mathematics by recognising and valuing
their mathematical creativity may reverse this negative tendency. 97 learners from
Riverview High School took part in the study. Three different instruments were used to
collect data: Mathematics Anxiety Scale (MAS), Personal Report of Communication
Apprehension (PRCA-24) and a focus group interview. The MAS questionnaire was
used to measure the level of mathematics anxiety experienced by the learners. The
PRCA-24 questionnaire is a self-report measure of communication apprehension. The
underlying factors were established that were influential in determining the levels of
maths anxiety and communication apprehension in individual learners. The results of
the study suggest that learner’ ability and attitude played an important role that would
lead to the large failure rate in mathematics. Analysis and interpretation of the findings
lead to the following conclusions being reached: (a) perceptions of mathematics as
being a difficult subject (b) learners negative attitude in mathematics (c) fear for the
subject, (d) learners self-efficacy beliefs in mathematics, (e) peer behaviour and (f)
teacher behaviour. The research study findings suggest that learner’ ability and attitude
played an important role. These attitudes contribute directly to the existence of maths
anxiety and communication apprehension in learners which impacts on their academic
performance. The results of the study suggest that learners experience varying levels of
maths anxiety and communication apprehension that impacts on their performance in
Mathematics, which are barriers to learning mathematics. / Thesis (M.Ed.)-University of KwaZulu-Natal, Edgewood, 2011.
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A survey of the assessment of clinical learning in selected nursing education institutions in KwaZulu Natal within an outcomes-based education (OBE) context.Mthembu, Sindisiwe Z. January 2003 (has links)
Assessment of clinical learning as a process for determining competence in practice is one of the underpinning principles of establishing and measuring student progress III nurse education. Literature reviewed for this study revealed that assessment of clinical learning in nursing education has been a problem for many years in the profession and it still is even today. This study was therefore aimed at investigating the current methods of assessing clinical learning used in nursing education institutions specifically as these relate to the South African Qualification Authority {SAQA)'s call for
applied competence. The study was an exploratory descriptive survey. Data were collected through the use of questionnaires. Questionnaires were mailed to those institutions that were not
easily accessible owing to their geographic location and questionnaires were delivered by the researcher to the geographically accessible institutions. All nurse educators employed
in five nursing colleges, two university nursing departments and one technikon in KwaZulu-Natal (KZN) were asked to participate in the study. The total number of nurse educators in the above-mentioned institutions was 195. The return rate of completed questionnaires was 56%. The results of this study revealed that the Objective Structured Clinical Examination (OSCE) and continuous clinical assessments were the two methods currently most commonly used in nursing education for assessing clinical learning, The results also revealed that triangulation of assessment methods of clinical learning was prevalent in nursing education institutions, with the OSCE and continuous clinical assessments being the most favoured combined strategies in assessing clinical learning. Very few participants mentioned the non-traditional clinical assessment methods (such as the triple jump and portfolio assessments) as strategies of assessing clinical learning that were used in their institutions. This study also revealed that continuous clinical assessment as a method of assessing clinical competence allowed nurse educators to assess applied competence and was generally believed to provide a more valid, reliable and realistic form of assessment. Continuous clinical assessments were also favoured for their authenticity because they were undertaken in a real clinical setting. Within the era of outcomes-based education, the focus in assessment moves from judgmental assessment methods to developmental assessments with extra emphasis on authentic and integrated assessment methods. / Thesis (M.N.)-University of Natal, Durban, 2003.
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