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Assessment of the implementation of the National Certificate (Vocational) plant production modulesLanga, Phakama Perry Macmillan January 2016 (has links)
From 2010, the South African vocational skills education is offered by the Department of Higher Education and Training (DHET) through the Technical Vocational Education and Training (TVET) colleges. TVET colleges need to be transformed in order to empower young learners with the skills required by the various sectors of the economy. The purpose of this study was to assess the implementation of the National Certificate (Vocational) Plant Production module in Training and Vocational Education and Training (TVET) Colleges. The sample for this study is concurrent triangulation whereby complementary methods of data sources were brought together to offset each other‘s weaknesses. The sample for this study consisted of participants from three TVET colleges: one deep rural, one semi-rural/semi-urban and one urban in terms of geographical location. A total of 18 participants were interviewed: 2 subject advisors engaged by the colleges, 1 lecturer from college A, 3 lecturers from college B, 2 lecturers from college C, 4 graduates from college B, 3 graduates from college C and 3 employers .Research design for this study has features of both a survey and a case study. The mixed-method approach was applied using document analysis, questionnaires and interviews for data collection. The researcher found out that there is a disparity between the Plant Production guidelines and their implementation and assessment. Among the main reasons for failure to implement the guidelines properly are poor or inadequate infrastructure for doing practical work, high rate of student absenteeism within the investigated categories, and the high drop-out rate at Levels 2–4. To minimize the challenges in offering the Plant Production module, the study recommends that since some colleges cannot afford purchasing large sizes of land to properly implement the Plant Production guidelines, the government and the DHET should link the Primary Agriculture training to the land reform program where students can be trained under the land reform program.
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'n Evaluering van die kurrikulum vir die oriënteringskursus vir die nasionale tegniese sertiflkaatOosthuizen, Jan Anthonie 18 February 2014 (has links)
M.Ed. (Tertiary and Adult Education) / The research under discussion follows from and should be seen against the background of the request to the Subdirectorate: Subject Curriculum Matters of the Department of Education and Training (DET) to develop a curriculum (syllabus) for an orientation course to the NI-course. The aim of this course is to fill existing gaps so that progress in the NI-course and the results of the course could be improved. The gap between general formative education and the expected teaching and training knowledge for entry into the NI-course was identified as a problem area.- Launched under the direction and initiative of the DET the NTC (OR) Course is a co-ordinated attempt to ensure a uniform standard in that this program was developed nationally. The curriculation action is unique because the curriculum for the introductory course wasn't developed in isolation but with the co-operation of all the education departments and interest groups. The NTC(OR) Course was developed and tested according to the curriculum development model of Jansen (1984:210). In this study use was mainly made of quasi-experimental research. In the first place it was necessary to define clearly what is meant by scientifically justified curriculum development. A literature study was undertaken to identify criteria to determine which requirements are necessary for curriculum development. To identify said criteria, use was mainly made of Jansen's model of curriculum development. This model was made applicable to curriculum evaluation by elevating the phases in the curriculum development process to criteria for the evaluation of a subject curriculum. The evaluation of the curriculum developmental actions of the DET was undertaken solely to express an opinion as to the scientificalness of the curriculum development. Use was made of evaluation tables to compare the curriculum developmental requirements, as set by practice, and the curriculum developmental action of the DET. The conclusion derived from the evaluation tables is that curriculum development of the DET compares favourably with the requirements set by practice. With only a few exceptions the curriculation action of the DET complies to a large extent with the criteria set in practice.
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Vernuwing van die kurrikulum vir beheerstelsels N6Bothma, Pieter Hendrik 19 May 2014 (has links)
M.Ed. (Curriculum Studies) / Please refer to full text to view abstract
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'n Kurrikulumraamwerk vir vliegtuigteorie13 August 2012 (has links)
D.Ed. / In the past number of years the practical training of apprentice aircraft technicians has undergone a major change when it moved over to Modular Criterium Based Training. The theoretical training at technical colleges did not change phenominally over the past number of years. The aircraft industries thus requested that something should be done about the overlapping of the training. This problem could be effectively attended to by the present renewal that is busy occurring in the education and training in South Africa. If the technical colleges' learning programs could be curriculated and presented as outcome based programs, as suggested by the discussion document of the Department of Education (Department of Education, 1997b), it could be to the advantage of apprentice aircraft technicians and the whole aircraft industry in the future. An outcomes based curriculum framework is suggested in this study for the design of a curriculum framework for Aircraft Theory. Guidelines were discussed on how such a curriculum framework could be designed for Aircraft Theory, but these guidelines could be used with good results on the other trade theory subjects in the technical colleges in order that these courses could also be re-curriculated to be presented as outcomes based. The curriculum framework which was determined by the suggested outcomes based framework, have a situation analysis and critical outcomes as a first step in order that specific outcomes could be determined in the next step. The assessment is done according to assessment criteria and range statements as a third step and after this the performance indicators are left to the lecturer/facilitator to, in co-operation with the learners, determine it. These different steps have a close relationship with each other and need not be determined as rigid steps which have to follow each other. A point that should be kept in mind is that the changes in technical colleges could not only be of a cosmetic nature, to present outcomes based courses the daily timetable will be different and it will have many other administrative implications. The course will concentrate much less on subjects like Mathematics, Engineering Science and Engineering Drawing, although these subjects will still be there present in them, but not with such intensity. The writer would prefer a system which is used in Germany (Bayerisches Staatsministerium far Unterricht, Wissenschaft and Kunst, 1994: 4) where the "Fachtheorie" is prominent and the "Fachrechnen" and "Fachzeichnen" are much less prominent. The necessary implications at the National Qualification Framework will have to be addressed in order that the course will enjoy recognition in this setup too. The training of apprentice aircraft technicians could be improved further if the technical colleges and the training centres of the aircraft industry would take the time to determine which training will be done in which organisation and to spell it out clearly. Furthermore they should be closely working together to the advantage of the aircraft technical apprentices and eventually to the advantage of the aircraft industry as a whole.
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A critical investigation into curriculum development discourses of academic staff at a South African university of technology.Powell, Paulette. January 2010 (has links)
This thesis investigates the curriculum discourses of academics within a University of
Technology, exploring their responses to curriculum challenges and considering the
degree to which national and institutional shifts contest existing curriculum
discourses. Curriculum discourses are identified and discussed against the national
and institutional environment and are found, to some degree, to reflect the
entrenched assumptions of teaching and learning that were dominant during the
apartheid era. Existing curriculum discourses also reveal the influence of curriculum
practices adopted within the highly bureaucratic technikon system out of which the
institution has evolved.
This critical inquiry rests on the assumption that with more insight into socio-cultural
values and assumptions, understandings of knowledge, teaching and learning, and
existing power relations within individuals’ working context, the possibility of
transforming curriculum will be increased. Selecting a small sample of twelve
participants from the Durban University of Technology, I conducted in-depth, open-ended
interviews intended to explore these academics’ curriculum discourses.
Adopting discourse analysis as my primary method of data analysis enabled me to
explore the discourses which academics use to construct the notion of curriculum
and their own roles in regards to the curriculum. Further to this, I used my own
experience of the institutional context and the literature on the national
and international contexts of higher education to inform the study and add to the
richness of the data.
Issues of professional, disciplinary and institutional knowledge and culture are
acknowledged to play a central role in participants’ curriculum discourses. These
socio-cultural factors are found to affect academic identity construction and change,
assumptions about knowledge production and dissemination and notions of teaching
and learning. These insights are then overlaid onto a consideration of the extent to
which academics have the agency to transform their curricula to align with current
higher education policy and the societal and economic transformation agenda.
Competing curriculum discourses evident in post-apartheid policy, enormous
institutional changes resulting from mandated institutional mergers, changed
institutional management team profiles, significantly different student profiles and
increased student numbers have all to a large degree overshadowed issues of
teaching and learning and led to confusion, disillusionment and uncertainty among
the academics participating in this study. There is evidence of a weakening
institution-identity with academics feeling uncertain about their roles and
responsibilities within the institution, feeling under-valued by the institutional leaders
and over-burdened in their workloads with limited support and resources. On the
other hand there is a strong identification with workgroups which include both
professional and departmental groups that share sets of assumptions and
established practices that provide academics with the stability, familiarity, security
and affirmation that they need. The issue of individual agency as reflected in the
findings, demonstrates that there was a continuum of participant agency that
tentatively points to a correlation between the level of agency and the amount of
stability and value gained from allegiance to and participation in workgroups.
Despite the increasing pressure upon academics to interrogate their own systems
and disciplinary structures that chiefly focus on a traditional mode of specialised
knowledge production, there is limited evidence of significantly changed
understanding of curriculum practices. Furthermore there is little to suggest that
these academics’ curriculum practices have been impacted by international trends
towards globalisation, marketisation and shifts in modes of knowledge production.
Traditional views of knowledge construction and low skills training discourses were
strongly evident in the data. With the challenges presented not only by the need for
economic and social transformation within South Africa, but also by the need to
respond to fast-paced technological and knowledge advancements, exceptional
leadership and improved capacity are required to enable rather than inhibit
curriculum transformation. / Thesis (Ph.D.)-University of KwaZulu-Natal, Durban, 2010.
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Design analysis of the Grade 9 technology curriculum in South Africa.Chapman, Gavin Ashley. January 2002 (has links)
During the years of apartheid (pre 1994) there were two main streams that one could follow while studying at school viz. academic or technical. The majority of
South African learners followed the more traditional academic stream allowing some to enter careers as doctors, lawyers, policemen/woman, school teachers
and the like, while the remainder ended up jobless. Those pupils who followed
the technical stream were considered by some of the more academically inclined persons, to be the 'duller' type of pupil, who could learn a trade and end up as a
blue-collar worker. As the cost of technical education has always been much
higher than the purely academic courses, the number of schools offering
technical subject courses in South Africa has always been in the minority.
The entire scene changed after the banning of apartheid (post 1994) and the
introduction of the notion of globalisation. Rapid developments suddenly appeared world-wide especially with the introduction of new technologies, mainly
in informatics. Suddenly the world seemed to be a much smaller place as one
could e-mail, fax, or use a cell phone anywhere in the world at the touch of a button. In order for South Africa to become part of the new world order, and to
think about global markets, certain essential changes had to be made firstly to the local environment. A depressed economy needed rejuvenation. There was a growing awareness that serious change was needed in the way children think
and learn at school and to start aligning ideas with international trends. To do
this, the Department of Education in Pretoria (DoE), decided to radically transform the education sector by introducing a new system of education known as outcomes-based education (OBE). The new OBE system brought with it mixed reactions from the South African public and from the teachers within the system. Many teachers did not want to accept that education could be done in a
different way than they had been used to, in the past twenty to forty years. Younger teachers on the other hand did embrace change but are still trying to get the right balance within the prescribed parameters laid down in national
education policy documents. To try and achieve such balance, the minister of
education called for an independent review committee to re-work the general
education and training phase curricula in order for them to be made more 'user-friendly'
as many complaints had been received about the policy documents being overly complicated and unmanageable in the normal classroom situation.
This process was concluded in May 2001 and Technology education remained
as one of the eight new learning areas within the general education and training phase (GET) of South African schooling.
The first draft of the Technology education curriculum was handed out for public comment in October 1997 and was used as the basis for a pilot study at selected
schools in 1998. This information was used as the basis for analyzing the design of the Technology curriculum at grade 9 level. Grade 9 was selected as it is the final exit from general education and training (GET) into further education and training (FET), and because it was the starting point for the pilot project in 1998.
Valuable data was available at the pilot project school sites to be used in this study. Not all the provinces were able to initiate a pilot project due to a number of reasons but those that did viz. Kwazulu/Natal, Gauteng, and the Western Cape
were visited individually to collect data. This study therefore 'unpacks' the Technology curriculum into component parts using an analysis tool developed
from a theoretical framework. This unpacking of the parts allows one the
opportunity to critically check whether or not certain important aspects of the
design were omitted either intentionally or unintentionally by the design team
(NTT).
Chapter one orientates the reader and sets the scene from where I, as
researcher, locate myself and what the prevailing conditions are like at South African schools. The study problem is highlighted as are the obstacles that have tended to have an impact on the final curriculum design.
Chapter two provides an overview of the related theory associated with the field of curriculum study. Technology education is discussed as broadly as possible
within the framework of the new OBE education system for South African schools.
Chapter three discusses the methodologies applied to ensure reliability and
validity of the findings. The design analysis tool is presented with an explanation
of each of the eight components. Chapter four relates an interesting story about the findings. A description of the
educational sites is presented together with descriptions of the educators at the
six pilot schools, as well as some background of the national technology design team (NTT). All recorded evidence was gathered during personal visits to the schools and individual meetings with the design team members.
Chapter five provides a discussion of the data to analyse the Technology curriculum. In this way the reader is directed to the problem areas that were identified and supported the purpose of this curriculum study.
Chapter six firstly answers the three critical questions posed in Chapter one. An
alternative model for curriculum design and development is presented. This
theoretical model is intended to reduce the weaknesses of the present curriculum
design if applied to any similar initiative in the future. This will allow educators
greater freedom to do what they do best - to teach from a curriculum policy that they clearly understand and are trained to deliver. In this way South African
schools and all learners will be rewarded by being well prepared for a variety of
challenging careers in the global world that we live in. / Thesis (Ph.D.)-University of Durban-Westville, 2002.
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Sustainability of Professional Development to Enhance Student Achievement: A Shift in the Professional Development ParadigmJanuary 2012 (has links)
The purpose of this study was to determine the sustainability of professional development teacher utilization of the Science-in-CTE pedagogical model and science enhanced CTE lessons one year following the Science-in-CTE Pilot Study. This study included 27 teachers (15 experimental CTE and 12 science) who participated in the Pilot Study in 2009-2010. This study was a partial replication of the Math-in-CTE Follow-up Study and data were collected using a mixed methods approach. Quantitative data were obtained from online questionnaires and qualitative data were collected from personal and telephone interviews. Data found that a majority of the CTE and science teachers voluntarily incorporated portions of the seven-element pedagogical model and 15 science-enhanced lessons into their curricula one year later. Findings suggest that collaborative professional development is an effective method of integrating science content into CTE curricula to enhance student CTE course achievement without reducing the intent of the CTE program.
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Sustainability of Professional Development to Enhance Student Achievement: A Shift in the Professional Development ParadigmStachler, Wendi Marie Mizer January 2012 (has links)
The purpose of this study was to determine the sustainability of professional development--teacher utilization of the Science-in-CTE pedagogical model and science-enhanced CTE lessons--one year following the Science-in-CTE Pilot Study. This study included 27 teachers (15 experimental CTE and 12 science) who participated in the Pilot Study in 2009-2010. This study was a partial replication of the Math-in-CTE Follow-up Study and data were collected using a mixed methods approach. Quantitative data were obtained from online questionnaires and qualitative data were collected from personal and telephone interviews. Data found that a majority of the CTE and science teachers voluntarily incorporated portions of the seven-element pedagogical model and 15 science-enhanced lessons into their curricula one year later. Findings suggest that collaborative professional development is an effective method of integrating science content into CTE curricula to enhance student CTE course achievement without reducing the intent of the CTE program.
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An Analysis of Enrollment Patterns in Required General Education Courses and the Related Success, as Measured by Grade Point Average, of Technical-Occupational Students in a Multi-Campus Urban Community CollegeHines, Linda Kay, 1942- 12 1900 (has links)
This study investigated the following with regard to technical-occupational students in a multi-campus urban community college: The enrollment patterns in required general education courses at specific intervals of course work; the relation between successful completion of certain required general education courses (English and mathematics) and academic success as measured by grade point average; and the profiles or basic characteristics (age, GPA, sex, and high school graduation status) of (a) the student who had completed a specified amount of general education course work and (b) the graduate who had attained a higher grade point average in technical course work than in general education course work. The data was obtained from the academic records of 328 current student, selected by established criteria, and 284 graduates of six technical-occupational programs. The six programs were chosen by pairs to represent white-collar, technical-skilled, and blue-collar oriented occupations. Data on enrollment patterns were analyzed according to percentage in frequency distributions. Differences in mean grade point averages for completers and non-completers of English and mathematics were analyzed using the t-test. Significant variance among the groups representing types of occupations was analyzed using the chi-square test for independence. The Pearson Product Moment test was used to investigate correlations between grade point average and amount of general education work completed. Among the major findings were the following: over 57 per cent of the current students had completed general education requirements at a level proportional to their total program enrollments; current students tended to avoid enrollment in English more than in mathematics; current students who had completed mathematics had a higher mean GPA than those who had not completed mathematics; graduates who completed mathematics during the first half of the program had a higher mean GPA than those who completed mathematics later; a negative correlation was detected between GPA and the amount of general education course work completed; and more than 81 per cent of the graduates had a higher GPA in technical course work than in general education course work.
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Identifying the educational needs of Capricorn College for Further Education and Training : a case studyNgobeni, J. S. January 2015 (has links)
Thesis (MEd. (Community and Continuing Education)) -- University of Limpopo, 2015 / The research was carried out in Capricorn College for FET. The main aim of this study
was to identify the educational needs of Capricorn College for FET. This study attempted
to answer the following research question:
What are the educational needs of Capricorn College for FET?
This study was designed within a qualitative research paradigm using multiple-case
studies. A document analysis, semi-structured interviews, observations were used to
identify the educational needs of Capricorn College for FET. Semi-structured interviews
allowed me to ask questions to participants while allowing the flexibility to probe further
details. Semi-structured interviews helped me to have a broader view and clear
understanding of educational needs that might exist in all campuses of Capricorn College
for FET. Through observation educational needs of learners, educators and campus
managers were noted.
Findings of this study show that there are educational needs at the Capricorn College for
FET such as; the lack of funding, lack of staffing, poor learner recruitment, poor
infrastructural resources and poor quality of teaching and learning. Recommendations
were made for educators in the three campuses to be trained so that they can acquire
knowledge about teaching methodologies. More funding should be provided to the college
to enhance the smooth running of the college. The college should be equipped with
resources that are required for teaching and learning. More learners should be able to
study and equipped with relevant skills for job market. Capricorn College for FET should
use recruitment strategies that may benefit almost learners in the country. The
Department of Higher Education and Training should make sure that Capricorn College
for FET be provided with necessary and enough infrastructural resources. Teaching and
learning materials should be supplied to this institution and on time. In that way it will
enhance the effective teaching and learning at the college.
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