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Study of technology education instructional practices in grade nine classrooms a case study of three senior secondary schools in the King Williams Town districtNtshaba, Lulama Princess January 2012 (has links)
The purpose of this study is to investigate teaching and learning practices in Grade nine Technology Education classrooms. However, this is to ensure the relationship between the existing Technology Education teaching and learning practices and the Revised National Curriculum Statement (RNCS) requirements. The study was conducted in three King William’s Town Senior Secondary schools. The research took the form of a qualitative interpretive case study focusing on a study sample of three Technology Education teacher participants. The qualitative methods used allowed the researcher to gather the data in order to describe and interpret teachers’ Technology Education instructional practices in Grade nine classrooms. The data was gathered by the observation of Technology Education lessons in the classrooms, through the interviews, as well as the examination of the learning area policy documents (mainly the lesson plans and the activities in the classrooms). In contrast to the past traditional curriculum, the outcomes-based RNCS proposes that teachers teach for understanding and concept development with emphasis on active learning, problem solving, reasoning and communicating technologically. To achieve the outcomes of the RNCS, teachers who are regarded as the “key contributors to the transformation of education in South Africa” need to be “qualified, competent, dedicated, caring and be able to fulfill the various roles outlined in the Norms and Standards for educators” (Department of Education, 2002a, p.9). vi It has been evident by the researcher that instructional practices are not aligned with curriculum expectations. The findings revealed two fundamental reasons for this, namely the teachers’ understanding of the RNCS is limited and teachers’ lack of confidence with regard to content knowledge for Technology Education teaching. Teacher competence relates to teachers having the content knowledge and the ability to use this knowledge pedagogically to ensure that the curriculum is thoroughly covered at all levels. It has been recommended in this study that teacher development needs to become a priority. It is vital, that programmes are developed to retrain Grade nine Technology Education teachers in-service.
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Learning through service : community service learning and situated learning in high schoolWolfson, Larry 11 1900 (has links)
This dissertation explores the symbiotic relationship resulting from the merging of situated
learning's socio-cultural conceptualization of the nature of learning with community service
learning's ethos of service. As such, I enquired into the effects of the integration of situated
learning as the conceptual framework, and community service learning as both an instructional
methodology and educational philosophy. Specifically, through an ethnographic investigation I
sought to discover the nature and outcomes of learning which result when high school students take
their skills out of the classroom into the community to help solve authentic problems.
The students with whom I worked were members of a high school computer technology
class in which expectations were that they (the students) would combine learning with service by
devoting ten to twenty hours to help a community agency solve technology-related problems. In
this regard, eight different student groups applied their technology skills within a variety of school
and community environments. Thereupon, I looked to ascertain not only if the students improved
upon their already sufficient technical skills, but also what other abilities and knowledge of
themselves and/or the world they appropriated. Thus, as per the defining features of situated
learning and community service learning, I hoped to find evidence of learning in areas related to
technological development, workplace knowledge and expertise, problem solving, group skills,
personal and social maturity, and an ethos of service.
Such learning occurred and, thus, I concluded that the integration of community service
learning and situated learning in this technology classroom resulted in a symbiotic relationship in
which the nature and specific outcomes of learning were 1) accounted for by situated learning and
2) enhanced beyond what would normally be expected in a non-service Information Technology
Management classroom in the Province of British Columbia. Hence, the well documented and
rigorously determined empirical findings: 1) argue that situated learning provides a viable
theoretical framework for community service learning, 2) add empirical support to the learning
claims of both situated learning and service learning, and 3) suggest a means of enabling education
to become more responsive to the students and the community. / Education, Faculty of / Educational Studies (EDST), Department of / Graduate
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Technology education and the development of thinking skills : a case studyDe Swardt, Anna Estelle 13 March 2014 (has links)
M.Ed. / In general terms education focuses on the acquisition of knowledge and the development of skills and attitudes. In Technology Education these principles correlate with the aims of the technological process. Within the constructivist instructional approach the technological process provides the possibility for dormant thoughts to come to the fore, and provides the opportunity to the learners to be creative. Typing instruction, in contrast, is traditionally directed at the development of psychomotor skills and reproductive thinking. The cross curricular nature of Technology Education makes it possible for the integration of certain aspects of other subjects (learning areas), and in this context a theme of the Typing syllabus according to the technological process was presented to a group of Typing learners. This project was developed within the qualitative paradigm, and with the aid of a spontaneous sketch and a semi-structured focus group interview the perceptions of the learners, in respect of their learning experiences were investigated. Learners reported positively on their learning experiences and the co-operative learning opportunities. It was concluded that they felt more empowered and took bold but responsible decisions. This could indicate possible development of thinking skills by the learners. From this study it appeared that education should promote meaningful learning that empowers the learners to be independent and responsible in taking decisions. Purposeful learning opportunities must be created for learners to enhance thinking skills. Learners should be actively involved in the construction of knowledge and the Technology Education platform provides an ideal opportunity for this.
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First year students’ initial engagement with ICTs in teaching and learningCoetzee, Anna Michelle 01 October 2014 (has links)
M.Ed. (ICT in Education) / The purpose of this study has been to explore computer-illiterate first year students’ experiences of initial engagement with ICTs in their first weeks of study at the University of Johannesburg, by examining meanings they construct for themselves of these experiences. Pressure on universities to adopt ICTs in educational practice is intensified by South Africa’s legacy of un- and under-prepared first year students. Many factors impacting first year students’ transition to university have a direct bearing on their learning. Students who are able to engage with ICTs during first year orientation seem rapidly to become more confident and motivated to experiment further with these technologies, while students who struggle to engage show signs that may be interpreted as fear or lack of confidence to do so. I have argued that current interventions do not sufficiently support new students in their initial engagement with ICTs. In some modules, academic tasks are due within the first few weeks of study, suggesting possible implications for later academic performance. Eight students without prior experience of ICTs who attended basic computer orientation sessions during 2011 were interviewed immediately after their sessions, in a basic generic qualitative study. Interviews were transcribed and analysed. Elements from the taxonomies of Bloom, Krathwohl, Masia, Anderson and Shulman have been combined into a heuristic to examine to what extent learning and engagement took place during the sessions. Cultural Historical Activity Theory (CHAT) and Engeström’s extended mediational triangle have been employed as analytical tools to guide me as researcher in an understanding of student activity, and to help me to interpret students’ stories as they struggled to engage with ICTs. Tensions that were exposed between the students and different components of the activity systems (the orientation sessions) have been exposed, and from this a joint account of students’ experiences has provided a framework for understanding their initial engagement with ICTs.
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A teaching environment for learning soft skills applicable to information systems developmentThomas, Theda Ann 19 July 2006 (has links)
Please read the abstract in the section 00front of this document / Thesis (PhD (Information Technology))--University of Pretoria, 2006. / Informatics / unrestricted
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Incorporating internet technology as as educational and learning toolHelsper, Charles Bernard 01 January 1998 (has links)
No description available.
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High technology cargo theft: A new multibillion dollar criminal industryYakstas, John Robert 01 January 2001 (has links)
The central theme of this study is to explore the growth and causes of a relatively new form of "property crime" - the large scale theft of high technology products while the products are in transit from the point of manufacture to the point of market (retail stores, end users). For the purpose of this study, high technology products may be defined as computers, computer monitors, computer hard drives, microchips and other computer peripherals.
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Technology staff development: Is it effectively designed to increase classroom use of technology?Holliday, Susan Ellen 01 January 2002 (has links)
The purpose of this project was to examine the current staff development training program's impact on the integration of technology into the teacher/participants' classroom. This thesis evaluates whether or not training practices were being transitioned to the classroom, which practices need to be added to the training program to increase the implementation of technology into the classrom.
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Teacher attitude towards technology: Usage in K-2 classroomsGranillo, Lilia Reyes 01 January 2004 (has links)
This thesis is designed for teachers in early elementary education. It focuses on how and if, these teachers are integrating technology while meeting the many State Standards required by the State of California.
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The Effects of Task-Based Documentation Versus Online Help Menu Documentation on the Acceptance of Information TechnologyBell, Thomas 05 1900 (has links)
The objectives of this study were (1) to identify and describe task-based documentation; (2) to identify and describe any purported changes in users attitudes when IT migration was preceded by task-based documentation; (3) to suggest implications of task-based documentation on users attitude toward IT acceptance. Questionnaires were given to 150 university students. Of these, all 150 students participated in this study. The study determined the following: (1) if favorable pre-implementation attitudes toward a new e-mail system increase, as a result of training, if users expect it to be easy to learn and use; (2) if user acceptance of an e-mail program increase as expected perceived usefulness increase as delineated by task-based documentation; (3) if task-based documentation is more effective than standard help menus while learning a new application program; and (4) if training that requires active student participation increase the acceptance of a new e-mail system. The following conclusions were reached: (1) Positive pre-implementation attitudes toward a new e-mail system are not affected by training even if the users expect it to be easy to learn and use. (2) User acceptance of an e-mail program does not increase as perceived usefulness increase when aided by task-based documentation. (3) Task-based documentation is not more effective than standard help menus when learning a new application program. (4) Training that requires active student participation does not increase the acceptance of a new e-mail system.
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