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Salem Teen Mother Program : a follow-up studyBarton, Frances L., Berman, Florence C., Bertoli-Nordlof, Sharon M., Cooper, Marilyn L., Murray, Claire K., Peratrovich, Rosanne, Showell, Arlene M., Velazquez, Julio C. 01 January 1980 (has links)
Society has, historically, reacted to teenage pregnancies with a mixture of embarrassment, apathy and neglect. It wasn't until the 1960's that an attempt was made to design and implement programs to meet the needs of pregnant adolescents. An example of such a program is the Salem Teen Mother Program. This program was begun in 1966 and is affiliated with the local YWCA. If offers a comprehensive program to approximately 150 students each year. The services it offers include day care, social services and counseling, education, health services, parenting skills and employment counseling.
The following chapters include a literature review which describes the problems facing teenage mothers in the nation. Programs that have been implemented to deal with those problems and the results of related research studies are also discussed. Subsequent chapters are devoted to the follow-up study of the Salem Teen Mother Program. First a description of the program is presented followed by chapters on methodology, data analysis, results and the conclusions from the study.
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Managerial imperatives of teen motherhood in public secondary schoolsRapeta, Seshoka Joseph January 2013 (has links)
This study aims at investigating the managerial imperatives of teen motherhood in
public secondary schools in the Mamaila circuit, Limpopo province. The focus is on the
managerial imperatives of teen mothers that principal must fulfil; the experiences of
principals that have teen mothers in their school; the ability of the principals to fulfil
these managerial imperatives; and the kinds of support principals give teen mothers.
The study was informed by the legal framework entrenched in Chapter 2 (Bill of Rights)
of the Constitution of South Africa, especially such concepts as equality, human dignity, security, the interest of the child, the right to basic education and the safety of learners.
In South Africa it is illegal to expel pregnant girls in terms of the Constitution of the
Republic of South Africa (hereafter Constitution) (RSA, 1996a). Schoolgirls who become
pregnant are allowed to return to school after giving birth (Kaufman, De Wet and
Stadler, 2001:147). The learner pregnancy policy (DoBE, 2007) puts obligations to
principals to deal with each case confidentially (i.e. to respect the human dignity of the
learner); to support the learner by encouraging her to continue with education prior to
and after the delivery of the baby; to put in place appropriate mechanisms to deal with
unfair discrimination, hate speech or harassment that may arise.
The findings have revealed that most of the principals are not aware of the departmental
policy on learner pregnancy, but they acknowledge that it is unconstitutional to expel a
pregnant learner. Principals find it difficult to liaise with learners who are on maternity
leave in terms of giving them school tasks as advocated by the learner pregnant policy
(DoBE, 2007). Learners who are entitled to receive a child-support grant disrupt school
on the social grant payday by queuing for permission to go to local pay points.
Principals also experience late-coming and absenteeism from teen mothers due to a
lack of reliable people to care for their babies during the school day. The performance of
teen mothers deteriorates due to the household chores of taking care of the baby and
having no time to attend extralessons or afternoon study sessions at school.
The study has also revealed that principals engage the local clinics officials to present
pregnancy awareness with the learners as a way of educating them. / Dissertation (MEd)--University of Pretoria, 2013. / gm2014 / Education Management and Policy Studies / unrestricted
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Case Study of Teen Mother Perceptions of Their Influence on Preschoolers' Language DevelopmentDuncan, Mary Schmidt 01 January 2016 (has links)
Children born to teen mothers tend to score lower on language development assessments and to have school readiness delays. To support teen mothers and their children in improving language development, educators need information about mothers' daily interactions with their children and how they contribute to their children's language development. The purpose of this descriptive case study was to understand mothers'perceptions of how they influenced their children's language development through play, routines, and other informal interactions. Flavell, Vygotsky, and Bruner's views on how learners' construct knowledge informed the study. Research questions were focused on the mothers' perceptions regarding interactions during routines and during play and on the mothers' beliefs about how influential they were developing their children's language skills. Data were gathered through semistructured interviews, journals, and follow-up questions addressed in narratives or additional interviews. A combination of a priori and open coding was used to support inductive analysis. Participants believed that they influenced their children's development and wanted to increase what they know about overall development and specifically language development. They indicated that they did not have enough time for reading, that they used songs and chants frequently, and that participation in the study made them think more about the importance of conversations shared within activities. The results of this study may help teen mothers, their families, and those who provide education and support to teen mothers in mentoring groups, faith-based support groups, and alternative high schools. Social change will occur when young parents are supported in enhancing the lives of their children.
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A longitudinal study of the academic performance of teen mothers at schools in the Luvuvhu Circuit, Vhembe District, Limpopo ProvinceMaswuba, Mukosi Enoch 18 September 2017 (has links)
MEd (Educational Management) / Department of Educational Management / This longitudinal research study investigated the attendance and academic performance of teen mothers enrolled at two schools in the Luvuvhu Circuit, Vhembe District, of the Limpopo Province over a period of two years, 2014 and 2015. Apart from this, it also sought out to examine factors in the school and home that influenced the schooling of teen mother learners (TMLs) and the available support that were provided to teen mothers with the aim of improving their poor performance in schools. The study used a qualitative approach and data were collected by means of school documents such as mark schedules and attendance registers and focus group interviews from a total of 40 participants from the two sampled schools. Purposive sampling was used to select 10 teen mother learners, 10 teachers and 20 other learners who were in the same school with the teen mother learners. Tables were used to present data on teen mother learners’ school performance and attendance in 2014 and 2015 in order to find out how their performance changed before, during and after pregnancy. Data from interviews was analysed using the thematic approach according to four themes. The main findings from the study were that both schools had over 20 teen mother learners, teen mother learners performance was good to fair in Tshivenda but poor in English and extremely poor in Mathematics and Science and most of them did not have marks in the last two subjects. Every month, teen mothers did not come to school for some days due to home problems such as baby being ill, taking baby to clinic for immunisation, collecting grant money and household duties. The general picture that actually emerged relationship-wise, within the school between teachers and non-mother or ordinary learners could generally be referred to as differing depending mostly on the pregnancy stages. This study revealed that teen mothers had some causes for being absent from school and for not being able to perform well at school. The factors were found both in the home and the school, such as illness during pregnancy, baby sitting and taking baby to clinic for immunisation, home duties, having to collect monthly government child grants, being ridiculed by other learners at school. With respect to support given to teen mothers by the school and the family or in the home, most teen mothers and teachers indicated in the interviews that not much was given to them. Based on little support for
teen mother learners from the school and the home, the study recommended that there should be nurses and counsellors or social workers at schools, extra lessons to be organised by principals, religious leaders to be invited to pray for them and rules to be formulated by the school so that they are not ridiculed by other learners and teachers
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