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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
241

Successful teachers : a Cubist narrative of lives, practices and the evaded.

Pillay, Guruvasagie. January 2003 (has links)
This research presents an understanding of the world of successful teachers. In documenting their life histories, I composed a research text which explored the presences and absences, identities and differences, changes and continuities, variations and uniqueness, which characterise how teachers perform their success in the present educational context of continued shifts and constantly changing images. Working with Trevor, Anna, Ursula, Daryl, Eddie and Hlo, I co-created stories of lives "told and experienced", a journey that pressed me to look at the transcending and shifting line between the private/public. Written through a composition of stories, poems, photographs, musical pieces and illustrations, I have engaged in the risky, poststructural practice of redescribing their worlds in order to understand what it means to think, know and act differently, in the struggle with the desire to be "free". Employing a cubist metaphor as a heuristic device, I was able to entertain the possibility of other "worlds" within the discursive practice of "being teacher": creating potential explanatory and diverse descriptions other than the one available as the singularly defined identity category of "teacher". Employing a poststructural analytical framework, I documented the multi-dimensional nature of identity and meaning, and drew attention to the play between discourse and practice in teachers' agenda for agency. Teachers' agenda for agency is described within "Patterns of Desire" within which the evaded or marginalised in teachers' lives become available as spaces for change and moments of freedom. I present an understanding of teachers' selves through excavating the "interior" of their lives to provide a more three-dimensional approach that injects the private into the public, rupturing the fine line as a way to maintain an "aura" of desire, love, friendship, hope and familiarity in their daily lived experiences. Emerging along two axes, "Practices of the Self' and "Practices on the Self', this composition that I have created, identifies the complexity of teaching discourses and practices enacted out and enacted on teachers' daily lives that resist and disrupt those hierarchical grids of normalcy and regularity. In particular, I attended to those elusive eruptions of teachers' selves when teachers articulate their resistance to normalcy and surveillance and make themselves available to refiguration and transformation. Investing in particular historically emergent social practices and relationships that teachers effect, by their own means, there is pleasure in challenging anew the bond between teachers' private lives and public responsibilities. Agency of teachers lies in the ability to deconstruct and reconstruct identity within the discursive formations and cultural practices. In troubling the structures that often imprison and violate, teachers are able to slip through and open their thoughts and desires to their differences - the other categories that are evaded in the single identity category teacher, thereby sustaining potential for ongoing continuity and change. Continued metamorphosis of thought and act, simultaneous and consecutive, is what offers teachers moments of deep meaning and awareness that keep the private/public alignment and variation in the ways of experiencing their world, in their 'desire to be', 'desire for' and 'desire to please' as a possible condition for being a successful teacher. / Thesis (Ph.D) - University of Durban-Westville, 2003.
242

A curriculum framework for undergraduate studies in dental health science.

Laher, Mahomed Hanif Essop. January 2009 (has links)
This study begins with an ethnographic self-study w hich allows for a reflection on traditional learning experiences. This study is located in the context of the initial development of dental health professionals within those higher education institutions that end eavour to provide education and training in a rapidly changing context. This context is charact erised by the simultaneous need to address the blurring of boundaries and the dichotom ies that exist such as the first world and the third world, the developed and the less develop ed world, the rich and the poor, health and wealth, the private and the public sectors, the formal and the informal sectors, the advantaged and the disadvantaged, the privileged an d the underprivileged. The definitions, concepts, theories and principles around curricula and professional development are examined in an effort to extend int o discoveries of educational research usually beyond the purview of dental health practit ioners, policy makers or higher education specialists involved in training these dental healt h practitioners. It poses key questions regarding the nature of prof essional competences within dental health science undergraduate studies and how the curricula are organised around these perceptions of competence. Investigative tools include particip ant observation, interviews and questionnaires which have included both education d eliverers – the teaching staff - and education consumers – the students. The areas of access by students to programmes (inpu t), activities whilst in the programmes (throughput) and their competences at the exit end of the programme (output) are examined. It was found that institutions and programmes are p aradoxically positioned declaring missions to be globally competitive and internation ally recognised and at the same time wanting to reach out to the population who are disa dvantaged and who form a majority. Whilst the needs of the wider community is for basi c dental services and primary health care, the resources appear to be geared for producing tec hnologically-superior professionals who will cater for a largely urban and middle class pop ulations. The resources available, particularly human resources, for this training, ar e going through a critical shortage. Simultaneously demands are being made to challenge the epistemological rationale of the curriculum practice of the training sites at both u niversities and technikons (now known as universities of technology). / Thesis (Ph.D.) - University of KwaZulu-Natal,Durban, 2009.
243

Archaeology of a language development non governmental organisation : excavating the identity of the English Language Educational Trust.

Dhunpath, Rabikanth. January 2013 (has links)
Any attempt at understanding the influences that impinge on teacher development in South Africa is incomplete without an exploration of the role of NGOs, particularly those alternative development agencies that were conceived in response to apartheid education and which continued to pursue progressive, contextually relevant interventions in the transitional democracy. Using the archaeological approach to excavate deep insights into the behaviour of a language development NGO, this study documents the institutional memory of the English language Education Trust (ELET). Portraying two decades of its history (1984 to 2001) through the eyes of key participants in the organisation, the study traces the multiple influences, internal and extraneous, that have shaped ELET's mutating identity as it negotiated the challenges of a volatile and unpredictable NGO climate. The study pursues two reciprocal outcomes. First, it attempts methodological elaboration. In advocating transdisciplinary research, it borrows from the established traditions of empowerment and illuminative evaluation, appropriating their key tenets for an institutional evaluation. Underpinned by the genre of narrative research, the study expands the lifehistory method as an evaluative tool, providing opportunities for organisational members to engage in self-reflexive interrogation of the organisation's life as it negotiated a multiplicity of development challenges. Second, it attempts theoretical elaboration. It challenges classical organisational theory (which derives from the structural - functionalist corporatist mode of management theory), as conservative and inadequate in understanding the organisational culture of an NGO. The study proposes a post-structuralist mode of discourse analysis as complementary to classical management theory in organisational analysis. Conflating theory and method provides incisive conceptual lenses to appraise the contribution of ELET to language teacher development. The study finds that while ELET has been complicit in allowing its mission as a counter-hegemonic agency to be undermined by its submission to normative, coercive and mimetic isomorphism, it nevertheless demonstrates agency to innovate rather than replicate. It achieves this despite the cumulative constraining pressures of globalisation, manifest through volatility in corporate funding, shifting imperatives of bilateral funding agencies, and the fickle agendas of the fledgling democratic government. The study demonstrates that, given these unpredictable conditions, NGOs Iike ELET are forced to reinvent themselves to respond to emerging development opportunities as a hedge against attrition. In this regard, ELET has benefited from astute management and a vigilant quest for homegrown intervention programmes as alternatives to imported literacy programmes, all of which helps it redefine what constitutes emancipatory literacies. Despite its proven record of accomplishment as a site for alternative teacher development, the study demonstrates that a competitive higher education sector a hostile policy environment and the debilitating reporting mechanisms demanded by funders results in ELET's potential as a site for 'authentic' knowledge production to be devalued. A further consequence of this marginilisation is that the organisation finds itself increasingly vulnerable to co-option by the state as a functionary of service delivery, accounting upwards to funders rather than downwards to beneficiaries of development. The study argues that the exploitative relationship the NGO endures with other development constituencies is as much a consequence of the NGO's failure to embrace an expedient corporate culture as it is the failure of these constituencies to acknowledge the potential of the NGO. Hence, rather than preserve the antagonistic relationship between higher education institutes and alternative agencies for knowledge production, they will each benefit by mutually appropriating the accumulated expertise of the other, giving substance to the ideal of a community of reason through creative dialectical evolution. The study concludes with the proposition that one mechanism to operationalise the notion of a community of reason is community service learning, a partnership between higher education institutes, corporate funders and development NGOs, a relationship in which the NGO provides leadership in appropriating disparate energies towards the cultivation of a socially literate country. / Thesis (Ph.D.)-University of Durban-Westville, 2003.
244

Exploring the personal and professional identities of special education teachers through small stories.

Bankole, Fadekemi Olamide. January 2013 (has links)
There have been numerous studies internationally and in South Africa that have explored the identities of teachers in ordinary schools. However, research on the identities of special education teachers is very limited. Through narrative inquiry, this study explored the personal and professional identities of special education teachers at a school in KwaZulu-Natal. The key research question was: How do these special education teachers negotiate their personal and professional identities? Six teachers on the staff of a special school for learners with mild to moderate intellectual disability were participants in the study. The narrative interview was used as the means of data generation. The findings revealed that there is a strong intersection between the personal and professional identities of the six special education teachers. Further, their cultural backgrounds and emotionality play a pivotal role in the lives of these special education teachers, and shape how they negotiate their identities and the subject positions they take in the special school context. The study suggests that the self-identity of a teacher needs to be seen in terms of the personal and professional, as there is a personal dimension to much of a teacher’s work. The teachers’ personal beliefs and values nurtured within their cultural backgrounds influence their teaching experiences, teaching philosophy, teaching practice and teacher identity. There is little doubt that the identities of the six teachers are embedded in their personal biographies. The study shows that that professional identity is multifaceted and multi-layered. Further, the teacher narratives in this study revealed that emotions are a critical facet of professional identity formation. Narrative inquiry proved to be a valuable method through which the teachers made sense of themselves and their practices. / Thesis (M.Ed.)-University of KwaZulu-Natal, Pietermaritzburg, 2013.
245

Learning to change : a study of continuing teacher development in two contexts of educational reform.

Samson, Annie-Hélène. January 2013 (has links)
Systemic educational reforms entail major changes at the different levels of the system, of which classroom practice is ultimately crucial to obtaining the desired output. Within this paradigm shift, experienced teachers have to replace what they are likely to consider good teaching and learning approaches with unfamiliar strategies. Continuing professional teacher development (CPTD) plays a key role in successfully changing classroom practices. This in-depth case study research —six teachers in two different countries, Canada and South Africa—looks into the information acquisition process of instructors. Interviews were performed at different levels of the educational system – policy makers, pedagogic/subject advisors as well as teachers for which questionnaires and classroom observation were also used to collect data. A research-based analytical tool developed by Laura Desimone (Desimone, 2009) guided the exploration of the vast data collected and served as the analytical framework for the various data sources, drawing a link between the intended, implemented and attained policies. The thorough discourse analysis situated in the interpretivist framework gives global insight into the teachers’ perception of the impact of CPTD as it enables a deep understanding of the information acquisition and utilization by teachers. The examination of teachers’ pedagogical content knowledge in different reform contexts brings a profound perspective on how professional development activities contribute to the professional capital of educators, as envisaged by Hargreaves and Fullan (2012). Data suggest that policies related to professional development are adequate in Québec and in South Africa, but that planning around implementation is hasty or lacking altogether. Regardless of the socio-economic environment and the professional development accessibility, teachers do not perceive CPTD as being a major vector of change and they were found to lack the necessary capacity to change their practices to reflect their beliefs. Finally, teachers reported that the most influential factor on practices is the availability of teaching and learning material and learners’ reaction to it. In conclusion, in the two contexts observed, CPTD was not emphasised to the level required for a paradigm change such as constructivist-based systemic reforms. I suggest adapting CPTD delivery methods to teachers’ need by ensuring widespread and reform-aligned professional development. In addition, access to information through appropriate teaching materials combined with appealing and applicable activities should be facilitated. / Thesis (Ph.D.)-University of KwaZulu-Natal, Pietermaritzburg, 2013.
246

Teenage pregnancy : young mothers in grade twelve : shh ... there are mothers amongst us.

Singh, Roma. January 2005 (has links)
My interest in teenage pregnancy began when I discovered pregnant girls in my class. Upon discussion with other educators in my school, I discovered that there were many pregnant girls in school. Thus began a journey in which I spent much time researching the topic. What I learnt along the way is that this is not a third world problem that affects certain race groups. It is a universal problem and if it is left to grow it will become the greatest social problem faced by the world. I believe that as educators we need to help curb the problem of teenage pregnancy. More importantly Secondary School educators need to become more aware of the debates surrounding teenage pregnancy for three reasons: (1) many of us may have pregnant or mothering teenagers in our classes and we need to understand where they are coming from and where they are heading towards, (2) we have the potential to help prevent teenage pregnancy by removing the cloak of ignorance that covers the issues surrounding sex and (3) teenage sexuality may be closely linked to the Aids pandemic that is moving like a veld fire across our country. We know that teenage pregnancy is not a new social problem. It has been around for centuries, but of late the severity of the problem has increased. It was this increase in teenage pregnancy that spurred me on to research why the youth of today, who have so much of sexual information made easily available to them, are still falling pregnant while at school. This study attempts to answer two critical questions. Firstly: "How do learners engage with factors that contribute to teenage pregnancy?" My study revealed that learners lack the knowledge or skills to avoid sex, they were ignorant of the different types of contraceptives, they were in denial that they could fall pregnant and they lacked the motivation to avoid early childbearing. Secondly, the critical question, "Why, in context of all the information present today on sex, do teenagers still fall pregnant?" Through the process of research it was found that teenagers engage in premarital sex because of the following reasons: peer pressure, they get caught up in the moment of passion and because they are bored and have nothing better to do. It is hoped that the analysis, findings and recommendations of this study will help curb the problem of teenage pregnancy. / Thesis (M.Ed.) - University of KwaZulu-Natal, Durban, 2005.
247

A school-based, balanced approach to early reading instruction for English additional language learners in grades one to four

Nathanson, Renee Riette 03 1900 (has links)
Thesis (PhD (Education))--University of Stellenbosch, 2008. / Given that schooling is compulsory and that the quality of literacy instruction that children receive in the primary years lays the foundation for the rest of formal learning, management and teachers are under strong pressure to ensure the improvement of literacy in schools. This study reports on a literacy intervention directed at improving literacy instruction for seventytwo English Additional Language (EAL) learners in grades one to four. The intervention aimed to help teachers maximise teaching time through a theoretically sound approach that balanced language experience, shared and guided reading and writing, and embedded phonics and word level instruction within the context of reading and writing. In doing so, the approach breaks with the traditional position still held by many teachers that learners must first be taught to sound out letters and read words before they can be taught to read and write. Daily features of the literacy programme included whole class shared reading and small group guided reading and writing. Whereas shared reading engaged learners in lively literacy experiences on challenging texts, small group guided reading enabled teachers to match instruction and texts more closely to individual learners' needs. During shared and guided reading sessions, teachers modelled behaviours and strategies on interesting texts, interacted with learners and provided direct instruction in phonics and word level work. Once a week, planned outings and practical activities created opportunities for developing the learners' language and extending their conceptual understandings.
248

Enhancing the quality of first-year Biology teaching at the University of Stellenbosch

Joubert, Lydia-Marie 12 1900 (has links)
Thesis (MPhil) (Higher Education)--University of Stellenbosch, 2002. / ENGLISH ABSTRACT: Transformation in biology teaching is inevitable. There is a global concern about the quality of undergraduate biology teaching, especially when considering the growth in the fields of biotechnology and the molecular sciences. Programmes of learning have to be market orientated, and the contents of curricula have to equip students for entrance into a specific career. At the University of Stellenbosch the School for Biological Sciences has developed an interdisciplinary approach to first-year biology teaching. The new programmes in Biological Sciences, implemented in 2000, contain first-year curricula that introduce students to the disciplines of genetics, botany, zoology, microbiology, biochemistry and statistics. This involves participation by six departments, and lecture facilitation in two languages for up to 600 students. As contact sessions between lecturers and students are limited, self-study is becoming increasingly important, and lectures should be fully exploited to obtain deep learning. This study investigated various ways to enhance the teaching and learning process for first-year biology students in a module fraught with growing pains and problems. The influence of software support on student learning was evaluated, while the introduction of an innovative approach to teaching statistics to first-year students was analyzed. Supplementing the statistics section with video-recordings of the lectures was further considered as a possible way of overcoming various obstacles in especially this section of the module. The application of a practical laboratory course to enhance the quality of the theoretical lectures was also investigated and evaluated. It can be concluded that no simple solution could be found to solve the variety of problems that arose with implementation of the new programmes of learning. Technology proved to be invaluable, but should be applied after thorough needs assessment and impact studies have been performed. Provision of IT tools and facilities do not necessarily imply their application and effect, and innovation and inspiration still proved to be most effective in enhancing biology teaching. / AFRIKAANSE OPSOMMING: Transformasie in biologie-onderrig is onvermydelik. Daar is wêreldwye kommer oor die kwaliteit van voorgraadse biologie-onderrig, veral in die lig van die vooruitgang in biotegnologie en die molekulêre wetenskappe. Programme van onderrig moet markgerig wees, en die inhoud van leerplanne loopbaangerig. Die Skool vir Biologiese Wetenskappe van die Universiteit van Stellenbosch het sedert sy stigting 'n interdissiplinêre benadering tot eerstejaarsbiologie-onderrig ontwikkel. Die nuwe programme in die Biologiese Wetenskappe wat in 2000 geïmplementeer is, bevat eerstejaarskurrikula wat studente bekendstel aan die dissiplines van genetika, botanie, sooloqie, mikrobiologie, biochemie en statistiek. Ses departemente is hierby betrokke, en lesings word in twee tale vir tot 600 studente aangebied. Aangesien kontaksessies tussen dosente en studente beperk is, word selfstudie toenemend belangrik, en lesure moet ten volle benut word om 'n diepgaande leerproses te verkry. Hierdie studie ondersoek derhalwe verskeie potensiële maniere waarop die onderrigen leerproses by eerstejaarbiologie-studente versterk kan word. Die invloed van sagteware-ondersteuning by die leerproses is geëvalueer, terwyl 'n nuwe innoverende benadering tot statistiek-onderrig vir eerstejaarstudente geanaliseer is. Uitbreiding en ondersteuning van die statistiek-seksie, d.m.v. videoopnames van die lesings, is verder oorweeg om verskeie van die hindernisse in veral hierdie deel van die module te oorkom. Die toepassing van 'n laboratoriumkursus om die kwaliteit van die teoretiese lesings uit te brei is ook geëvalueer. Daar kan saamgevat word dat geen enkelvoudige oplossing bestaan om die verskeidenheid van probleme op te los wat met implementering van die programme ontstaan het nie. Tegnologie is onontbeerlik, maar moet toegepas word nadat behoorlike behoeftebepaling en impakstudies uitgevoer is. Verskaffing van informasietegnologie impliseer nie noodwendig die nodige toepassing en effek nie, en innovasie en inspirasie blyk steeds onontbeerlik te wees om biologie-onderrig uit te brei en te versterk.
249

Learners' strategies for solving linear equations

Jonklass, Raymond 12 1900 (has links)
Thesis (MEd)--University of Stellenbosch, 2002. / ENGLISH ABSTRACT: Algebra deals amongst others with the relationship between variables. It differs from Arithmetic amongst others as there is not always a numerical solution to the problem. An algebraic expression can even be the solution to the problem in Algebra. The variables found in Algebra are often represented by letters such as X, y, etc. Equations are an integral part of Algebra. To solve an equation, the value of an unknown must be determined so that the left hand side of the equation is equal to the right hand side. There are various ways in which the solving of equations can be taught. The purpose of this study is to determine the existence of a cognitive gap as described by Herseovies & Linchevski (1994) in relation to solving linear equations. When solving linear equations, an arithmetical approach is not always effective. A new way of structural thinking is needed when solving linear equations in their different forms. In this study, learners' intuitive, informal ways of solving linear equations were examined prior to any formal instruction and before the introduction of algebraic symbols and notation. This information could help educators to identify the difficulties learners have when moving from solving arithmetical equations to algebraic equations. The learners' errors could help educators plan effective ways of teaching strategies when solving linear equations. The research strategy for this study was both quantitative and qualitative. Forty-two Grade 8 learners were chosen to individually do assignments involving different types of linear equations. Their responses were recorded, coded and summarised. Thereafter the learners' responses were interpreted, evaluated and analysed. Then a representative sample of fourteen learners was chosen randomly from the same class and semi-structured interviews were conducted with them From these interviews the learners' ways of thinking when solving linear equations, were probed. This study concludes that a cognitive gap does exist in the context of the investigation. Moving from arithmetical thinking to algebraic thinking requires a paradigm shift. To make adequate provision for this change in thinking, careful curriculum planning is required. / AFRIKAANSE OPSOMMING: Algebra behels onder andere die verwantskap tussen veranderlikes. Algebra verskil van Rekenkunde onder andere omdat daar in Algebra nie altyd 'n numeriese oplossing vir die probleem is nie. InAlgebra kan 'n algebraïese uitdrukking somtyds die oplossing van 'n probleem wees. Die veranderlikes in Algebra word dikwels deur letters soos x, y, ens. voorgestel. Vergelykings is 'n integrale deel van Algebra. Om vergelykings op te los, moet 'n onbekende se waarde bepaal word, om die linkerkant van die vergelyking gelyk te maak aan die regterkant. Daar is verskillende maniere om die oplossing van algebraïese vergelykings te onderrig. Die doel van hierdie studie is om die bestaan van 'n sogenaamde "kognitiewe gaping" soos beskryf deur Herseovies & Linchevski (1994), met die klem op lineêre vergelykings, te ondersoek. Wanneer die oplossing van 'n linêere vergelyking bepaal word, is 'n rekenkundige benadering nie altyd effektiefnie. 'n Heel nuwe, strukturele manier van denke word benodig wanneer verskillende tipes linêere vergelykings opgelos word. In hierdie studie word leerders se intuitiewe, informele metodes ondersoek wanneer hulle lineêre vergelykings oplos, voordat hulle enige formele metodes onderrig is en voordat hulle kennis gemaak het met algebraïese simbole en notasie. Hierdie inligting kan opvoeders help om leerders se kognitiewe probleme in verband met die verskil tussen rekenkundige en algebraïese metodes te identifiseer.Die foute wat leerders maak, kan opvoeders ook help om effektiewe onderrigmetodes te beplan, wanneer hulle lineêre vergelykings onderrig. As leerders eers die skuif van rekenkundige metodes na algebrarese metodes gemaak het, kan hulle besef dat hul primitiewe metodes nie altyd effektief is nie. Die navorsingstrategie wat in hierdie studie aangewend is, is kwalitatief en kwantitatief Twee-en-veertig Graad 8 leerders is gekies om verskillende tipes lineêre vergelykings individueel op te los. Hul antwoorde is daarna geïnterpreteer, geëvalueer en geanaliseer. Daarna is veertien leerders uit hierdie groep gekies en semigestruktureerde onderhoude is met hulle gevoer. Vanuit die onderhoude kon 'n dieper studie van die leerders se informele metodes van oplossing gemaak word. Die gevolgtrekking wat in hierdie studie gemaak word, is dat daar wel 'n kognitiewe gaping bestaan in die konteks van die studie. Leerders moet 'n paradigmaskuif maak wanneer hulle van rekenkundige metodes na algebraïese metodes beweeg. Hierdie klemverskuiwing vereis deeglike kurrikulumbeplanning.
250

Technology as a new learning area in the South African school curriculum: a critical reflection

Adams, John 12 1900 (has links)
Thesis (MEd)--Stellenbosch University, 2002. / ENGLISH ABSTRACT: This thesis investigates the implementation of Technology as a learning area in the South African school curriculum. This investigation is done within the context of three articles contained in chapters two, three and four. Article one, chapter two, investigates the readiness of educators to implement Technology in the classroom. A survey was done by means of interviews and a questionnaire. The interviews and questionnaire focused on three critical questions to determine the readiness of educators, namely • A conceptual understanding of Technology as learning area; • The type of technology suitable for the South African curriculum; and • The extent of government support to implement Technology successfully. The findings suggest that educators do have a conceptual understanding of Technology and that they emhasized the use of technology within the curriculum that suits local conditions. It identified the lack of government support as the biggest problem facing the successful implementation of Technology. Article two, chapter 3, investigates Technology as part of the Outcomes- Based Curriculum 2005. It is a theoretical study that discuss the relevance and purpose of Technology as learning area in the new curriculum. It finds that the position of Technology as learning area in the curriculum is unequivocal. It proved that there is a strong link between technological innovation, economic growth and social development. It suggest, therefor, that Technology is a catalyst for economic growth and social development. Article three, chapter four, invetsigates how Technical Drawing as subject from the old dispensation can be reconciled with Technology as a learning area. It finds that Technical Drawing as a graphical language can be applied as an effective tool of communication in the different stages of the Technological Process. It suggests that the old subjects can reconcile with the learning areas in the new curriculum. These three articles, in summary, emphasize the importance and relevance of Technology as a separate learning area in the new curriculum. The objective, therefore, is to use Technology as a catalyst for economic growth and social development, so dearly needed by South Africa. / AFRIKAANSE OPSOMMING: Hierdie tesis ondersoek die implementering van Tegnologie as 'n leerarea in die skoolkurrikulum. Hierdie ondersoek word binne die konteks van drie artikels wat in hoofstukke twee, drie en vier vervat word, gedoen Artikel een (hoofstuk twee), ondersoek die gereedheid van opvoeders om Tegnologie in die klaskamer toe te pas. 'n Opname is deur middel van onderhoude en 'n vraelys gedoen. Ten einde die gereedheid van opvoeders te bepaal, is daar in die onderhoude en vraelys op drie kritieke vrae gefokus: • 'n konseptueie begrip van Tegnologie as 'n leerarea; • die soort tegnologie wat relevant sou wees binne die Suid- Afrikaanse kurrikulum; en • die mate van regeringshulp wat nodig sou wees om Tegnologie suksesvol as leerarea te implementeer. Die bevindinge dui daarop dat opvoeders wel 'n konseptueie begrip van Tegnologie het. Dit blyk voorts dat opvoeders die gebruik binne die kurrikulum beklemtoon van tegnologie wat by plaaslike omstandighede pas. Gebrekkige regeringshulp is as die grootste probleem rakende die suksesvolle implementering van Tegnologie as leerarea geidentifiseer. Artikel twee (hoofstuk drie) ondersoek Tegnologie as deel van die Uitkomsgebaseerde Kurrikulum 2005. Dit is 'n teoretiese studie wat die toepaslikheid en doel van Tegnologie as leerarea in die nuwe kurrikulum bespreek. Daar word bevind dat die plek van Tegnologie as leerarea in die kurrikulum ondubbelsinnig is. Daar is bewys dat daar 'n sterk band bestaan tussen tegnologiese vernuwing, ekonomiese groei en sosiale ontwikkeling. Artikel drie (hoofstuk vier) ondersoek hoe Tegniese Tekene as "ou" vak van die vorige bedeling, met Tegnologie as leerarea versoen kan word. Daar word bevind dat Tegniese Tekene, as 'n grafiese taal, aangewend kan word as 'n doeltreffende kommunikasiemiddel in die verskillende stadia van die Tegnologiese Proses. Daar word voorgestel dat die ou vakke versoen kan word met die leerareas in die nuwe kurrikulum. Hierdie drie artikels beklemtoon dus die belangrikheid en relevansie van Tegnologie as 'n aparte leerarea in die nuwe kurrikulum. Die doel is om Tegnologie aan te wend as katalisator vir ekonomiese groei en sosiale ontwikkeling wat so dringend nodig is in Suid-Afrika.

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