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Violence in schools : a recipe for disaster.Singh, Selvia Kista. January 2006 (has links)
A plenitude of media and research reports suggest that aggressive behaviour amongst
the youth is becoming more confrontational, violent and common place. Factors
spawning violence in schools are numerous and complex and include socio-economic
and political inequities. This study not only reflects on the nature and scope of violence
in schools, but focuses specifically on teachers as victims of violence. A broad based
definition of violence has been used to include both insidious and physical forms of
violence against teachers.
In the first phase of data collection, the quantitative method was used to gather
information via questionnaires. In the second phase, narrative stories were developed
from semi-structured interviews using the qualitative methodology. Both these
methodologies have been used in a complementary manner to give depth and enhance
the meaning of the data.
The analysis indicates that the prominence and pervasiveness of violence against
teachers is staggering. The absence of effective structures, mechanisms and policies to
stem the tide of violence has further aggravated the problem. The potential for conflict
within the school context is underpinned by tension created by transient values. The
youth do not have a core set of values that give direction to the decisions that they
make. The consequence of this gap is unpacked in the "Core Values-Vacuum (CV2)
Theory" that has been proposed in an attempt to understand violence in schools.
The study concludes with the idea that there is no single factor that can explain violence
in schools. However, the major causes and impact of violence identified provides a
foundation for the conceptualisation of future safety and security initiatives in schools. / Theses (Ph.D.) - University of KwaZulu-Natal, Durban, 2006.
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Pregnant at the wrong time : experiences of being a pregnant young woman while schooling : selected Lesotho cases.Mokobocho-Mohlakoana, Karabo M. January 2005 (has links)
This study is an exploration of participants' experiences of being pregnant as young women. The study attempts to respond to the following set of questions: What are the issues that surround young women's pregnancy in general? How has history shaped the construction of womanhood, family, sexuality, motherhood and young women's pregnancy? What are the beliefs, perceptions and policies surrounding young women's pregnancy and that underlie responses to it and how might they (beliefs, perceptions and policies) be changed? How do issues of sexually transmitted infections and HIV/AIDS among young women interact with issues of pregnancy? What are the ways in which schools, students and pregnant young women handle the issue of pregnancy, the continuation of pregnancy while schooling, and the implications or impact on the women's career trajectories? What are the experiences of women who have been pregnant at young ages with regard to their education (including the implications for it)? The study utilized a feminist research methodology to interact with women who have been pregnant while schooling. In addition, the study employed feminist research to establish the way in which the Basotho construct young women's pregnancy and to decipher the basis for the way this is constructed. A survey questionnaire was used to generate baseline data on the current interactions of school and young women's pregnancy. The storied lives of pregnant women have been shared in the study in their Lesotho context, a small mountain Kingdom completely land locked by South Africa. In-depth interviews were conducted with eight previously pregnant women while some past pregnant women were accessed by the use of focus group interviews. Additional interviews were conducted with principals, parents, siblings, proprietors, and partners of past pregnant young women. The researcher’s autobiography as a previously pregnant young woman was also used. The data in the study was analyzed at different levels. The first level was a narrative analysis of the eight stories, including the autobiography, which have been presented as their stories. Data from the focus group interviews was analyzed by picking up themes from the interviews and presented by discussing the themes together with some of the direct words of the participants to reinforce the discussion. A cross sectional narrative analysis was done for principals, parents, siblings, proprietors and partners. A narrative analysis was also done for a separate principals ' survey. At the final stage the study brings together information that relates to the research questions. The analysis of the experiences of young woman's pregnancy has been illuminated by the interrogation of who constructs these experiences, what the constructions are and what they are based upon. Each story in the study is unique and not dependent on another however, it is interesting to note that the way young women's pregnancy interacts with the family, partner, school and religion has much to do with the social construction. The sudden altering of context of "good girl" to "bad girl" causes a sharp shift of the pregnant young woman's experiences, thus the fluid nature of social construction is observable. The negotiations that occur as individuals struggle to handle pregnancy are brought forward. The study has not gone without observations on the challenges faced. The study has also moved from the context based possibilities to the way forward. / Theses (Ph.D.) - University of KwaZulu-Natal, 2005.
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Some problems in the selection and preliminary training of non-European medical students.Branford, William Richard Grenville. January 1961 (has links)
Abstract not available. / Thesis (Ph.D.) - University of Natal, Durban, 1961.
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Perceptions and understandings about mental health problems of children and adolescents in Zambia : implications for innovative curriculum development for PHC practitioners.Mudenda, John. January 2007 (has links)
An exploratory study covering phase 1 stages 1, 2 and 3 only was undertaken in this large hybrid
research project to determine perceptions and understandings of the practitioners and the
community about mental health problems of children and adolescents in Zambia because so far
there is little known about this phenomenon. The aim of this exploratory study was to gain new
insights into the phenomenon by undertaking a preliminary investigation to determine priorities for the future post doctoral research before a more structured study to develop the PHC innovative curriculum.
The process first 'explored' social reality on the ground to better comprehend the perceptions and
understandings of mental health problems of CA and the curricula model preferences as perceived by the practitioners and the community respectively. This was done to appreciate the "reality of practice" on the ground using the Systems, Ecological, and Biopsychosocial theories which underpinned the four field areas of the study which are: Mental Health, Curriculum Development, INSET and Action Research (AR).
The total project is open-ended with three (3) phases and eight (8) stages, from the initial
exploration of perceptions (phase 1), through reports to government and stakeholders, curriculum development and piloting with health educators (phase 2) and finally implementing the reconstructed curriculum and integration (phase 3) in such a way as to empower primary health workers to themselves do further research. This thesis, covering the initial explorations of
perception, encompasses ONLY the first phase and three stages of this larger qualitative research project because of the Higher Education requirements and funding to try to complete in 4 years.
This entails literature review of all 4 field areas because in order to orientate the first phase and
three stages of such research and to see the implications of results, it is necessary to have a good
grounding in all four.
The research study process commenced with an orientation and introduction of the context and
purpose of the study, followed by the search conferences and focus group meetings using
Qualitative Research Design and Methodology. Search conferences, focus group discussions,
hospital registers and clinic records were the three sources of data collection. Analysis of
Qualitative and Quantitative Data used NVIVO and SPSS 13.0 Statistical Data Analysis Soft ware respectively.
The study showed that mental health problems of Children and Adolescents perceived by the
community and the practitioners were also referred and recorded in various hospital registers. The analysis of data from hospital records on referred cases further showed that there are serious
psychotic mental health disorders in children and adolescents referred for further consultations to
hospitals from the community, some of which are: acute psychotic states, with some associated with HIV/Aids. In addition to these psychotic states, epilepsy, drug and alcohol abuse, child defilement, rape cases, mental retardation and conversion disorders particularly in female children/adolescents appeared to be relatively significant mental health concerns and problems in the researched community sites.
The conclusion of the study suggests that there were more environment related factors perceived to cause mental health challenges to children and adolescents. This finding further suggests that there are similarities of cases referred from the community with those seen in clinical practice areas. The significance of these findings in the reality of practice, implies that the preferred PRISMS curriculum model to be developed later as a post doctoral activity for 'INSET' of PHC practitioners in Zambia should have deliberate blending of curriculum content with more socio-environment related issues than the current traditional curricula models which are more clinical in structure, process and content. / Thesis (Ph.D.)-University of KwaZulu-Natal, Durban, 2007.
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An analysis of learners' engagement in mathematical task.January 1988 (has links)
The present project is part of a larger research programme focussed on
the analysis of change; one aspect being educational transformation and
in particular an emphasis on the explication of the contentless processes
(eg. logical operations, reasoning styles, analysis and synthesis) which underlie
both learning and teaching at university level. The present project
is aimed at an analysis of the teaching-learning dialectic in mathematics
courses. This analysis has two major focal points, that is, making explicit
the often tacit and mostly inadequate and/or inappropriate rules for engaging
in mathematical tasks which the under-prepared learner brings to
the teaching-learning situation, and secondly the teaching strategies which
may enable these learners to overcome their past (erroneous) knowledge
and skills towards the development of effecient, autonomous mathematical
problem-solving strategies. In order to remedy inadequate and inappropriate
past learning and/or teaching, the present project presents a set of mediational
strategies and regulative cues which function both for the benefit
of the teacher and the learner in a problematic teaching-learning situation
and on the meta and epistemic cognitive levels of information processing.
Furthermore, these mediational strategies and regulative cues fall on a kind
of interface between contentless processes and the particular content of the
teaching-learning dialectic of mathematics in particular, as well as between
the ideal components of any instructional process and the particular needs
and demands of under-prepared learners engaged in mathematical tasks. / Thesis (M.Ed.) - University of Natal, Durban, 1988.
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Racism and the science classroom : towards a critical biology education.Patel, Farida. January 2005 (has links)
This study explores how students experience oppression and subordination in and
through biology education. The exploration is guided by the following questions: how
is racism/discrimination played out in my biology classroom; in what way/s are the
classroom practices of both the students and the teacher racist/discriminatory; and
what reinforces such racist/discriminatory practices and why. Since the critical
perspective allows for oppressions, subordinations and discriminatory practice to be
named and challenged this then became the perspective within which the study was
located.
The methodology, guided by the critical perspective, and used to generate the data in
this search is therefore a critical ethnography within which a critical self ethnography
is also employed. Through foregrounding the oppression of race and racism, this
methodology made it possible to generate data on the various oppressions and
subordinations that are perpetuated in and through biology education. The data was
generated from biology lessons on cell division, human reproduction, genetics and
biological determinism in a Grade 11 class. This class had in it 34 fe/male students
from three different race groups viz. Indian, Black and Coloured. Ten students who
volunteered to be interviewed also contributed to the data generated in this study.
At a first level of analysis, the data generated from the lessons and the interviews
were written up and presented as factionalised stories. This was then used to provide,
at a second level a descriptive cross-case analysis grounded in the data of the stories.
This cross-case analysis generated categories of oppression, subordination and
discriminatory practice that included race and colour; gender and patriarchy; bodies
and sexuality; class, poverty and sexually transmitted diseases; institutional power
and hierarchy; religion; and language. These categories of oppression and
subordination, although described separately, are mutually inclusive categories. From
this description it became possible to name and theorise, at a third level of analysis,
oppressions and subordinations within biology education. The theorisations
deliberated on issues of race, class, gender, language and power. The naming and
challenging of existing oppressions, subordinations and discriminatory practice
required that a traditional contemporary biology education be replaced by a critical
biology education.
This study, in engaging a critical biology education, shows how biology may be
taught differently when the agenda is social transformation in efforts towards social
justice. Whilst it is accepted that social justice in all forms may never be attained, this
study shows possibilities for how that contained within current Life Sciences policy
for human rights and social justice, could be realised. / Theses (Ph.D.) - University of KwaZulu-Natal, Durban, 2005.
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A study of the philosophy and practice in the education of the South African Hindu.Rambiritch, Birbal. January 1959 (has links)
Abstract not supplied. / Thesis (Ph.D)-University of Natal, 1959.
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Power and identity in theory-practice relationships : an exploration of teachers' work through qualitative research.January 1997 (has links)
This thesis provides two interwoven sets of detailed descriptions with narrative lines. The first relates to five case studies involving secondary school teachers in schools in and around Durban during 1993 and 1994. This account focuses on the relationships between the teachers' thinking about knowledge and learning and their classroom practice. The second account describes the processes and difficulties involved in qualitative research incorporating case study and participant observation methodologies - from gaining access to schools and developing a task to access teachers' thinking about knowledge to acquiring skills for observation, writing lesson descriptions, conducting interviews and completing different levels of analysis. In essence, this account traces the development of the researcher during the course of this project and also highlights both the strengths and the weaknesses of qualitative research as a mode of social inquiry. Analysis of theory/practice relationships in each of these descriptions is centred around issues of power and identity, the data collected during the course of the fieldwork being used to develop grounded theory. The work of George H. Mead, Michel Foucault and Thomas Popkewitz provide the basis for the concept of power identity. The relational and shifting nature of power and its role in identity and theory/practice relationships - both in the work of the five teachers work and in qualitative research - is explored. In the former, seven interrelated components of power are identified and the ways in which these strengthen and limit teachers' power identities are described. In the latter, the connections between epistemology and research methodology and the similarities between qualitative research and local criticism are highlighted together with the critical roles played by contradiction, language and reflexivity. Finally, the insights gained about theory/practice relationships and power identity are extended to provide possibilities for conceptualising rationality and teacher education. The thesis is structured so as to capture both the contradictory elements and the shifts and developments that occurred during the study - those in the work of the participating teachers during the period of collaboration and those related to my personal epistemology and my practice as a qualitative researcher. / Thesis (Ph.D.)-University of Natal, 1997.
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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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A sociological study of the educational and career routes of a group of Indian secondary school students in the Durban area : the transition from school to work.Naicker, Subramunian Anand. January 1988 (has links)
This longitudinal study on the transition from school to work
of a group of Indian school-leavers from two co-educational
schools in Durban is an attempt to analyse the processes underlying
the construction of educational and career routes. It
deals with the lived experiences of boys and girls from different
social-class backgrounds within the school, the family, and
the work situation. This passage from school to work, which
also includes the experiences of unemployment, is examined
against the background of social interactions in micro settings,
as well as the influences of social, structural and cultural
forces. In particular, the career pathways are studied within
the context of the cultural background of Indians, and their
socio-historical location in the South African society as a
minority and an intermediate status group in a racially-divided
society.
As the students proceeded through the last three years at school
and into the first few months of work various qualitative,
field research methods were used to get some insight into the
changing and complex nature of the transitional process. These
methods included participant observation, focus sed and unfocussed
interviews, and discussions. Such qualitative research methods
were valuable for an understanding' of the meanings and values
on which the students' actions were based.
The structural and interpretive analysis of the family, the school, the labour market, and a patriarchal, capitalist, apartheid society points to the significance of ideological values, hegemony, class relations, racial, gender, and political and economic influences on the construction of educational and career identities. The analysis also indicates the close relationship
which exists on the one hand between the cultural interpretations
and practices of various social actors; and on the other
hand, the structural conditions in which these are located.
The findings provide some account of how social-class relations
are continued and sustained via related and different inequalities
such as race and gender. Race, class and gender exist side
by side in this reproduction process. By focussing on the close
relationship which exists between the actions and decisions
of the students, and the structures of society, this study
attempts to bridge the gap between structural and interpretive
explanations. The students' interpretations of their educational
and career choices are brought into a closer relationship with
the structures of society. / Thesis (Ph.D.) - University of Natal, Pietermaritzburg, 1988.
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