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The implementation of integrated quality management system in schools : experiences from Mayville ward.Mncwabe, Jetro Bongani. January 2007 (has links)
This study examines the experiences of the school management teams and
educators of Mayville ward schools regarding the implementation of Integrated
Quality Management Systems (lQMS) policy at school level. The research was
conducted as a case study in the Mayville Ward Schools in Durban, KwaZulu
Natal, South Africa. This study was looking at the recently introduced educator
evaluation system that is being in schools called Integrated Quality Management System (IQMS). This study also elaborates on the changes in the education history from the apartheid system to the democratic system of education. Three schools participated in the study (two secondary schools and one primary school). These schools were purposively selected using convenience and easy access, as well as, the fact that they had started implementing the IQMS policy, as the main criteria for selection. Semi-structured interviews were used to gather data from principals, heads of departments as well as post-level one educators about their experiences of IQMS implementation. The findings indicated that while the IQMS policy was good on paper but it was extremely difficult to implement. Issues of honesty and trust were at the root of the difficulties that make IQMS implementation difficult. The participants' understanding of IQMS was that it was meant for the provision of quality education and development. / Thesis (M.Ed.)-University of KwaZulu-Natal, 2007.
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An exploration of the ways in which secondary school girls construct their relationship with mathematics and mathematical literacy.Vermeulen, Charmaine. January 2007 (has links)
This study explores the ways in which Grade 11 girls from an independent, predominantly / Thesis (M.Ed.) - University of KwaZulu-Natal, Durban, 2007.
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Discipline in a KwaZulu-Natal secondary school : the gendered experience of learners.Msani, Mhlope Cynthia. January 2007 (has links)
The study explores and describes perceptions of learners in a secondary school on how discipline is enforced at Hintsho, with particular attention to gender. Corporal punishment is one of the methods of discipline that is still used at Hintsho. The issue of corporal punishment is a sensitive one since its use is now illegal. In the course of the study the researcher interviewed learners about this and other forms of discipline. Data was collected through interviews with ten Grade eleven learners. Access was enabled by the position of the researcher as a teacher of over ten years’ standing in the school. The study found that some teachers (especially males) still beat learners in order to enforce discipline and keep order. This occurs despite the fact that the school has formally prohibited the use of corporal punishment and has passed a code of conduct to encourage the use of alternative disciplinary forms. Learners confirmed that other forms of discipline and punishment are
indeed used. But these are generally corporal punishment in another
guise. Hard labour, for example, was identified by learners as a frequent form of punishment. While some learners accepted the various forms of punishment that were used, others opposed both corporal punishment and the other forms of punishment introduced as an alternative, especially the cleaning of toilets. Male teachers proved to be stricter and more severe than females as they were less tolerant and less reasonable. / Thesis (M.Ed.)-University of KwaZulu-Natal, 2007.
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The use of educational video (EV) to facilitate learning of mathematics education in grade ten : a case study of two secondary schools in Durban KwaZulu-Natal province in South Africa.January 2008 (has links)
The integration of technology into teaching and learning has come as new in education. It is a shifting of paradigm from one way of educational thinking to the other. Before entering their classrooms for the first time students already have been using technology devices and educators’ cannot ignore this facts. The South African Ministry of Education has responded to this issue by designing implementation strategies and has mandated all schools in the country to have integrated Technology in the curriculum by 2013. The study anticipated to understand how Educational Video (EV) is used to facilitate learning of mathematics in two Secondary schools in Durban, KwaZulu-Natal Province. The underlying principle was to ascertain the challenges educators encounter in facilitating teaching and learning of mathematics, using EV in two secondary schools in Durban, KwaZulu-Natal Province. A qualitative research approach and case methodology were used to explore these experiences of educators in mathematics instruction. Semi-structured interviews, classroom observations and documents review methods were used to collect data that were analysed and discussed, using the principles of Engagement and Activity theories. Four purposively selected educators and ten grade ten students were interviewed and their mathematics lessons observed. The findings indicated that the integration of video in teaching and learning appears to assist both learners and educators in two schools, and the educators from the two Secondary Schools in Durban, KwaZulu-Natal Province have shown to be comfortable with its use in facilitating mathematics instruction for it enables authentic and higher order thinking in learners by engaging them in complex tasks within collaborative learning contexts. Issues of professional empowerment financial support, and lack of materials, delay the integration of EV in two schools. This would be solved easier if all stakeholders in the education sector were effective in their individual roles for the betterment of education in the whole country. / Thesis (M.Ed.)-University of KwaZulu-Natal, Durban, 2008.
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Misconceptions held and errors made by South African learners in answering science questions in the trends in mathematics and science study (TIMSS).Sibanda, Doras. January 2006 (has links)
This thesis presents results of a secondary analysis of South African Grade 8
learners' responses to the TIMSS 1999 Population 2 Science questions, and the
results of a test and group interviews with learners from three high schools in
Pietermaritzburg. The study is motivated by the need to understand the reasons for
the poor performance of SA Grade 8 natural science learners in the TIMSS 1999
study. The aim of the study was to identify possible misconceptions held and errors
made by SA science learners and to pinpoint pos sible causes and sources of these
misconceptions and errors. An analysis of the SA learners' responses contained in
the TIMSS 1999 Population 2 data and the test results from the Pietermaritzburg
schools was used to identify possible misconceptions held and errors made by SA
learners on certain science topics. The questions used in the Pietermaritzburg study
were selected from the TIMSS 1999 population 2 science quest ions. The questions
were selected based on perceived minimal levels of guessing by learners when
answering these questions in the TIMSS 1999 study. The three schools selected for
inclusion in this study in Pietermaritzburg were chosen based on their former
classification as Indian, Coloured and Black schools. The majority of pupils at each
of these three schools still reflect this racial composition that was in place at the time
the TIMSS study was conducted. The Pietermaritzburg data was collected by
administering a written test consisting of selected TIMSS 1999 science questions to a
randomly selected group of ten learners at each school follow ed by interviews with
the learners and the head of the Science Department at each school.
Learner ' notebooks and the year planners used by teachers at the three schools were
analysed primarily to check if these were in line with the SA intended curriculum
and to check for any possible sources of misconceptions. The analysis of the data
was guided by the constructivist theory and the conceptual framework used in the
TIMSS data. The TIMSS conceptual framework focused on the intended, the
implemented and the achieved curriculum.
The study found that learners hold misconceptions on different concepts of the
natural science curriculum. Some causes of misconceptions and errors among
learners were identified. Some of the misconceptions highlighted indicate for
instance that learners believe that boiling water is a form of a chemical reaction; a
seed develops from a root; proteins are the same as vitamins, proteins and vitamins
provide energy for the body. Some possible causes of misconceptions and errors among learners were identified. These possible causes of misconceptions and errors are varied with some for
example, linked to poor content coverage by teachers, learners' everyday experience,
the lack of learning resources and materials at some schools. / Thesis (M.Ed.)-University of KwaZulu-Natal, Pietermaritzburg, 2006.
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Teachers' curriculum development experiences of the transition from mother tongue to English as a medium of instruction : a case study of three primary schools in Lesotho.Masilo, 'Mamotloang Grace. January 2008 (has links)
In the Lesotho primary education system, the language policy states that the mother
tongue (Sesotho) should be used up to Standard Three (this is the third year of
schooling in Lesotho) as the medium of instruction. English is prescribed as the
medium of instruction from Standard Four upwards. This sudden change presents enormous challenges for teachers, especially in Standard Four. The purpose of my study was to investigate Standard Four teachers’ curriculum development experiences
of the transition from the mother tongue to English as medium of instruction. The
study also sought to understand how teachers plan and teach at this level.
This was a qualitative interpretive study that adopted a case study methodology. Participants were purposively selected. They were three Sesotho-speaking Standard Four teachers in three different urban schools. In addressing the research questions, data was generated through qualitative methods such as semi-structured teachers’ interviews, classroom observations, document analysis and a personal reflective journal. Data was analyzed and interpreted through an open coding process. The findings revealed that these teachers experienced several challenges in the use of
English as the medium of instruction. Teachers were faced with three key issues that they had to deal with, namely, overcoming their own perceptions of their competence in English, their low sense of self efficacy with regard to teaching at this transition class, and the difficulty with teaching pupils in a second language before these pupils had gained proficiency in their mother tongue. Teachers regularly employed codeswitching as a strategy to make meaning in their classrooms. The study recommends pre- and in-service teacher professional development, and a review of the Lesotho language policy in the primary school. / Thesis (M.Ed.)-University of KwaZulu-Natal, Durban, 2008.
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An exploration of the reading choices of grade 4 learners in a public primary school in KwaZulu-Natal.Govender, Kistensamy. January 2009 (has links)
The advent of technology, especially the electronic media, heralded a new era of
communication. Together with this boom came a host of reading challenges that has
affected the learner and learner performance in the classroom. In the PIRLS report
(2006) an emergence of a “non-reading” culture was noted as a result of poor
performance by learners in South Africa.
This research aims to explore the reading choices of grade 4 learners and why they
choose to read what they read. The research was conducted at a public primary school
in the Chatsworth region in KwaZulu Natal. This research used the qualitative case
study approach which is set within the interpretivist paradigm. The main source of data
generation was the semi-structured interviews of five learners and their respective
parents. In addition to this method, two structured observations were conducted:
observations of the reading- for- pleasure lessons and the LRE lessons. To conclude
the data collection, a case scenario, where the learners created their own reading room,
was used. This multi-pronged approach was adopted to fill in the information gaps and
omissions that arose from the interviews.
The analysis of the data indicates the following: girls read more frequently than boys,
newspapers form the bulk of the reading at home, billboards are an interesting addition
to their reading list, girls are intrinsically motivated. Findings show that the electronic
media require higher levels of literacy skills to access the highly- textual society of the
workplace. It becomes imperative that reading be motivated, taught and encouraged.
The definition of literacy by the school and the home should be revisited and reviewed
so that learners are not disadvantaged. Furthermore, the teachers and the librarians will
thus have a greater degree of flexibility in selecting reading materials for the classroom
and the library respectively. It becomes vitally important that we heed the warning of Alvermann (2001, p. 680) who argues that “the possibility that as a culture we are making struggling readers out of some adolescents who for any number of reasons have
turned their backs on a version of literacy called school literacy is a sobering thought” / Thesis (M.Ed.)-University of KwaZulu-Natal, Durban, 2009.
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An analysis of the physical science results in the province of KwaZulu-Natal in the 2008 National Senior Certificate (NSC) examinination.Gareeb, Ramesh. January 2009 (has links)
This study examined the performance of the first cohort of learners writing Physical
Science in the National Senior Certificate examinations. The critical question that the
researcher addressed was: How can the results produced in Physical Science in the
province of KwaZulu-Natal in the 2008 NSC examination be used to give an
understanding of the academic performance of learners? Using the mixed method
approach, two data cohorts, namely the results produced by learners in Physical Science
and the interview data, were subjected to analysis through the lens of phenomenology and
semiotics. Findings of the study reveal that the education system still carries with it the
inequalities of the past, with quality Physical Science to a few learners who were fortunate
enough to attend privileged schools, identified by their high quintile ranking (5), in the
predominately urban areas. The results of learners in poor, predominately rural schools,
ranked quintile 1 and quintile 2, reveal that the “cycle of mediocrity” (Khan, 1995, p.128)
still prevails. / Thesis (M.Ed.)-University of KwaZulu-Natal, Durban, 2009.
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An exploration of how grade one IsiZulu teachers teach reading.Maphumulo, Thabisile. January 2010 (has links)
This study aims to investigate how Grade One isiZulu teachers teach reading in the Foundation Phase of Schooling. History of teaching can be traced back as far as the 1800s up until the introduction of the
Outcome Based Education (OBE) that came into being after the first South African democratic elections in 1994. Data for this study was collected from the three Grade One isiZulu teachers of my school.
This was a qualitative study and data was collected through semi-structured interviews, observation and document analysis. Interviews were taped, transcribed and analysed, and data
was categorized into themes.
The study revealed that there were some social conditions that did hinder the progress of reading
in the school. There was a lack of motivation from parents. It was found out from the study that,
in spite of all the Department of Education’s attempts to provide teachers with handbooks with
strategies on how to tackle reading lessons, some teachers still have problems in putting these
into practice. It also became clear that reading involves role players which are learners, teachers,
parents and the community as well as the Department of Education. The study has also revealed
that the best way to teach reading is through a variety of methods.
It is recommended that Grade One classes should not consist of more than fifty learners. Policies
implemented by both the Department of Education and various schools should be reinforced. / Thesis (M.Ed.)-University of KwaZulu-Natal, Durban, 2010.
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Towards understanding ways in which out-of-school youth in Highflats, Hlokozi area, KwaZulu-Natal respond to a context of HIV/AIDS.Latha, Nicholas. January 2009 (has links)
Thesis (M.Ed.) - University of KwaZulu-Natal, Durban, 2009.
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