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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.
351

The revision of an existing English language textbook to meet the demands of outcomes-based education

Moeng, Pamela 06 November 2012 (has links)
M.A., Faculty of Humanities, University of the Witwatersrand, 1999
352

Competência gerencial em enfermagem: identificação do grau de competência desenvolvido por graduandos em uma universidade privada / Nursing Management Competence: identifying the efficiency level developed by undergraduates of a private university

Oliveira, José Carlos de 11 May 2009 (has links)
Este estudo teve como objetivo identificar a percepção do grau de competência gerencial alcançado por graduandos em enfermagem de uma universidade privada frente ao elenco de competências previsto nas disciplinas da área de administração que permeiam o currículo do curso desta instituição. Também, se procurou identificar possíveis relações de associação entre as variáveis independentes do estudo e os resultados encontrados. Este estudo tem caráter quantitativo descritivo que se utiliza de comparações ora transversalmente entre - sujeitos, ora longitudinalmente nos - sujeitos, sendo a população de estudo constituída por graduandos das disciplinas da área de administração do curso de graduação da Faculdade de Enfermagem da PUC-Campinas do período integral e noturno. Para tal, este estudo foi pautado em recursos da análise quantitativa e se utilizou da técnica de coleta de dados por meio de questionários estruturados com uma escala de respostas que permitiu a aplicação de processos estatísticos para obtenção de representações simplificadas. Os questionários foram estruturados em duas partes: uma composta pela caracterização dos respondentes envolvendo as variáveis sexo, idade, tipo e local de atividade profissional, e outra envolvendo as competências previstas nas disciplinas da área de administração. A definição das competências das disciplinas constituiu um trabalho a partir da análise dos objetivos e conteúdos programáticos das disciplinas e passou por um processo de validação de juízes. Os resultados mostraram uma população de 488 respondentes distribuídos em função da disciplina que estavam cursando e do período de realização do curso, sendo identificada uma predominância de indivíduos do sexo feminino, idade mediana de 24 anos, a maioria foi composta por graduandos trabalhadores distribuídos em 19 diferentes tipos de atividade profissional com grande incidência de trabalhadores de nível médio de enfermagem. Os resultados relativos ao alcance das competências mostraram que aproximadamente ¾ das respostas se situaram entre o grau parcial e o grau integral da escala de intensidade, sendo que das 125 questões em que se constituíram os quatro questionários aplicados, em apenas 14 delas foi identificada uma diferenciação nas respostas entre os grupos analisados. A análise dos resultados e a comparação dos resultados fase á fase do conjunto de respostas dos respondentes em relação a sua percepção do grau de competência alcançado permite concluir que o grupo alcançou em sua maioria o grau de competência integral e, preservados os limites da análise transversal, alcançaram um grau de competência crescente conforme cursaram as disciplinas. É preciso uma avaliação da contribuição das disciplinas para o desenvolvimento de competências previstas no projeto político pedagógico de forma a atender ao perfil do egresso desejado pelo curso. E, além disto, primordialmente avaliar a contribuição que estas disciplinas podem dar ao curso no sentido de buscar a formação do Enfermeiro capaz de uma ação transformadora de sociedade em que atua e vive / This studys objective was to identify the perception degree of management competency reached by undergraduates in nursing of a private university relative to subjects that administrative field forecasts. Also, was to identify possible relations of association between the independent variables contained in the paper and the results found. This study has quantitative descriptive character which uses comparisons times transversally with subjects, times longitudinal in subjects, being the study population made of undergraduates of administration disciplines of the Nursing course from the Faculdade de Enfermagem da PUC-Campinas, both integral and night shifts. For that, this study was ruled by quantitative analysis resources and has used the data collection by questioning method, those structured by an answer scale that allowed the application of statistic processes leading to simplified representations. The question forms were structured by two parts: the first was composed by the characterization of the interviewed containing variables as gender, age, type and local of professional activity, the second touching the subjects of forecast in the administrative graduation field. The definition of subjects competencies constituted a work of developing the analysis of the objectives and programmatic contents and went through a process of validation by judges. The results shown a population of 448 repliers distributed by the subject they were coursing and the period they were in, being identified predominance of female individuals, medium age of 24, most of them worker undergraduates distributed in 19 different groups of professional activity and great incidence of workers on nursing basic levels. The results related to range of the competences have shown approximately ¾ of the answers situated between the partial and integral level of the intensity scale, being that from 125 questions which built the forms, in only 14 of them were identified a differentiation of the answers by the analyzed groups. The analysis of the results and the comparisons of the them phase by phase allows to conclude that the group reached in its majority the integral degree of competence and, preserved the limits of transversal analysis, reached an increasing degree of competence as they attended the disciplines. An evaluation of the subjects contribution is needed for the development of competences forecast in the politic pedagogic project as to reach the expected egress profile of the course. And, besides that, first mostly evaluate the contribution that those subjects may give to the course in sense of seeking the development of the Nurse capable of transformation action on the society in which he acts and lives
353

Challenges facing foundation phase educators in the implementation of continuous assessment

Masipa, Mpho Dellynah January 2014 (has links)
Thesis (M. Ed. (Curriculum Studies)) -- University of Limpopo, 2014
354

Within and Against Performativity: Discursive Engagement in Adult Literacy and Basic Education

Sanguinetti, Jill, kimg@deakin.edu.au,jillj@deakin.edu.au,mikewood@deakin.edu.au January 1999 (has links)
The field of adult literacy and basic education (ALBE) has undergone dramatic changes in recent years with the advent of labour market programs, accreditation, competency-based assessment and competitive tendering for program funds. Teachers' working conditions have deteriorated and their professional autonomy has been eroded. ALBE has been increasingly instrumentalised to fulfil the requirements of a marketised economy and conform to its norms. The beliefs and value systems which traditionally underpinned the work of ALBE teachers have been reframed according to the principle of 'performativity' and the demands of the 'performative State' (Lyotard, 1984: 46, Yeatman 1994: 110). The destabilisation of teachers' working lives can be understood as a manifestation of the 'postmodern condition' (Lyotard 1984; Harvey 1989): the collapse of the certainties and purposes of the past; the proliferation of technologies; the impermanence and intensification of work; the commodification of knowledge and curricula; and the dissolving of boundaries between disciplines and fields of knowledge. The critiques of the modernist grand narratives which underpin progressivist and critical approaches to adult literacy pedagogy have further undermined the traditional points of reference of ALBE teachers. In this thesis I examine how teachers are teaching, surviving, resisting, and 'living the contradictions' (Seddon 1994) in the context of struggles to comply with and resist the requirements of performativity. Following Foucault and a number of feminist poststructuralist authors, I have applied the notions of 'discursive engagement' and 'the politics of discourse' (Yeatman 1990a) as a way of theorising the interplay between imposed change and teachers' practice. I explore the discursive practices which take place at the interface between the 'new' policy discourses and older, naturalised discourses; how teachers are engaged by and are engaging with discourses of performativity; how teachers are discursively constructing adult literacy pedagogy; what new, hybrid discourses of 'good practice' are emerging; and the micropractices of resistance which teachers are enacting in their speech and in their practice. My purpose was to develop knowledge which would support the reflexivity of teachers; to enrich the theoretical languages that teachers could draw upon in trying to make sense of their situation; and to use those languages in speaking about the dilemmas of practice. I used participatory action research as a means of producing knowledge about teachers' practices, structured around their agency, and reflecting their standpoint (Harding 1993). I describe two separate action research projects in which teachers of ALBE participated. I reflect on both projects in the light of poststructuralist theory and consider them as instances of what Lather calls 'within/against research' (Lather 1989: 27). I analyse written and spoken texts produced in both projects which reflect teachers' responses to competency-based assessment and other features of the changing context. I use a method of discourse mapping to describe the discursive field and the teachers' discursive practices. Three main configurations of discourse are delineated: 'progressivism', 'professional teacher' and 'performativity'. The teachers mainly position themselves within a hybridising 'progressivist /professional teacher' discourse, as a discourse of resistance to 'performative' discourse. In adapting their pedagogies, the teachers are in some degree taking the language and world view of performativity into their own vocabularies and practices. The discursive picture I have mapped is complex and contradictory. On one hand, the 'progressivist /professional teacher' discourse appears to endure and to take strength from the articulation into it of elements of performative discourse, creating new possibilities for discursive transformation. On the other hand, there are signs that performative discourse is colonising and subsuming progressivist /professional teacher discourse. At times, both of these tendencies are apparent in the one text. Six micropractices of resistance are identified within the texts: 'rational critique', 'objectification', 'subversion', 'refusal', 'humour' and 'the affirmation of desire'. These reflect the teachers' agency in making discursive choices on the micro level of their every day practices. Through those micropractices, the teachers are engaging with and resisting the micropractices and meanings of performativity. I apply the same multi-layered method of analysis to an examination of discursive engagement in pedagogy by analysing a transcript of the teachers' discussion of critical incidents in their classrooms. Their classroom pedagogies are revealed as complex, situated and eclectic. They are combining and integrating their 'embodied' and their 'institutional' powers, both 'seducing' (McWilliam 1995) and 'regulating' (Gore 1993) as they teach. A strong ethical project is apparent in the teachers' sense of social responsibility, in their determination to adhere to valued traditions of previous times, and in their critical self-awareness of the ways in which they use their institutional and embodied powers in the classroom. Finally, l look back on the findings, and reflect on the possibilities of discursive engagement and the politics of discourse as a framework for more strategic practice in the current context. This research provides grounds for hope that, by becoming more self-conscious about how we engage discursively, we might become more strategic in our everyday professional practice. Not withstanding the constraints (evident in this study) which limit the strategic potential of the politics of discourse, there is space for teachers to become more reflexive in their professional, pedagogical and political praxis. Development of more deliberate, self-reflexive praxis might lead to a 'postmodern democratic polities' (Yeatman 1994: 112) which would challenge the performative state and the system of globalised capital which it serves. Short abstract Adult literacy and basic education (ALBE) teachers have experienced a period of dramatic policy change in recent years; in particular, the introduction of competency-based assessment and competitive tendering for program funds. 'Discourse politics' provides a way of theorising the interplay between policy-mediated institutional change and teachers' practice. The focus of this study is 'discursive engagement'; how teachers are engaged by and are engaging with discourses of performativity. Through two action research projects, texts were generated of teachers talking and writing about how they were responding to the challenges, and developing their pedagogies in the new policy environment. These texts have been analysed and several patterns of discursive engagement delineated, named and illustrated. The strategic potential of 'discourse polities' is explored in the light of the findings.
355

The perceptions of principals and educators of primary school libraries in implementing outcomes based education (OBE) in Ndengezi ward, Pinetown district, KwaZulu-Natal.

Nkuku, Adelaide Buyisiwe. January 2008 (has links)
The purpose of this study was to investigate the perceptions of principals and educators of primary school libraries in implementing Outcomes Based Education (OBE) and imparting and enhancing information skills in the Ndengezi Ward, Pinetown District, KwaZulu-Natal, with a view to proposing a set of recommendations based on the findings that would contribute to more effective use of the school library. The study population consisted of 15 principals and 385 educators. The survey instrument used to elicit data was a self-administered questionnaire that was distributed to a sample population of 15 principals and 105 educators. The questionnaire sought to establish if principals and educators are aware of the role of the school library in the successful implementation of OBE. A total of 104 responded, 10 principals and 94 educators, indicating a response rate of 89.5%. The results were analyzed in terms of frequency responses and are graphically displayed in the form of tables. The study findings show that the educators used both school libraries and other libraries for their curricula needs. Other libraries were more heavily used than school libraries. In the Ndengezi Ward there are no functional and well-resourced school libraries and this has contributed to their underutilization. Principals experience problems in development and establishment of school libraries. There is a need for training educators in library and information skills and creating awareness amongst principals about the role of the school library in implementing OBE. Recommendations for action and further research, based on the conclusions of the study, are made. / Thesis (M.I.S.)-University of KwaZulu-Natal, Pietermaritzburg, 2008.
356

An evaluation of the outcomes-based education policy in public schools in the Empangeni region.

Ngubane, Mpilo Brilliance. January 2002 (has links)
This thesis aimed at evaluating Outcomes-Based Education (OBE) policy in public schools in the Empangeni Region. Although South Africa is now a free and democratic country with a new system of education, some inequalities still exist among public schools which make it very difficult for them to implement OBE policy in the same way. It is therefore necessary to evaluate how educators view OBE policy. This research aimed at finding out (a) the policy measures that apply to OBE as a policy, (b) the extent to which normative factors apply in the implementation of education policy, (c) factors that hinder or promote effective implementation of OBE policy in public schools and (d) the model that can be recommended for the effective implementation of OBE policy. For purposes of orientation of the study it had to be located within its background which motivated it. The field of education in South Africa has always experienced problems especially with its policies. Some of these problems motivated the researcher to undertake this study and because of their significance they had to be stated in this research. The statement of the problem provided a foundation within which the aims of the study were explained. The significance of any research cannot be overemphasized. However, this one becomes even more significant because it comes up at a crucial period in South African education. This is a period when policies that were implemented in the country after 1994 should be evaluated. It is true that not all problems that relate to education policy can be solved at once. This therefore necessitated that delimitation of the study be clearly stated. There is virtually no study without its limitations, especially if it has to be done in public schools. These limitations were stated. For the purposes of clarity the terms that were constantly used in the study were defined and explained. The demarcation of the study provided a clear picture of the outline of chapters. The study had to be contextualized within the existing theoretical and conceptual perspectives that apply to public policy, policy-making process and OBE policy. Theory had to be drawn from different sources to find out whether OBE policy does adhere to the expectations of public policy in general. The policy-making process is one area that plays a very important role in the success of the implementation process. This necessitated that OBE policy be evaluated in terms of whether it followed necessary policy processes before and during its implementation. It also became necessary to present critical viewpoints on OBE policy as understood by its critics. This criticism culminated in the Revised National Curriculum Statement which was also discussed in great details in this study. This study had to outline the research methods and techniques used. The nature of the study necessitated the use of only questionnaires and interview schedule to elicit information from educators. It is true that there is no single research instrument without its limitations. It is for this reason that information obtained through the questionnaire had to be validated through the interview schedule. The researcher presented, analyzed and discussed research findings at the same time. The nature of the study enabled the use of tables and frequency distribution to present data. Because there was a lot of information to analyze, it sufficed to use descriptive statistical analysis. Discussion of data entailed interpretation and integration of data based on its presentation and analysis. In drawing conclusions the researcher realized that the present South African education system still has problems. To obviate these problems recommendations were made to the government, the education department in KZN and schools. This research culminated into a model of implementation which is the researcher's own creation intended to help all stakeholders have a clear direction in the implementation of OBE policy. The researcher did not only experience challenges inherent in the research process but also professional development. This learning experience is discussed as reflections on learning. / Thesis (Ph.D.)-University of Durban-Westville, 2002.
357

Difficulties experienced by educators implementing curriculum 2005 : a case study of grade seven Natural Science educators in a predominantly rural district of one region of the KwaZulu-Natal Department of Education.

Oakes, Ivan Alvin James. January 2001 (has links)
The purpose of this study was to establish what difficulties Grade Seven educators were experiencing in the implementation of Curriculum 2005, a new national outcome-based curriculum with wide ranging aims. A qualitative approach, using a case study method, was employed and mainly in-depth interviews and observations were conducted. Six Grade Seven educators in a variety of schools were interviewed at length about the wide ranging problems they experienced in introducing C2005 into the classrooms for the first time in 2000. The interview data was supplemented by personal observations of most of these educators in their schools. The research study was undertaken in a predominantly rural district of one region of the KwaZulu-Natal Department of Education. The findings of the study are presented and these are interpreted and discussed under two categories: these being the kinds of difficulties enunciated by the educators and the researcher's observation of identified features of problems. The key findings of this research study are the following: • Educators use inappropriate teaching styles • Educators lack a conceptual knowledge of Science • Educators lack the skill to teach practical work • Educators avoid selected aspects of C2005 • Assessment, recording and reporting is a threat to educators • Educators are not able to use learners' knowledge • Educators display a waning interest in the implementation of C2005 • Educators are stressed out • There is an increased workload on educators Educators lack qualification, training and teaching in outcomes - based approaches • Educators do not have parental support • There is a lack of guidance on what to teach • The lack of resources is a major obstacle for the implementation of C2005 • Educators lack a commitment to teach Natural Science • There is a lack of support from principals and school management teams Finally, recommendations are made for the successful implementation of C2005 as well as suggestions for further research. / Thesis (M.Ed.) - University of Natal, Pietermaritzburg, 2001.
358

The development of selected learning units in land administration to facilitate the land reform programme.

Landman, J. C. January 2003 (has links)
With the introduction of a new government in South Africa in 1994, the country embarked on a programme of land reform, and currently the process of dealing with the issues of Land Redistribution, Land Restitution and Tenure Reform is underway. Sound land administration is crucial to the Land Reform programme, and to future peace in the country. Such land administration requires a range of role players with varying levels of education. Also in the field of education the country saw a complete break away from the system of content-based education and competency based training, to one of outcomes-based education and training. The introduction of this new educational dispensation is overseen by the South African Qualifications Authority (SAQA), who is in the process of ensuring the smooth implementation of the National Qualifications Framework (NQF) into all aspects of learning in South Africa. The purpose of the NQF in the broad sense is to provide for the registration of nationally and internationally recognised qualifications on all levels in an integrated system, in order to facilitate access to and provide mobility in education and training. The NQF is designed to develop learning that is relevant to the needs of industry, the individual and the economy, but also to be dynamic and able to adapt quickly to changing circumstances. It therefore is providing South African educators with new challenges in the field of Outcomes-Based Education and training. One of the methods available to identify appropriate learner outcomes to meet the above requirements is the DACUM method, which works on the premise that expert workers are better able to describe/define their job than anyone else. The DACUM method is a proven way of arriving at relevant outcomes, which is the starting point in the curriculum development process as used in outcomes-based education and training programmes. In this thesis the DACUM model is tested as a tOGI for designing relevant outcomes, and such outcomes are modified in accordance with outcomes in practices in existing programmes in land administration in SouthernAnother important component in designing learning outcomes is to ensure that appropriate embedded knowledge is identified in order to avoid that learning becomes mechanistic without learners mastering necessary content. In this thesis a body of general knowledge has been compiled which can inform the curriculum developer on relevant embedded knowledge when designing learning units in Land Administration. This body of knowledge includes land related historical issues in South Africa as well as Australia and the USA, Government Policies and Legislation dealing with Land Reform. Finally some learning units in one of the fields in land administration were developed. In making the choice of which field, care was taken to identify one which will span a range of NQF levels, and the choice fell on the adjudication of land rights, which proved to have relevant learning on every NQF level from Level 3 to Level 7. To achieve this the writer had to interview a number of stakeholders and compile a body of knowledge specific to adjudication. Care was taken to develop elements, which could be used by the Standards Generating Body (SGB) in Surveying in designing Unit Standards, as well as by educators in Higher and Further Education. Africa. / Thesis (M.Sc.)-University of Natal, Durban, 2003.
359

Learners' views of practical work in addition of fractions : a case study.

Mdluli, Fortunate Gugulethu. January 2013 (has links)
This study considered use of practical work as one of the strategies that may be used to teach and learn fraction concepts in primary school Mathematics. Although an educator and learners were participants in the study, the focus was mainly on the learners. The class educator’s perception of practical work was investigated and the results confirmed the assumption that most educators use minimal or no practical work when teaching learners fractions. The researcher carried out an experiment with learners to find out whether they saw any value in doing practical work. Data collection instruments used were an observation schedule which was collated by the researcher in teaching four lessons, written responses of learners to a series of activities they did as class work and their responses to interview questions. Data collected from learners confirmed that practical work did have value in the teaching of fraction concepts, especially addition of fractions. Other than confirming the value of practical work, much other valuable data emerged from the findings. The data have important implications for the teaching and learning of fractions, especially addition of fractions, teacher training in practical work and also further research. These are intended to improve teaching of fractions, particularly addition of fractions. / M. Ed. University of KwaZulu-Natal, Durban 2013.
360

Problems experienced by practitioners in implementing continuous assessment and common task for assessment in the General Education and Training Certificate in the North West Province / Emily Varughese Mammen

Mammen, Emily Varughese January 2005 (has links)
This study reports on the findings of a research project into the problems facing the General Education and Training Certificate (GETC) for Grade 9 learners in the North West Province. To do this, the views of school management staff, teachers and professional support staff were sought. This study confined itself to the North West Province, South Africa. The sample size was two hundred individuals, comprising professional support staff, school management staff and teachers who are directly involved with GETC and Outcomes-Based Assessment (OBA). Three main problem areas were selected for the purpose of this study. l)lese are (a) OBA assessment training (b) follow-up activities needed for teachers (c) challenges facing the school level implementation. The study culminated in recommendation of a professional support model for teachers. The findings of this study revealed that teachers in the province were not adequately trained for the General Education and Training Certificate (GETC) implementation. Professional Support Staff did not offer enough follow-up activities to support the teachers during the implementation period and there after. Lack of this monitoring and supporting mechanism adversely affects the school level implementation of the GETC for Grade 9 learners. It was also revealed that schools are experiencing challenges regarding time management, implementation of CASS and CTA and in the processes and procedures followed in the GETC administration. The final recommendation is that there is a need to include in the pre-service training programmes, CASS and CTA assessment and develop an on-going professional support plan for teachers who are in the service. / Thesis (Ph.D) North-West University, Mafikeng Campus, 2005

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