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Foundation Phase teachers’ responses to curriculum change in South Africa over the past two decades: a case study of two schoolsNakaonga, Ruth January 2014 (has links)
South Africa has experienced three significant curriculum reforms since 1994. The first of these replaced the ‘apartheid’ curriculum with C2005 based largely on Outcomes Based Education. In the second stage C2005 gave way to the National Curriculum Statements, a simplified version of C2005. Finally, the NCS was replaced with CAPS. This research study investigates the perceptions, attitudes and experiences of teachers implementing these curriculum changes. It focuses in particular on Foundation Phase in 2012, the year in which CAPS was implemented in that phase. It took the form of an interpretive case study, using qualitative data generating and analysis techniques. Principals and selected teachers of two primary schools in Grahamstown – an ex-Model C school and a performing ‘township’ school - were the respondents of the study. Data were generated chiefly through questionnaires and semi-structured interviews, supplemented by document analysis and observation. The findings revealed that the teachers in this study are frustrated and angry about the frequency of curriculum change in South Africa. Respondents are particularly critical of OBE and the NCS. While they welcome the need for a departure from ‘apartheid’ curricula, they feel the pedagogical underpinning of the NCS – with its emphasis on learner-centredness – disempowered them as teachers. Hence, they welcomed CAPS which seems to return to content – rather than skills and attitudes – and re-instates the teacher as the chief giver of knowledge and manager of learning.
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Factors affecting the implementation of the National Curriculum Statement in the Mthatha education districtGobingca, Berington Zanoxolo January 2012 (has links)
The current investigation was conducted in the Mthatha Education District. It sought to investigate factors affecting the implementation of the National Curriculum Statement (NCS) in the Mthatha schools of the Eastern Cape Province in South Africa. Literature reviewed showed that teachers, as the key role players to the implementation of the curriculum in schools, are still experiencing difficulties in implementing the NCS. It is thus important to establish and investigate the factors affecting the implementation of the NCS. The research was both exploratory and explanatory in nature and adopted a mixed method approach. Questionnaires were distributed among 210 teachers who were randomly selected from 363 schools in the Mthatha Education District. Out of 210 teachers who were provided with questionnaires to fill out, it was 148 (70.5 percent) of them who completed and returned the questionnaires. Semi-structured interviews were conducted face-to-face with 10 purposefully selected teachers to collect the data from those who participated by filling out the questionnaires. The researcher analysed the data both quantitatively and qualitatively. The data was presented, analysed and discussed according to themes derived from the main research question and sub-questions. The quantitative data (closed-ended statements) was analysed statistically by means of the Statistical Package for Social Sciences (SPSS). In the case of the qualitative data (open-ended statements in questionnaires and interviews), similar responses were analysed in themes as per the research question and sub-questions for easy interpretation. Note-taking and tape-recording were done during the interview sessions. Qualitative data were transcribed, coded and analysed. The findings which emerged from the study indicated that intermediate-phase teachers experienced difficulties in implementing the NCS. These were attributed to, amongst others, a lack of resources such as learning material and infrastructure, redeployment of teachers, a high learner teacher ratio, inadequate in-service training and support from the DoE. These factors need to be addressed to enhance the implementation of the NCS and to avoid the repetition of those shortcomings in any future envisaged changes to the curriculum such as the implementation of CAPS.
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'n Fundamenteel-kritiese evaluering van voorstelle vir relevante skoolkurrikula in die R.S.AGeyer, J.M. 13 February 2014 (has links)
M.Ed. (Education Philosophy) / Please refer to full text to view abstract
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The place of African Renaissance in the South African educationXulu, Victor Sibusiso January 2004 (has links)
Submitted in accordance with the requirements
for the degree of .
DOCTOR of EDUCATION
in the Faculty of Education at the
University of Zululand, 2004. / This research focused on describing "The Place of African Renaissance in the South African Education".
The motivating factor is how African cultures can be restored through education. The research is intended to explore how the present education system can direct African education when faced with challenges that the African Renaissance would usher in. There is need to grapple with the problem of how the process of educational transformation as embodied in the current Philosophy of Education can transmit African values, cultures, norms and beliefs.
The relevant literature reviewed the African Renaissance idea and its conceptualization. It debated two perspectives surrounding it; philosophies underlying the African Renaissance; Afrocentricity and the notion of this ideal; the dichotomy between African Renaissance call and the present education system. African Renaissance and education were studied with particular reference to African centered Psychology, African Philosophy and African centered curriculum.
The qualitative ideographic research method was used in this research. Data was collected through interviews. Conversational analysis drew full
transcript and recorded conversations that were carried out. Qualitative research was relevant in that the phenomenon under study was "seen throush the eyes" of the African people, thereby rejectins the deleterious formulations of theories and concepts in advance. Throush qualitative research, the perceptions, the feelinss and the attitude of the African people about the place of African Renaissance in the South African education were critically analysed.
The findinss of the study significantly revealed that there is a place for African Renaissance in the South African education. The study further found that: African Renaissance could revive self-esteem amons Africans and renew African consciousness; African Renaissance was an ideal worth striving for; important education considerations should not ostracise African cultural backgrounds; the incorporation of African Renaissance at school level demands broad-minded educators with a particular character. The study furthermore revealed critical challenges facing the South African Education system, the African traditional culture of Ubuntu hold much promise and should receive significant consideration in education for the realisation of African Renaissance; there is an essential need for reconstruction of African consciousness among African learners; African educators are not better positioned to facilitate African Renaissance; and there is dire need for the reawakening of African languages.
The most significant aspects of the recommendations address the incorporation of African Renaissance in the South African education. Both the indigenous African education and Outcomes Based Education (OBE) Curriculum frameworks are recommended in good stead for incorporation. The implementation thereof demands unbiasness and apolitical objectives. There is demand for making the present curriculum relevant to the needs of the African people in South Africa. African education needs to be globally competitive, and emancipatory without losing the notion of African identity.
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The school as a curriculum management site in an era of curriculum changeKhumalo, Vusumuzi Praisegod 06 1900 (has links)
This study investigates the actions, roles and beliefs of curriculum leaders and managers as they work to secure improvements in curriculum delivery and in managing curriculum change, using the context of an academically successful rural secondary school as a case study. This study acknowledges that curriculum reforms are far from over in South African education scape and that these reforms are unlikely to neglect the school as a curriculum management site. The rationales of this study are threefold. First, in view of the challenges facing curriculum managers at school level, as well as the questionability of the school managements’ capacity to mediate the curriculum, there is a need for empirical investigation as to how successful rural schools manage the curriculum effectively. Secondly, to gain a greater understanding how school leaders might influence curriculum delivery through effective instructional leadership. Thirdly, given that South African principals have little experience of instructional leadership and managing, teaching and learning is one of the core modules in the new qualification for school principals, this study aims to contribute case study evidence in this field.
This study was conducted within two research paradigms. Firstly, this study assumes that in a school setting there are key participants who are informative about the research foci. These participants have something important to say about curriculum management processes, curriculum change and instructional leadership. This assumption is located within phenomenology. Secondly, symbolic interaction is another conceptual paradigm in that curriculum management is studied as a complex process requiring interaction among role players.
Findings indicated that the principal impacts positively on teaching and learning if he focuses on instructional leadership. Secondly, the effective use of regular meetings is essential in order to clarify the vision and build an organization and culture where teaching and learning flourish. Thirdly, curriculum managers are directly involved in curriculum management, albeit at different angles. Fourthly, the capacity of the School Management Team (SMT) needs to be strengthened through use of innovative practices and lastly, the principal needs to be a proactive leader who observes and takes ownership of curriculum changes. / Curriculum and Instructional Studies / M. Ed. (Curriculum Studies)
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Curriculum 2005: challenges facing teachers in historically disadvantaged schools in the Western CapeDe Waal, Trevor Garfield January 2004 (has links)
The quest for change in the new South Africa on political , economical and social frontiers were primarily directed at entrance into the global markets, establishing democracy and leveling the playing fields amongst South Africa&rsquo / s diverse population. Those previously disenfranchised on political, economical and social grounds waited in anticipation on the rewards for their participation in the struggle against the discriminative minority regime of the past. These rewards would be in the form of radical policy changes sometimes far removed from the realities of the ordinary citizen. These reforms especially those on the educational level would prove to be flawed with constraints not anticipated by these policy developers as well as the government of the day. The educational transformation process was thus deemed as significant in order to address equity and equality and in so doing also provide skilled citizens which are able to be globally competitive.<br />
<br />
These educational changes in terms of schools were externalised in the form of Curriculum 2005 and Outcomes-based Education. Curriculum 2005 was viewed as a planned framework (process) of curriculum innovation underpinned by factors such as redress, access, equity and development. Outcomes-based Education in turn was the approach focusing on what is learned and how learning is taken place. This study will focus on Curriculum 2005 and OBE as education transformation tools and to what extent grade 7 teachers as implementers and modifiers understand and practice C2005 and OBE in their respective classrooms. One of the biggest problems facing the educational transformation process is the fact that there exists a gap between theory (policy) and practice (implementation). This gap can be attributed to different factors present in the historical disadvantaged school context in South Africa.<br />
<br />
This study will follow a qualitative approach which is directed at an inquiry process of understanding based on a distinct methodological approach. Data- gathering tools such as direct observation, structured interviews and questionnaires will be used. The research was primarily conducted in historically disadvantaged schools in the Metropole-east circuit of the Western Cape Educational Department. The sample was made up of schools in Macassar, Firgrove, Somerset-West, Strand, Temperance Town and Sir Lowry&rsquo / s Pass.
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The extend and nature of curriculum change in the historically black technical colleges in the Limpopo ProvinceBopape, Matome Zacharia January 2003 (has links)
Thesis (M. Dev.) -- University of Limpopo, 2003 / Refer to the document
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Reconceptualising history teachers' identities within the context of changing curriculum.Seetal, Surendra Seepersad. January 2005 (has links)
Teachers are considered by most policymakers and school change experts to be the
centerpiece of educational change. Therefore, it is not surprising that many current
educational reform efforts in South Africa are directed at teachers and their involvement
in educational reform is seen as critical. Reforms must address the core processes of
teaching and learning if they are to markedly change what happens in schools. Yet
teachers respond to educational reforms in a variety of ways: some teachers push or
sustain reform efforts, whereas others resist or actively subvert them. The question of
addressing curriculum change in our schools has recently become a matter of contention.
Teachers are finding it difficult to adjust to the changing educational policies that seek to
coerce teachers into addressing curriculum change in their classrooms.
In response to the changes in educational policy in the new dispensation, the teaching of
history, a subject that had already experienced numerous transformations in the past, was
once again faced with the challenges of a renewed curriculum framework. This study
aims to capture the complexities and contradictions that are associated with a
transforming educational system. More specifically it interogates the question of how
history teachers see themselves within this transformation process and the impact that it
has on their identities to curriculum change.
Identity formation theories were used as a lens to understand the various forces that
influence the identities of teachers. A number of theories were examined in order to
unfold identity development from various approaches to allow for a more holistic
understanding of a teacher's life career. The main question that guided this investigation
was how history teachers construct their identities within the context of curriculum
change.
In attempting to unpack the messiness of the curriculum transformation process and at the
same time to capture how history teachers are negotiating their roles and identities in post -apartheid South Africa, this research study employed a qualitative method of data
collection based on a life history research tradition. The richness of information that was
obtained from lengthy, open-ended interviews with six history teachers from the
Kwasanti circuit, provided a sound platform on which to respond to the critical questions
of the study. The data was collated to develop narrative stories with the intention of
understanding teacher thinking and experiences within a broad social and historical
context. The wealth of information provided by the interviews enabled the researcher to
examine how these teachers were constructing their identities within the context of
curriculum change.
An analysis of the findings indicated that the conceptions that history teachers have about
the changing curriculum are influenced by their past experiences. The study revealed that
some of the major forces of influence that shaped the teachers' understanding of the
changing curriculum were pragmatic and educational. Teachers come with many realities
into the profession often reconstructing and creating their context based on past
experiences and perceptions. Evidence from the data reveals that the plethora of policy
initiatives seeking educational transformation in South Africa are to a large degree not
congruent with existing teachers' beliefs . Teachers have to redefine and renegotiate their
roles and identities, which is problematic because they come embedded with experiences
gleaned during the apartheid era.
The study concludes with a synthesis of the findings and it makes recommendations for
addressing the present needs of history teachers in South Africa. The reconceptualisation
of education through new policy initiatives has to refocus and look more closely at
teachers' understanding of their day-to-day realities in the work environment. Teachers
need to 'own' the process of change, and reform efforts need to be grounded in an
understanding of teachers' professional lives and development. Teachers must see
themselves as experts in the dynamics of change. To become experts in the dynamics of
change, teachers must become skilled change agents. / Theses (Ph.D.) - University of KwaZulu-Natal, Durban, 2005.
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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.
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A Bernsteinian description of the recontextualising process of the national curriculum statement from conceptualisation to realisation in the classroom.Davey, Brenda G. January 2006 (has links)
The aim of this study is to describe the recontextualisation of the official pedagogical
field, in the form of the National Curriculum Statement (NCS), in the Further Education
and Training (FET) band. The study's focus concentrates specifically on the in-service
training programme devised by the KZN FET Directorate for teachers of Grade 10's in
2005, beginning with the creation of the FET curriculum statements at national level and
tracking the dissemination of this information to provincial level, then through regional
and district level and into the schools.
The researcher was able to analyse the documents created at national level, observe
and/or interview role-players at each level of the continuum: national, provincial,
regional, district and school (including parents of school-going teenagers). This evidence,
supplemented with video-recordings and posters produced at five different venues was
selectively described using Berasteinian terminology and his theoretical framework of the
pedagogic device.
Research findings in answer to the questions posed, viz. to what extent the social
transformation process was understood by the role-players in the process (concentrating
on English Home and First Additional Language teachers), indicate that in some cases
the official pedagogical field is carried over with minimal change, and in others it is
evident that careful monitoring and retraining may be the only means to concretise the
intended change in thinking in the minds of South Africa's teachers. / Thesis (M.Ed.)-University of KwaZulu-Natal, Pietermaritzburg, 2006.
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