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Towards the development of an environmental curriculum for members of the planning professionsLong, Stanford Staples January 1994 (has links)
In exercising their professional duties professional planners inevitably impact on the environment. In the past, more often than not, this impact has been allowed to occur without sufficient forethought, and usually to the detriment of the environment. In this research it is proposed that this undesirable state of affairs arises from inadequacies within the professional education of the planners, and that greater emphasis on the environmental education of planners is called for. From the perspective of a participative approach to curriculum development, the opinions of professional planners in the Port Elizabeth area were canvassed to establish baseline data in respect of their environmental education needs. To provide further information and a background against which the perceptions of the professional planners could be assessed, the opinions of the learned societies of the planning professions and of key environmentalists were also sought. In all these opinion surveys postal questionnaires formed the basis of the methodology employed. The extent of environmental education presently available to professional planners at tertiary institutions in South Africa and overseas, with particular emphasis on that available in the civil engineering discipline, was also investigated. The surveys revealed a strongly felt need for environmental education within the planning professions. The natural environment, the social environment, environmental ethics and interdisciplinary action all emerged as acceptable themes of the said education. A number of environmental topics to be covered were also identified. Block-release and part-time courses emerged as the most popular format for such environmental education offerings. The limited environmental education practice within the civil engineering discipline at South African tertiary institutions was noted, and the overseas practice in this regard provided useful insights. The data gathered as outlined above, formed the basis from which proposals towards an environmental curriculum for professional planners were made. Although these proposals focused primarily on the civil engineering discipline within the ambit of technikon-based educational programmes, wider multi-disciplinary applications remained an important concern. In the first instance, proposals aimed at expanding the environmental component of the existing first-qualification course were suggested. Secondly, proposals in respect of a post-first qualification, interdisciplinary, environmental study programme leading to a technikon degree were formulated.
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'n Funksionele kurrikulumevalueringsmodelReyneke, Ezena 11 June 2014 (has links)
M.Ed. (Curriculum Science) / Please refer to full text to view abstract
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Curriculation as a component of a teacher training programmeFern, Leslie 21 July 2014 (has links)
M.Ed. (Curriculum Studies) / Please refer to full text to view abstract
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The influence of culture on curriculum practice in Black schoolsKutoane, Khitsane Ishmael 24 August 2015 (has links)
M.Ed. / Please refer to full text to view abstract
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A study of the criteria teachers use when selecting learning materialKoch, Lynn January 2004 (has links)
This study investigates the criteria teachers use when selecting and evaluating learning support material, in particular, English second language textbooks. The study seeks to determine what informs the criteria that teachers use for selection. The study is conducted against the backdrop of Curriculum 2005 (C2005) and outlines the C2005 revision process and the subsequent introduction of the Revised National Curriculum Statement (RNCS). Through a series of focus group interviews, the researcher explores the criteria teachers use for evaluation. Many of the teachers in this study did not have clearly articulated criteria; rather, they drew on implicit criteria and mentioned favoured qualities or attributes that they looked for in a textbook. In addition, the teachers in the focus groups used criteria that had been ‘told’ rather than ‘owned’ and had not developed their own sets of criteria. This research concludes that teachers are caught between two conflicting sets of criteria: those of their pre-service training and those of the new curriculum, which is currently being mediated to them through brief orientations. Drawing on recent literature, the researcher argues that in order to shift deep-seated literacy practices, teacher training needs to be prolonged, in-depth and ongoing.
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Biology and its recontextualisation in the school curriculum : a comparative analysis of post-apartheid South African life sciences curricula.Johnson, Kathryn Barbara. January 2009 (has links)
This study explored the way biological knowledge is transformed when it
moves from its disciplinary form to a high school biology curriculum, and how
this occurred in successive versions of the life sciences curriculum
implemented in post-apartheid South Africa. Bernstein’s (1996, 1999)
conceptualisation of biology as an hierarchical knowledge structure, the
recontextualisation of knowledge, and the implications for social justice
formed the theoretical framework to the study, as did Aikenhead’s (2006)
distinction between traditional and humanistic approaches to science
education, and Schmidt, Wang and McKnight’s (2005) concept of curriculum
coherence. Firstly, I attempted to elicit core concepts and conceptual organisation in
biology from the writings of the distinguished biologist Ernst Mayr, two
foundational biology textbooks, and interviews with two professors of biology.
Seven concepts emerged: the cell, inheritance, evolution, interaction,
regulation, energy flow and diversity, which I arranged in a hierarchy
according to Mayr’s “three big questions”, “what?”, “how?” and “why?”. The
theory of evolution was highlighted as the key integrating principle of the
discipline. Secondly, I considered biology in the school curriculum by means of a
literature review and synthesis of the changing goals of a school science
education. Five broad categories of objectives were derived: knowledge,
skills, applications, attitudes and values , and science as a human enterprise.
Aikenhead’s (2006) terminology captured the shifts in emphases of these
objectives over time.Thirdly, I analysed the stated objectives and content specifications of the
three most recent versions of the South African life sciences curricula – the
Interim Core Syllabus (ICS), the National Curriculum Statement (NCS) and
the new NCS. The NCS represented a dramatic swing away from the
traditional approach of the ICS, while the new NCS reverts to a more
traditional approach, though with more humanistic content than in the ICS.
Both the ICS and t he NCS were found to be deficient in one of the three key
conceptual areas of biology. The conceptual progression of the material is
strongest in the new NCS, and weakest in the original NCS. The conclusion
was drawn that, of the different curricula, the new NCS has the greatest
potential to induct South African learners into the hierarchical structure of
biology, and represents a positive contribution to the goal of transforming
education in South Africa.
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Current difficulties experienced by grade 10 mathematics educators after the implementation of the new curriculum in grade 9.Malinga, Mxoleleni Alfred. January 2005 (has links)
The purpose of this study was to establish current difficulties experienced by grade 10 mathematics educators after the implementation of the new curriculum in grade 9 (Senior Phase). Qualitative approach, using questionnaires' as a research tool was employed. The study was conducted from twenty grade 10-mathematics educators in a variety of schools. The questions were based on the current difficulties that educators were experiencing in grade 10 after the new curriculum was implemented in grade 9 in 2002. The research study was undertaken in different schools with different backgrounds in one District; UMgungundlovu of the Kwazulu - Natal Department of Education. These educators were from schools with the following backgrounds: • Rural schools • Township schools • Former White schools • Former Indians/ Coloureds schools The findings of the study are presented and these are interpreted and discussed under two categories: these being the kinds of difficulties enunciated by grade 10 mathematics educators and the researcher's comments on the findings. The Key Findings of this research study are the following: Grade 10 Mathematics educators complained that they have problems in teaching mathematics in grade 10 learners because: • Methods used in grade 9 are totally different from those they are using in grade 10. • There is no linkage between grade 9 and grade 10-mathematics syllabus. • Educators' lack training and teaching in outcomes - based approaches. • The new curriculum does not prepare learners to do pure mathematics in grade 10. • Learners cannot even work independently, only rely on the constant guidance from the educators and other members of the group. • Learners find it difficult doing individual work and completing homework and other class work. • Many learners drop out in mathematics classes and others even become worst in mathematics. The examinations or assessment (eTAs) which is an exit point from grade 9 to grade 10 have no value for the type of mathematics that is done in grade 10. • Textbooks used in grade 9 have lots of activities and lots and lots of stories and less mathematics. • Textbooks used in grades 8 and 9 are of poor quality and exercises are of pathetic quality. • Educators in grade 10 have to teach grades 8 and 9 work because it was not taught. • No clear focus on content part in grade 9, which form the basics of grade 10 mathematics. • The new curriculum in grade 9 gives emphasis to very few topics. • The level of mathematics that learners are exposed to, in grade 9 is far lower than the one they encounter in grade 10. • No support from parents in terms of doing homework. Finally, the recommendations are made for addressing the difficulties that are experienced by these educators as well as suggestions for further study. / Thesis (M.Ed.)-University of Kwazulu-Natal, 2005.
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Curriculum recontextualisation : a case study of the South African high school history curriculum.Bertram, Carol Anne. January 2008 (has links)
This thesis aims to answer the question: How is history knowledge contextualised into
pedagogic communication? Empirically, it takes place at a specific point in the
curriculum change process in South Africa, namely the period when the new curriculum
for the Further Education and Training (FET) band was implemented in Grade 10
classrooms in 2006.
The study is theoretically informed by a sociological lens and is specifically informed by
the theories of Basil Bernstein, particularly his concepts of the pedagogic device,
pedagogic discourse, pedagogic practice and vertical and horizontal knowledge
structures. It is premised on the assumption that the official policy message changes and
recontextualises as it moves across the levels of the pedagogic device. It tracks the
recontextualisation of the history curriculum from the writers of the curriculum document
to the actual document itself, to the training of teachers and the writing of textbooks and
finally to three Grade 10 classrooms where the curriculum was implemented in 2006.
The empirical work takes the form of a case study of the FET history curriculum. Data
were collected from a range of different participants at different levels of the pedagogic
device. It was not possible to interrogate all the sets of data with the same level of detail.
As one moves up and down and pedagogic device, certain things come into focus, while
other things move out of focus. Data were collected through interviews with the writers
of the history curriculum, with publishers and writers of selected Grade 10 history
textbooks and through participant observation of a workshop held by the provincial
education department to induct teachers in the requirements of the new FET history
curriculum. Data were collected in the Grade 10 history classrooms of three secondary
schools in 2005 and 2006. The school fieldwork comprised video recording five
consecutive lessons (ten lessons over two years) in each of the three Grade 10
classrooms, interviewing the history teachers and selected learners, collecting the test
papers and assignment tasks and assessment portfolios from selected learners. The study uses the pedagogic device as both a theoretical tool, and a literary device for
the organization of the thesis. Within the field of production, the study examines what is
the discipline of history from the perspective of historians and of the sociologists of
knowledge. History is a horizontal knowledge structure that finds its specialisation in its
procedures. However, an historical gaze demands both a substantive knowledge base and
the specialised procedures of the discipline.
Within the Official Recontextualising Field, the study examines the history curriculum
document and the writing of this document. The NCS presents knowledge in a more
integrated way. The knowledge is structured using key historical themes such as power
alignments, human rights, issues of civil society and globalisation. There is a move away
from a Eurocentric position to a focus on Africa in the world. Pedagogically, the focus is
on learning doing history, through engaging with sources.
Within the Pedagogic Recontextualising Field, the major focus of the teacher training
workshop was on working with the outcomes and assessment standards within the
‘history-as-enquiry’ framework. Textbook writers and publishers work closely with the
DoE Guidelines and focus on covering the correct content and the learning outcomes and
assessment standards. The three teachers within the field of reproduction taught and
interpreted the curriculum in different ways, but the nature of the testing (focused
primarily on sources) was similar as there are strong DoE guidelines in this regard.
For Bernstein, evaluation condenses the meaning of the whole pedagogic device. This is
even more so when the curriculum is outcomes-based. The assessment tasks that Grade
10 learners in this study were required to do had the appearance of being source-based,
but they seldom required learners to think like historians, nor did they require them to
have a substantial and a coherent knowledge base. The FET history curriculum is in
danger of losing its substantive knowledge dimension as the procedural dimension,
buoyed up by the overwhelming logic of outcomes-based education and the strongly
externally framed Departmental assessment regulations, becomes paramount. / Thesis (Ph.D.)-University of KwaZulu-Natal, Pietermaritzburg, 2008.
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Responses of science teacher educators to the curriculum change process in South Africa.Pillay, Alan Sathiaseelan. January 2006 (has links)
This study strove to establish how science teacher educators (lecturers) at three universities in a province in South Africa responded to curriculum changes related to C2005 and higher education. The following critical question is posed: How have science teacher educators in PRESET education responded to curriculum changes proposed for the Natural Sciences Learning Area of Curriculum 2005, the Norms and Standards of Educators, and modularization in the Higher Education curriculum? The framing of the study from 1996 to 2002 relates to the introduction of C2005 in schools in 1997 which coincided with curriculum changes in higher education prescribed by the NQF. The curriculum change process has to be seen in the context of developments during and after the demise of apartheid in South Africa. Responses of science teacher educators to post-apartheid educational policy developments driven by the NQF form the basis of this research. The production of data for the study occurred during 2001 and 2002. It involved an interpretive cross-case study of 11 science teacher educators' responses to the curriculum change process. The science teacher educators were selected from three universities in a province in South Africa. They had to be involved with preparation of student science teachers during PRESET for the Natural Sciences Learning Area of C2005. Data was obtained through a semi-structured interview schedule and an observation schedule. A document analysis was also conducted in the study. Qualitative data were first analysed qualitatively and represented at three leve ls of analysis. Stories of curriculum change experienced by three individuals were also presented as a second level of analysis. The theoretical frame that informed the methodology and analysis was developed in the context of a pre- and post-apartheid educational offering in South Africa. It operates in an interpretive and critical paradigm of research that includes change theories and other theories that can be used to account for ways in which science teacher educators have changed in response to C2005 and the NQF. These theories work together. Among them are those classified as Traditional Change, Adaptive Change and Advanced Change. Other theories such as theories in action and a theory of academic change were also used as a means to understand change in academic and other settings. Constructivism as a learning theory was included in the theoretical frame since science teacher educators are expected to use the theory as a rationale for the new curriculum. It is therefore an essential component of the theoretical frame in interpreting such change. Also significant is the role of situated cognition in enabling professional learn ing communities to make meaning of curriculum change and to act accordingly. Argyris' theory of organizational learning, the Concerns-Based Adoption Model, Complexity Theory and Systemic Reform also contribute to the development of the theoretical frame used to contextualize and interpret the data. The data analysis showed that the science teacher educators had made a more concerted effort to incorporated changes related to C200S into their curriculum materials and their actual teaching than the NQF's bureaucratic exercise related to modularization and the NSE. They were better able to account for their actions in terms of C200S than for modularization. This had occurred despite them not being bureaucratically accountable to the schools. The role of the new school curriculum as a major influence on change among the science teacher educators goes beyond the complexity associated with the change process. The influence of personal factors related to a moral response to school change (C2005) resulted in the science teacher educators making changes that were major and vastly different from their responses to the NQF's bureaucratically driven higher education changes. The responses of the science teacher educators to curriculum change shows that professional accountability does not flourish under bureaucratic control as displayed by demands of the NQF for modularization. The changes made by the science teacher educators was also vastly different from the responses of practising teachers to C200S. They made a concerted effort to change and there was no evidence of implementation failure compared to the practising teachers in terms of C2005. My research outcomes, therefore, have contradicted the standard findings of School Improvement research which alludes to the difficulties associated with teacher change, and the needs for long term systemic approaches related to large scale reform - where institutional management, external support, internal support, rewards and punishments work together. In the three universities in my study, such arrangements were loose couplings at best. But feelings of professional and moral responsibility in the direction of school-related change (C200S) were high for individuals and groups. Personal, social and professional interests were more obvious drivers of change than institutional interests and career interests. On the basis of the above, my research has suggested the following which serve as a positive contribution to theory pertaining to curriculum change: Much change theory developed in the context of schools does not apply to Teacher Education, because professionalism and education are primary concerns for science teacher educators: they chose to do their job well. Accountability is not only - or even mainly - about the institution and institutional monitoring systems. It is about professionalism and relationships within institutions and outside them. In this case, the responsibility the science teacher educators felt to schools, science teachers and their communities were much more powerful influences than responsibilities they felt to the reforms indicated in modularization and NSE. The professional imperative is not bureaucratically controlled. It flourishes in the absence of pressures related to forced compliance. / Thesis (Ph.D.)-University of KwaZulu-Natal, 2006.
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From OBE to CAPS : educators' experiences of the new life skills curriculum in the foundation phase.Krishna, Afsana Rabi. January 2014 (has links)
South Africa has undergone many changes in the past decade in terms of political, economic and educational transformations. The year 1994 was the turning point in which our education system underwent a major paradigm shift. The sands have been shifting in education ever since, beginning with the National Curriculum Statement, then the introduction of OBE and Curriculum 2005 and the most recent, CAPS. The question that intrigued me about curriculum change was how educators experienced these changes. This study therefore explored how educators experienced curriculum change in South Africa, particularly how they experienced the new Life Skills curriculum in the Foundation Phase.
The following research questions were addressed in this study:
1) What are grade one educators’ experiences of the new CAPS Life Skills curriculum?
2) Why do educators experience the new curriculum the way they do?
A qualitative research approach was used, making use of a case study design. Participants were purposely selected using non-probability sampling. Semi-structured interviews and diaries were used as data collection methods.
The data from this study revealed that educators experienced challenges in terms of the content, planning and preparation, assessment and dealing with contextual factors in the classroom. It was also found that educators experienced a lack of training and support in implementing the new Life Skills curriculum. A positive experience was that educators enjoyed teaching Life Skills. It was also found that educators welcomed and embraced curriculum change. / M. Ed. University of KwaZulu-Natal, Durban 2013.
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