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Principals' perceptions of their instructional leadership role in the improvement of numeracy and literacy in primary schoolsKgatla, Matome Edward January 2014 (has links)
The aim of this research was to explore the principals’ perceptions of their instructional
leadership role in the improvement of literacy and numeracy in the Foundation Phase.
This study was guided by a desire to find out and understand what principals perceive as
their instructional leadership role in the improvement of literacy and numeracy. Although
instructional leadership has been studied intensively, these studies have not explicitly
considered principals’ perceptions of this concept. Most of the research has tended to
explain this phenomenon from other stakeholders’ point of view. There has been very
little research that has sought to understand how and in what ways principals view their
instructional leadership role. As a domain of school leadership, instructional leadership is
viewed by many as the primary role of principals which is meant to ensure effective and
efficient teaching and learning.
The deteriorating level of learner performance in both national and international tests has
prompted the South African ministry of education to redirect efforts and seriously
consider the importance of basic numeracy and literacy skills. The Department of Basic
Education introduced programmes, namely the Foundations For Learning Campaign, the
Annual National Assessment and Action Plan to 2014 to address the problems of
learners’ inability to read, make basic calculations and write. This study is, thus,
premised on the assumption that literacy and numeracy are prerequisites for learners’
future learning.
To best understand instructional leadership, six primary school principals were
purposefully sampled according to their schools’ performance in the 2012 Annual
National Assessment results. They were sampled as “good”, “average”, and “poor”
performing schools. All these participants shared the same socio-economic background and were situated in the deep rural villages of Limpopo Province. Semi-structured
interviews were used as a data collecting technique for the study. / Dissertation (MEd)--University of Pretoria, 2014. / gm2014 / Education Management and Policy Studies / unrestricted
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Výuka řecko-latinské lékařské terminologie ve studijních programech všeobecného lékařství na lékařských fakultách v České republice a ve světě / Greek and Latin medical terminology instruction in programmes of general medicine at medical schools in the Czech Republic and abroad.Beran, Aleš January 2013 (has links)
TITLE: Greek and Latin medical terminology instruction in programmes of general medicine at medical schools in the Czech Republic and abroad. AUTHOR: Aleš Beran DEPARTMENT: Department of Education SUPERVISOR: doc. PhDr. Miroslava Váňová, CSc. ABSTRACT: The thesis seeks to provide a systematic description of the Greek and Latin medical terminology instruction at Czech and foreign medical schools. Its main objective is to build a platform for implementations of instructional innovations. In the first part of the thesis the medical terminology instruction in the Czech Republic is contextualized by giving a historical overview of development of medical terminology and dealing with origins of its instruction at the Faculty of General Medicine in Prague. The view of a present state of the instruction is completed by a profile of a typical medical student, which is based on the questionnaire. The next part of the thesis consists of detailed content analyses of selected Czech and foreign textbooks and their comparison. Based upon these analyses, an original typology of instructional models is set up which can be considered to be the most important theoretical outcome of the thesis. The typology is subsequently used as a tool for description of teaching medical terminology in Austria, Germany, United States, Canada,...
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The relative impact of an argumentation-based instructional intervention programme on Grade 10 learners' conceptions of lightning and thunderMoyo, Partson Virira January 2012 (has links)
<p><span style="font-size:12.0pt / line-height:150% / font-family:
" / Times New Roman" / ," / serif" / mso-bidi-font-family:" / Times New Roman" / mso-bidi-theme-font:
minor-bidi / mso-bidi-font-weight:bold">The basic premise of this study was that when a learner is confronted with two contradictory explanations of the same phenomenon, there is cognitive dissonance in the learner as the learner tries to determine which of the two explanations is correct. An argumentation-based instructional intervention programme (ABIIP) was created for and used on and by the Grade 10 learners in order to attempt to ameliorate this cognitive conflict. </span><span style="font-size:12.0pt / line-height:150% / font-family:
" / Times New Roman" / ," / serif" / mso-bidi-font-family:" / Times New Roman" / mso-bidi-theme-font:
minor-bidi">The purpose of this study was to determine the relative impact of that intervention programme on Grade 10 learners&rsquo / conceptions of lightning and thunder. The programme was designed to help learners to develop argumentative skills and use the acquired skills to negotiate and harmonise divergent and conflicting explanations of the nature of lightning and thunder that are propounded by different worldviews (Science and indigenous knowledge).</span><span style="font-size:12.0pt / line-height:150% / font-family:
" / Times New Roman" / ," / serif" / mso-bidi-font-family:" / Times New Roman" / mso-bidi-theme-font:
minor-bidi">The research design was primarily a case study of 16 Grade 10 learners of the Xhosa ethnic group at a high school in the Eastern Cape Province of South Africa. The Xhosa people are a typical example of a people whose cultural values were undermined and whose voice was silenced by the colonisers and whose local knowledge has been repressed and replaced by forms of Western privileged knowledge and understandings but who remain, deeply and resolutely, steeped in their cultural values and practices, making them a classic example of a people who would battle to harmonise the indigenous and the scientific explanations of natural phenomena. The research instruments used were questionnaires which were administered to learners, educators, community leaders, indigenous knowledge holders and experts to solicit information on causes, dangers and prevention of lightning / individual and group activities as learners went through the lessons on both argumentation and on lightning / follow up interviews and discussions with learners individually or in groups to seek further clarification of the ideas the learners would have raised in their earlier responses to questionnaires or group discussions / guided and reflective essays by the learners to determine the learners&rsquo / levels of understanding of the major tenets of the two thought systems and the relationship between the two worldviews and to determine the qualitative gain, if any, that the learners got from the intervention programme / observation schedules used by the researcher during participant observation of group discussions and during the lessons on lightning / an achievement test on lightning / field notes used by the researcher for memoing observations and reflections as the research process proceeded / informal and serendipitous sources of information. <span style="font-size:12.0pt / line-height:150% / font-family:
" / Times New Roman" / ," / serif" / mso-bidi-font-family:" / Times New Roman" / mso-bidi-theme-font:
minor-bidi">The collected data were analysed, mostly, qualitatively. Frequencies, percentages and t-test values were used to express and analyse quantitative data. Aspects of several analytical frameworks that included Toulmin&rsquo / s Argumentation Pattern (TAP) [and its modified versions such as that of Leitao (2000) and that of Osborne et al (2004)] and Contiguity Argumentation Theory (CAT) were used to attach meaning to the collected data and to address the research questions.</span></span></p>
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The relative impact of an argumentation-based instructional intervention programme on Grade 10 learners' conceptions of lightning and thunderMoyo, Partson Virira January 2012 (has links)
<p><span style="font-size:12.0pt / line-height:150% / font-family:
" / Times New Roman" / ," / serif" / mso-bidi-font-family:" / Times New Roman" / mso-bidi-theme-font:
minor-bidi / mso-bidi-font-weight:bold">The basic premise of this study was that when a learner is confronted with two contradictory explanations of the same phenomenon, there is cognitive dissonance in the learner as the learner tries to determine which of the two explanations is correct. An argumentation-based instructional intervention programme (ABIIP) was created for and used on and by the Grade 10 learners in order to attempt to ameliorate this cognitive conflict. </span><span style="font-size:12.0pt / line-height:150% / font-family:
" / Times New Roman" / ," / serif" / mso-bidi-font-family:" / Times New Roman" / mso-bidi-theme-font:
minor-bidi">The purpose of this study was to determine the relative impact of that intervention programme on Grade 10 learners&rsquo / conceptions of lightning and thunder. The programme was designed to help learners to develop argumentative skills and use the acquired skills to negotiate and harmonise divergent and conflicting explanations of the nature of lightning and thunder that are propounded by different worldviews (Science and indigenous knowledge).</span><span style="font-size:12.0pt / line-height:150% / font-family:
" / Times New Roman" / ," / serif" / mso-bidi-font-family:" / Times New Roman" / mso-bidi-theme-font:
minor-bidi">The research design was primarily a case study of 16 Grade 10 learners of the Xhosa ethnic group at a high school in the Eastern Cape Province of South Africa. The Xhosa people are a typical example of a people whose cultural values were undermined and whose voice was silenced by the colonisers and whose local knowledge has been repressed and replaced by forms of Western privileged knowledge and understandings but who remain, deeply and resolutely, steeped in their cultural values and practices, making them a classic example of a people who would battle to harmonise the indigenous and the scientific explanations of natural phenomena. The research instruments used were questionnaires which were administered to learners, educators, community leaders, indigenous knowledge holders and experts to solicit information on causes, dangers and prevention of lightning / individual and group activities as learners went through the lessons on both argumentation and on lightning / follow up interviews and discussions with learners individually or in groups to seek further clarification of the ideas the learners would have raised in their earlier responses to questionnaires or group discussions / guided and reflective essays by the learners to determine the learners&rsquo / levels of understanding of the major tenets of the two thought systems and the relationship between the two worldviews and to determine the qualitative gain, if any, that the learners got from the intervention programme / observation schedules used by the researcher during participant observation of group discussions and during the lessons on lightning / an achievement test on lightning / field notes used by the researcher for memoing observations and reflections as the research process proceeded / informal and serendipitous sources of information. <span style="font-size:12.0pt / line-height:150% / font-family:
" / Times New Roman" / ," / serif" / mso-bidi-font-family:" / Times New Roman" / mso-bidi-theme-font:
minor-bidi">The collected data were analysed, mostly, qualitatively. Frequencies, percentages and t-test values were used to express and analyse quantitative data. Aspects of several analytical frameworks that included Toulmin&rsquo / s Argumentation Pattern (TAP) [and its modified versions such as that of Leitao (2000) and that of Osborne et al (2004)] and Contiguity Argumentation Theory (CAT) were used to attach meaning to the collected data and to address the research questions.</span></span></p>
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The relative impact of an argumentation-based instructional intervention programme on grade 10 learners’ conceptions of lightning and thunderMoyo, Partson Virira January 2012 (has links)
Philosophiae Doctor - PhD / The basic premise of this study was that when a learner is confronted with two contradictory explanations of the same phenomenon, there is cognitive dissonance in the learner as the learner tries to determine which of the two explanations is correct. An argumentation-based instructional intervention programme (ABIIP) was created for and used on and by the Grade 10 learners in order to attempt to ameliorate this cognitive conflict. The purpose of this study was to determine the relative impact of that intervention programme on Grade 10 learners’ conceptions of lightning and thunder. The programme was designed to help learners to develop argumentative skills and use the acquired skills to negotiate and harmonise divergent and conflicting explanations of the nature of lightning and thunder that are propounded by different worldviews (Science and indigenous knowledge).
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Managing an instructional programme for reading English as first additional language for grade 3 learners in Limpopo province / Managing an instructional programme for reading English as first additional language for grade three learners in Limpopo provinceMotona, Johannes 02 1900 (has links)
Literacy is a critical aspect of learning in the Foundation phase and forms an important
foundation for learners’ education. Studies, however, show that many learners in Grade 3
cannot read at the expected levels. This problem has generated increasing public demand for schools in South Africa in general and Limpopo Province, in particular, to produce learners who are able to read for pleasure, learning and enrichment. It is against this background that this study sought to examine the management of an instructional programme for reading English as First Additional Language in Grade 3. To achieve this aim, a qualitative research approach was followed to collect data through interviews, observations and document analysis. The results revealed weaknesses in the instructional leadership of School Management Teams, which the study attributes to a limited understanding of their roles in this area. The qualitative case study method was used for this study. The sample for this study comprised three principals, three Foundation Phase Heads of Department and three Grade 3
teachers drawn from three primary schools. Three qualitative data collection instruments,
namely, semi-structured interview schedule, classroom observation schedule and documents analysis were used to collect data. Data on the management of teaching and learning were collected during interviews from principals and HoDs. Data on how reading is taught and assessed were gathered through observation of teachers’ lesson presentations. Documents analysed were curriculum management files, monitoring tools, planning files, lesson plans, mark-schedules and learners’ workbooks. Thematic analysis was carried out to analyse data collected through the three instruments. This study found that School Management experience challenges in managing the teaching of English reading in schools. The study calls for continuous professional development for primary school principals and English teachers on the methodology of teaching English First
Additional Language as well as training of Curriculum Advisors. / Educational Management and Leadership / M. Ed. (Education Management)
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An investigation of the role of learners and teachers resource materials in determining a school performance and quality education : a case study of Isiphosemvelo Secondary SchoolManqele, Clement Mandlenkosi 11 1900 (has links)
The focus of the study was to investigate the role of Learning and Teaching Support Materials (LTSMs) in determining a school performance and quality education. For sampling purposes, a rural disadvantaged school was selected to reveal how such schools organise and implement their instructional programs devoid of LTSMs. A school library, school laboratory and computer technology were prioritised for their bearing on National Curriculum Statement (NCS) implementation. According to the study‘s findings, the prioritised LTSMs were found to be vital in modernising, appropriating and improving a school performance and the quality of education. The study argued that without relevant LTSMs, schools can neither hope nor manage to successfully implement outcomes based education. Hence, learners in those schools are still excluded from quality education. / Curriculum and Instructional Studies / M. Ed. (Curriculum Studies and Didactics)
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An investigation of the role of learners and teachers resource materials in determining a school performance and quality education : a case study of Isiphosemvelo Secondary SchoolManqele, Clement Mandlenkosi 11 1900 (has links)
The focus of the study was to investigate the role of Learning and Teaching Support Materials (LTSMs) in determining a school performance and quality education. For sampling purposes, a rural disadvantaged school was selected to reveal how such schools organise and implement their instructional programs devoid of LTSMs. A school library, school laboratory and computer technology were prioritised for their bearing on National Curriculum Statement (NCS) implementation. According to the study‘s findings, the prioritised LTSMs were found to be vital in modernising, appropriating and improving a school performance and the quality of education. The study argued that without relevant LTSMs, schools can neither hope nor manage to successfully implement outcomes based education. Hence, learners in those schools are still excluded from quality education. / Curriculum and Instructional Studies / M. Ed. (Curriculum Studies and Didactics)
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Managing an instructional programme for reading English as first additional language for grade 3 learners in Limpopo province / Managing an instructional programme for reading English as first additional language for grade three learners in Limpopo provinceMotona, Johannes 02 1900 (has links)
Literacy is a critical aspect of learning in the Foundation phase and forms an important
foundation for learners’ education. Studies, however, show that many learners in Grade 3
cannot read at the expected levels. This problem has generated increasing public demand for schools in South Africa in general and Limpopo Province, in particular, to produce learners who are able to read for pleasure, learning and enrichment. It is against this background that this study sought to examine the management of an instructional programme for reading English as First Additional Language in Grade 3. To achieve this aim, a qualitative research approach was followed to collect data through interviews, observations and document analysis. The results revealed weaknesses in the instructional leadership of School Management Teams, which the study attributes to a limited understanding of their roles in this area. The qualitative case study method was used for this study. The sample for this study comprised three principals, three Foundation Phase Heads of Department and three Grade 3
teachers drawn from three primary schools. Three qualitative data collection instruments,
namely, semi-structured interview schedule, classroom observation schedule and documents analysis were used to collect data. Data on the management of teaching and learning were collected during interviews from principals and HoDs. Data on how reading is taught and assessed were gathered through observation of teachers’ lesson presentations. Documents analysed were curriculum management files, monitoring tools, planning files, lesson plans, mark-schedules and learners’ workbooks. Thematic analysis was carried out to analyse data collected through the three instruments. This study found that School Management experience challenges in managing the teaching of English reading in schools. The study calls for continuous professional development for primary school principals and English teachers on the methodology of teaching English First
Additional Language as well as training of Curriculum Advisors. / Educational Leadership and Management / M. Ed. (Education Management)
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Investigating the participation of school management teams in managing the instructional programme : a case studyDu Plooy, Kevin James 06 1900 (has links)
Public concern about the quality of teaching and learning is at an all time high in respect of
certain schools in South Africa. This study focuses on the participation of the SMT
members in managing the instructional programme with a view on improving the academic
performance of learners. The lack of the involvement of all the members of the SMT thus
prompted this investigation.
Apart from the literature review, an empirical investigation, based on a qualitative
paradigm involving interviews, was undertaken to collect data at selected primary schools
in Circuit 1 in the Metropole North Education District of the Western Cape Education
Department. Other methods used included observations as well as the analyses of
documents relevant to the investigation.
As a case study this research examined the involvement of all the members of the SMT by
utilizing the principles of participative management. It is hoped that this study will
contribute to the improvement of the academic performance of schools by virtue of what
has been highlighted as a reason for the poor performance of schools namely the lack of
involvement of all the members of the SMT in the management of the instructional
programme.
The literature findings revealed that School Management Teams (SMTs) have to be
properly structured. The SMT should be involved in decision-making in matters that
concern them. This, together with a more effective and efficiently managed instructional
programme, should improve the academic performance of learners.
Empirical findings indicated that the members of the SMT consider themselves
professionally trained individuals with the expertise needed to deliver what is expected
from them. The study further revealed that the success of a school depends on effective
instruction as a result of the effective management and leading of the instructional
programme by all members of the SMT. / Education management / M.Ed. (Education Management)
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