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Perceptions of preservice primary student teachers of their preparatory program : the case of Botswana

This study investigated perceptions of preservice primary student teachers of their teacher
preparatory program. In particular, the study wanted to find out if the Philosophy of
Kagisano, which encompasses the five national principles of democracy, development,
self-reliance, unity, and botho, was integrated in the training of the preservice primary
student teachers. The study addressed the following three research questions:
1. How do preservice primary student teachers perceive their preparatory program,
including the integration of the national principles?
2. What pedagogical methods/teaching strategies and assessment techniques do
teacher educators in primary colleges use?
3. How do primary teacher educators integrate the national principles (philosophy
of Kagisano) throughout the program, including in their content, teaching
strategies and assessment techniques?
This qualitative case study used semi-structured, in-depth interviews with the
participants, document analysis and classroom observations for collecting the data.
Seventeen preservice student teachers at Fellow College of Education in Botswana were
interviewed individually. These were third and final year students with a specialty in
Social Studies. The interviews were recorded, transcribed and the grounded theory was
used to analyze the data. The findings indicated that preservice teachers were taught
“more” theory than application. The content that was taught at the College of Education
was a repetition of the junior and senior secondary school content. The study also found
that college lecturers do integrate the five national principles of democracy, development,
self-reliance, unity, and botho in their content, and teaching strategies but did not
integrate them in their assessment techniques. Furthermore, the study found that some
inconsistency in the grading of students’ work existed. / Access to thesis permanently restricted to Ball State community only / Department of Educational Studies

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:BSU/oai:cardinalscholar.bsu.edu:123456789/193388
Date January 2009
CreatorsMajor, Thenjiwe E.
ContributorsMulvihill, Thalia M.
Source SetsBall State University
Detected LanguageEnglish
Formatxiii, 203 p. : digital, PDF file, ill., col. map.
SourceCardinalScholar 1.0
Coveragef-bs---

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