- Title
- The effect of academic staff development on lecturer teaching practices at a historically disadvantaged institution: lecturer’ perspectives
- Creator
- Baleni, Zwelijongile Gaylard
- Subject
- Universities and colleges -- Professional staff
- Date Issued
- 2021-00
- Date
- 2021-00
- Type
- Doctoral theses
- Type
- text
- Identifier
- http://hdl.handle.net/11260/8021
- Identifier
- vital:59331
- Description
- This study aimed to determine the lecturers’ perspective on the role of Academic Staff Development (ASD) in enhancing and upskilling lecturers' teaching practices and strategies to improve student learning. The study was undertaken at a comprehensive HE Institution in the Eastern Cape province of South Africa. This study was based on the critical theory which advances change, transformation, emancipation, contradiction, alienation and domination, tenets that academic staff development also advocates. Academic development is supported by principles upheld by critical theory, for example, empowerment, transformation and democracy. For this study, the population comprised those lecturers who attended academic staff development workshops as from 2015 to 2017 at the HDI. In line with the Quanti-Quali mixed explanatory sequential approach, I collected quantitative data from academics using questionnaires; followed by interviews to collect qualitative data. The results showed that the majority appreciated academic staff development as a career changing experience as it capacitated them to teach, grounding them in pedagogical content knowledge in addition to their discipline specialisations. Some constraining conditions to the uptake of ASD at the HDI emerged from the study. Due to the privileging of research over teaching, ASD was seen as a waste of their research time. Institutional environment constraints such as huge workloads, constraining departmental cultures; poor timing of ASD workshops, poor institutional communication about ASD activities and lack of monitoring of implementing those skills, were classified as hindrances. Finally, it is clear that lecturers are made, not born. Recommendations are that it must be compulsory for all academics to attend ASD workshops at least bi-annually. ASDs should be planned and conducted in three phases, namely, pre-workshop, workshop and post-workshop phases.
- Description
- Thesis (Doctoral) -- Faculty of Education Sciences, 2021
- Format
- computer
- Format
- online resource
- Format
- application/pdf
- Format
- 1 online resource (227 pages)
- Format
- Publisher
- Walter Sisulu University
- Publisher
- Faculty of Education Sciences
- Language
- English
- Rights
- Faculty of Education Sciences
- Rights
- All Rights Reserved
- Rights
- Open Access
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Thumbnail | File | Description | Size | Format | |||
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View Details Download | SOURCE1 | DEd THESIS Dr ZWELIJONGILE BALENI.pdf | 2 MB | Adobe Acrobat PDF | View Details Download |