The construction of the flexible generalist: a Foucaultian and Althusserian analysis of the basic education system of South Africa
- Authors: Du Plessis, Corne
- Date: 2014
- Subjects: Basic education -- Curricula -- South Africa , Education -- South Africa
- Language: English
- Type: Thesis , Masters , MPhil
- Identifier: vital:8427 , http://hdl.handle.net/10948/d1020047
- Description: The aim of this dissertation is to ‘problematize’ the ‘flexible generalist’ - the form of subjectivity allegedly produced by the basic education system of South Africa. According to the South African Qualifications Authority, ‘flexible generalists’ are individuals who possess the necessary skills, knowledge and flexibility to successfully participate in new working environments, thereby sustaining an adaptable workforce and contributing to the national economy. The dissertation will illustrate that this economic viability comes at the cost of critical and relative autonomous thinking, and is therefore not as ‘beneficent’ as the South African Qualifications Authority suggests. Initially, Louis Althusser’s theory regarding the repressive state apparatus and ideological state apparatuses will be employed in order to indicate how the education institution is underpinned by consumer-capitalist ideology. Subsequently, in order to ensure docility, efficiency and obedience within the workforce, the formal education system subjects the learner to various disciplinary discursive practices. By applying Michel Foucault’s theory regarding disciplinary power, this dissertation will illustrate that, through the regimentation of the subject’s time and space, docility is, for the most part, ensured. However, the flexible generalist is not solely produced through disciplinary power, but also through Foucault’s conception of bio-power, which is disseminated through the deployment of sexuality. Disciplinary power and bio-power are both appropriations of pastoral power, since the learner is led to believe that the well-being and care of the ‘self’ is always in the hands of another: specialists in numerous fields who ‘guide’ the individual regarding the ‘correct’ and ‘normal’ conduct in relation to the self and society, thereby stripping the subject of critical and relative autonomous thinking. The dissertation will conclude by suggesting a possible offset to the discursive practices that produce the flexible generalist in the form of ‘philosophy as a way of life’, or philosophia – the love of wisdom. Unlike the current educational discursive practices in South Africa that are underpinned by an ‘ethos of skills’ (resulting in mere economic empowerment), philosophia is based on an ‘ethos of wisdom’ - a comprehension of oneself, others and existence, based on the mastery of the self, and resulting in the ability to apply perceptions, judgements and actions on a contextual basis.
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- Date Issued: 2014
The assessment of the Skills Development Training Programmes on the performance of educators : the case study of two selected schools in King Williams Town
- Authors: Ncukana, Litha
- Date: 2013
- Subjects: Teachers -- Training of -- South Africa , Teachers -- Development -- South Africa -- Eastern Cape , Education -- South Africa
- Language: English
- Type: Thesis , Masters , MA
- Identifier: vital:8322 , http://hdl.handle.net/10948/d1020160
- Description: The primary objective of this study is to conduct an assessment of the effectiveness of skills development training programmes on the performance of educators, with specific reference to the case study of two selected schools in King Williams Town, Eastern Cape Province. This study is derived from the fact that in order for the government to provide efficient and effective service delivery to the population, the Public Service requires employees with requisite competency. There is a need for continuous improvement of capacity and skills development in the Public Service with the purpose of ensuring that employees who are recruited and retained in the Public Service have the requisite skills to perform their responsibilities. It is within such postulation that the main purpose of this study is to evaluate the effectiveness of skills development training programmes on the performance of Eastern Cape educators, so that improvement measures can be suggested. Two selected schools in King Williams Town district participated in the study and the detailed analysis of the findings imply that some of the on-the-job skills development training programmes that are used in the Eastern Cape Department of Education include coaching, counseling, job rotation, job enrichment, project work , mentoring, use of assistantship and committees or quality circles. Some interview participants construe that the strategies or measures that can be used to improve the implementation of skills development programmes for educators in the Eastern Cape Department of Education include commitment from school authorities, remunerate the learners, adopting support policies, possible promotion after training and investing more resources.
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- Date Issued: 2013
Narratives of curriculum adaptations: teacher challenges in the face of curriculum reform
- Authors: Harricharan, Romila
- Date: 2011
- Subjects: Curriculum change , Basic education , Education -- South Africa , Education -- Curricula , Education and state
- Language: English
- Type: Thesis , Masters , MEd
- Identifier: vital:9449 , http://hdl.handle.net/10948/d1008618 , Curriculum change , Basic education , Education -- South Africa , Education -- Curricula , Education and state
- Description: Prior to the landmark 1994 democratic elections the South African education system was unequal and departmentalised. The transformation in South African politics was reflected in the changes implemented in the education curriculum. A massive shift in the basic education process was put into operation, in an attempt to create an amalgamated system which would equally benefit all learners (Hackenberg, 2002:20). These curriculum alterations created a lot of dissatisfaction and a sense of frustration among the teaching fraternity (Maphalala, 2006:7 and Knight, 2005:27). The basis of this study focuses on my concern that teachers, already tense and overworked, face many challenges when curriculum modifications occur, and may find it extremely difficult to cope with them. The associated challenges may lead to excess stress, adversity and teachers becoming ill. For this research study I evaluated how teachers confront and cope with the challenges associated with changes to curriculum. The method and success of these coping skills and the management of curriculum revision is directly linked to certain issues, which may exacerbate problems stemming from these changes and have negative effects of on the teachers themselves. This study is a narrative of teachers’ experiences and was primarily conducted in the Umlazi Circuit of the KwaZulu Natal Department of Education. Purposive sampling was utilised by me, whereby the respondents, teachers who had over twenty years of teaching experience, were carefully selected from four primary schools and one secondary school. The study used the qualitative research approach within the interpretive paradigm, allowing for an in-depth insight into the challenges faced by teachers with changes to the curriculum. Data was collected through semi-structured interviews and observation. The data was later analysed using codes, themes and categories. This analysis revealed that curriculum changes cause teachers to experience many challenges in the classroom. These challenges include, amongst others, lack of resources; discipline problems; excessive workloads; overcrowded classrooms; and insufficient professional development workshops.
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- Date Issued: 2011
Exploring the use of interactive teaching and learning strategies in HIV and AIDS education
- Authors: May, Melissa
- Date: 2010
- Subjects: AIDS (Disease) -- South Africa -- Prevention , AIDS (Disease) -- Study and teaching -- South Africa , Education -- South Africa
- Language: English
- Type: Thesis , Masters , MEd
- Identifier: vital:9480 , http://hdl.handle.net/10948/1510 , AIDS (Disease) -- South Africa -- Prevention , AIDS (Disease) -- Study and teaching -- South Africa , Education -- South Africa
- Description: Schools play a major role in shaping the attitudes, opinions and behaviour of young people and so are ideal environments for teaching the social, as well as biological aspects of HIV and AIDS. However, literature indicates that learners are displaying “AIDS fatigue” and may be resistant to teaching around HIV and AIDS. In order to enhance learner engagement and learning, there is therefore a need for teachers to employ interactive teaching and learning strategies that are interactive, inexpensive and fun. This dissertation outlines the research design of an investigation into how such strategies can be used in HIV and AIDS prevention education. An action research design was made use of in this study and the manner in which several teachers presented HIV and AIDS education to his/her learners was initially observed. In addition, qualitative interviews were used to determine the teachers‟ need for development in this regard. Based on the findings of the problem identification step, teachers were introduced to active teaching and learning strategies and supported to implement them. Evaluation and refinement of the strategies, developmental workshops and training followed, which in turn lead to recommendations and the formulation of guidelines to influence teacher education with regard to HIV and AIDS prevention education.
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- Date Issued: 2010
Bantu education: the black teacher's lived experience of conflict
- Authors: Ramabulana, Ronald Thifulufhelwi
- Date: 1991
- Subjects: Conflict (Psychology) , Teachers, Black -- Psychology Case studies , Teachers, Black -- South Africa , Education -- South Africa
- Language: English
- Type: Thesis , Masters , MA
- Identifier: vital:3039 , http://hdl.handle.net/10962/d1002548 , Conflict (Psychology) , Teachers, Black -- Psychology Case studies , Teachers, Black -- South Africa , Education -- South Africa
- Description: This work is a descriptive phenomenological study of the experience of conflict that is lived by black teachers in the Bantu Education context. Subjects are teachers from the East Rand and Eastern Cape who have high school teaching experience that ranges from 1 to 15 years. The conflict researched was defined as those situations in which the teacher faced demands or expectations from different interest groups which were incompatible or negated each other. The Subjects of this research were six teachers who were interviewed for case material. The phenomenological case study design was used. Data collection consisted of in-depth interviews while analysis followed the phenomenological method developed at Duquesne University. This was an exploratory study which identified two major forms of conflict. The first exists between the teacher's expectation of teaching and the education authorities' expectation of how and what the teacher should teach in lessons. The second form of conflict identified is that in which the teacher's allegiance to one social group or ideology is violated by the teacher's participation in a system of education that negates his/her view about the South African sociopolitical situation. In the latter case the teacher is forced to comply with commitments or demands placed on him/her which negate each other. Van den Berg's theory of plural existence was used to inform data analysis and so was the theory of cognitive change and inconsistency.
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- Date Issued: 1991
The future of the past in South African schools : curriculum development, school leaving examinations and syllabus design and assessment in history : a comparative study
- Authors: Gunn, Alan Howard
- Date: 1990
- Subjects: Education -- South Africa , Education -- South Africa -- History , Education -- South Africa -- Forecasting
- Language: English
- Type: Thesis , Masters , MEd
- Identifier: vital:1375 , http://hdl.handle.net/10962/d1001441
- Description: This is a two-part study dealing with the curriculum, school leaving examinations and History as a school subject in England and South Africa. Part One is a developmental study. Developments in the curriculum of both countries since the Second World War are traced. In England this period is characterised by a shift from a somewhat laissez faire approach of the authorities at Whitehall to the curriculum of individual schools to the prescription that seems inherent in the National Curriculum. The outstanding development in South Africa during this period has been the introduction of a system of differentiated education. In contrast to minor developments in the South African school leaving examination system, England has witnessed the consolidation of the two-tier GCE and CSE system into a single examination at 16+, the GCSE. In discussing developments in History as a school subject, one is struck by the growth of the "new history" in England (this is described in some detail) against the relative lack of development (at "official" syllabus level) in South Africa where the subject remains rooted in the "traditional", chronological, content-based approach. Part Two of this study compares the current situation in England and South Africa at both the macro (ie. curriculum and school leaving examination systems) and micro (ie. History as a subject in the curriculum) levels. At the macro level the curriculum and school leaving examination systems in both England and South Africa are contrasted and one notes an increasing trend towards centralization in both countries. At the micro level use is made of "official" syllabuses and examination papers to contrast the "new history" approach in England with the "traditional" approach in South Africa. In the conclusion two broad possibilities for curriculum reform in South Africa are considered: Broad reform across the curriculum on the one hand and reforms in History on the other
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- Date Issued: 1990