Examination Mafiarisation, and the Ambivalence of Performativity in Zimbabwe: A Quest for Rebalancing Pedagogy

This theoretical paper taps into Ball’ view of the terrors of performativity in order to critique examination mafiarisation in Zimbabwe. Of late, the education system in this country has experienced a number of trajectories, characterised by examination leaks, cheating, and a decline in confidence i...

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Main Author: Bekithemba Dube
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Journal of Social Studies Education Research 2019-06-01
Series:Journal of Social Studies Education Research
Subjects:
Online Access:http://jsser.org/index.php/jsser/article/view/464
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spelling doaj-cdb03e7ed2764c2bb9b7e815bd7b75a42020-11-25T01:25:22ZengJournal of Social Studies Education Research Journal of Social Studies Education Research1309-91081309-91082019-06-011023145368Examination Mafiarisation, and the Ambivalence of Performativity in Zimbabwe: A Quest for Rebalancing PedagogyBekithemba Dube0University of the Free State, QwaQwa CampusThis theoretical paper taps into Ball’ view of the terrors of performativity in order to critique examination mafiarisation in Zimbabwe. Of late, the education system in this country has experienced a number of trajectories, characterised by examination leaks, cheating, and a decline in confidence in Zimbabwean education. I critique examination mafiarisation, using Ball’s perspective, and in so doing, I attempt to answer two questions: What are the causes of examination mafiarisation? What can be done to mitigate cheating in examinations? The argument of the paper is that the curriculum faces ambivalence, because of an overemphasis on performativity. Consequently, teachers, learners, and parents have resorted to immoral behaviour to ensure performativity is enacted. I also argue for a need to embrace a rebalancing of pedagogy, which is characterised by social justice education, promotion of morality, comprehensive education, and task-based assessment, to regain credibility for what was once perceived to be a thriving educational system.http://jsser.org/index.php/jsser/article/view/464mafiarisation and rebalancing pedagogy
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Bekithemba Dube
spellingShingle Bekithemba Dube
Examination Mafiarisation, and the Ambivalence of Performativity in Zimbabwe: A Quest for Rebalancing Pedagogy
Journal of Social Studies Education Research
mafiarisation and rebalancing pedagogy
author_facet Bekithemba Dube
author_sort Bekithemba Dube
title Examination Mafiarisation, and the Ambivalence of Performativity in Zimbabwe: A Quest for Rebalancing Pedagogy
title_short Examination Mafiarisation, and the Ambivalence of Performativity in Zimbabwe: A Quest for Rebalancing Pedagogy
title_full Examination Mafiarisation, and the Ambivalence of Performativity in Zimbabwe: A Quest for Rebalancing Pedagogy
title_fullStr Examination Mafiarisation, and the Ambivalence of Performativity in Zimbabwe: A Quest for Rebalancing Pedagogy
title_full_unstemmed Examination Mafiarisation, and the Ambivalence of Performativity in Zimbabwe: A Quest for Rebalancing Pedagogy
title_sort examination mafiarisation, and the ambivalence of performativity in zimbabwe: a quest for rebalancing pedagogy
publisher Journal of Social Studies Education Research
series Journal of Social Studies Education Research
issn 1309-9108
1309-9108
publishDate 2019-06-01
description This theoretical paper taps into Ball’ view of the terrors of performativity in order to critique examination mafiarisation in Zimbabwe. Of late, the education system in this country has experienced a number of trajectories, characterised by examination leaks, cheating, and a decline in confidence in Zimbabwean education. I critique examination mafiarisation, using Ball’s perspective, and in so doing, I attempt to answer two questions: What are the causes of examination mafiarisation? What can be done to mitigate cheating in examinations? The argument of the paper is that the curriculum faces ambivalence, because of an overemphasis on performativity. Consequently, teachers, learners, and parents have resorted to immoral behaviour to ensure performativity is enacted. I also argue for a need to embrace a rebalancing of pedagogy, which is characterised by social justice education, promotion of morality, comprehensive education, and task-based assessment, to regain credibility for what was once perceived to be a thriving educational system.
topic mafiarisation and rebalancing pedagogy
url http://jsser.org/index.php/jsser/article/view/464
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