Educators' understanding of their roles at a school of skills
Thesis (MEd (Specialised Education))--University of Stellenbosch, 2009. === The site for the study is a Western Cape school for industry that became a school of skills in 1999. According to the S.A. National Association for Specialised Education (SANASE) (2001:1), a school of skills, also referred t...
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Stellenbosch : University of Stellenbosch
2009
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ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-sun-oai-scholar.sun.ac.za-10019.1-20662016-01-29T04:02:57Z Educators' understanding of their roles at a school of skills Eksteen, Truter Daniels, D. University of Stellenbosch. Faculty of Education. Dept. of Educational Psychology. SANASE Dissertations -- Educational psychology Theses -- Educational psychology Teachers of children with disabilities -- Training of --South Africa -- Western Cape Trade schools Teacher-student relationships South African National Association for Specialized Education Thesis (MEd (Specialised Education))--University of Stellenbosch, 2009. The site for the study is a Western Cape school for industry that became a school of skills in 1999. According to the S.A. National Association for Specialised Education (SANASE) (2001:1), a school of skills, also referred to as a special school, caters for intellectually mildly disabled learners (IMD learners) who are characterised by their poor scholastic abilities in reading, writing and arithmetic skills, low self-esteem, poor self-concept, lack of motivation to study and their inability to cope with academically orientated work. These would be learners who were previously in mainstream schools but whose learning difficulties resulted in their being placed at special schools. These learners pose particular challenges to their school environments, and teachers who work with such special needs learners require specialised training to equip them for their tasks. Teachers at schools of skills, however, generally have no additional training. This study had as focus teachers' understanding of their roles at a school of skills. This study uses an ecosystemic approach within an interpretive research framework to obtain in-depth data on teachers' understanding of the learners' learning needs and the concomitant challenges to classroom learning and their teaching. It also explored teachers' interpretations of their professional positioning amidst the demands posed by an outcomes-based curriculum. The study found that, despite ongoing in-service training initiatives, teachers insist that they need learner-specific guidance as they were incapable of providing suitable learning to their learners. They believe that their learners will need life-long learning support. Such beliefs create barriers to successful learning and can also marginalize learners, preventing them from being part of the mainstream of community life. The study found that the successful implementation of inclusive classroom learning is left largely to teachers' personal initiative. Although some teachers achieved positive results, the majority of teachers at the site failed to provide successful learning. It seems that learning success at schools of skill is dependent on positive teacher expectations of learners learning. 2009-02-13T09:00:05Z 2010-06-01T08:39:51Z 2009-02-13T09:00:05Z 2010-06-01T08:39:51Z 2009-03 Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/10019.1/2066 en University of Stellenbosch Stellenbosch : University of Stellenbosch |
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en |
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SANASE Dissertations -- Educational psychology Theses -- Educational psychology Teachers of children with disabilities -- Training of --South Africa -- Western Cape Trade schools Teacher-student relationships South African National Association for Specialized Education |
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SANASE Dissertations -- Educational psychology Theses -- Educational psychology Teachers of children with disabilities -- Training of --South Africa -- Western Cape Trade schools Teacher-student relationships South African National Association for Specialized Education Eksteen, Truter Educators' understanding of their roles at a school of skills |
description |
Thesis (MEd (Specialised Education))--University of Stellenbosch, 2009. === The site for the study is a Western Cape school for industry that became a school of skills in 1999. According to the S.A. National Association for Specialised Education (SANASE) (2001:1), a school of skills, also referred to as a special school, caters for intellectually mildly disabled learners (IMD learners) who are characterised by their poor scholastic abilities in reading, writing and arithmetic skills, low self-esteem, poor self-concept, lack of motivation to study and their inability to cope with academically orientated work. These would be learners who were previously in mainstream schools but whose learning difficulties resulted in their being placed at special schools.
These learners pose particular challenges to their school environments, and teachers who work with such special needs learners require specialised training to equip them for their tasks. Teachers at schools of skills, however, generally have no additional training. This study had as focus teachers' understanding of their roles at a school of skills. This study uses an ecosystemic approach within an interpretive research framework to obtain in-depth data on teachers' understanding of the learners' learning needs and the concomitant challenges to classroom learning and their teaching. It also explored teachers' interpretations of their professional positioning amidst the demands posed by an outcomes-based curriculum.
The study found that, despite ongoing in-service training initiatives, teachers insist that they need learner-specific guidance as they were incapable of providing suitable learning to their learners. They believe that their learners will need life-long learning support. Such beliefs create barriers to successful learning and can also marginalize learners, preventing them from being part of the mainstream of community life. The study found that the successful implementation of inclusive classroom learning is left largely to teachers' personal initiative. Although some teachers achieved positive results, the majority of teachers at the site failed to provide successful learning. It seems that learning success at schools of skill is dependent on positive teacher expectations of learners learning. |
author2 |
Daniels, D. |
author_facet |
Daniels, D. Eksteen, Truter |
author |
Eksteen, Truter |
author_sort |
Eksteen, Truter |
title |
Educators' understanding of their roles at a school of skills |
title_short |
Educators' understanding of their roles at a school of skills |
title_full |
Educators' understanding of their roles at a school of skills |
title_fullStr |
Educators' understanding of their roles at a school of skills |
title_full_unstemmed |
Educators' understanding of their roles at a school of skills |
title_sort |
educators' understanding of their roles at a school of skills |
publisher |
Stellenbosch : University of Stellenbosch |
publishDate |
2009 |
url |
http://hdl.handle.net/10019.1/2066 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT eksteentruter educatorsunderstandingoftheirrolesataschoolofskills |
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1718163845050007552 |