An understanding of HIV and AIDS discourses of teachers in Cape Town, South Africa, and its' relevance for HIV prevention in schools

Philosophiae Doctor - PhD === This study investigates the content and nature of the HIV and AIDS "discourses" of teachers, which I have identified as a knowledge gap in the existing HIV and AIDS education literature that, presumably, is informing practice. The argument is that, without an...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Davids, Mogamat Noor
Other Authors: Lees, James
Language:en
Published: University of the Western Cape 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11394/1933
id ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-uwc-oai-etd.uwc.ac.za-11394-1933
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-uwc-oai-etd.uwc.ac.za-11394-19332017-08-02T04:00:15Z An understanding of HIV and AIDS discourses of teachers in Cape Town, South Africa, and its' relevance for HIV prevention in schools Davids, Mogamat Noor Lees, James Fataar, Aslam Meerkotter, Dirk Faculty of Education Discourse Discursive practices HIV Prevention Self-reflection Teachers South Africa Schools Foucault Policy Sexuality Philosophiae Doctor - PhD This study investigates the content and nature of the HIV and AIDS "discourses" of teachers, which I have identified as a knowledge gap in the existing HIV and AIDS education literature that, presumably, is informing practice. The argument is that, without an understanding of teachers' HIV and AIDS discourses, we will continue to speculate about why HIV education often does not have the effect we expect of it - reduced HIV infection, reduced risk behaviour, reduced teenage pregnancies - and why it has been regarded as a failure by many. The public media often expose rampant teenage sexual behaviour, such as abortions, pregnancies, and an addiction for electronically generated pornographic materials, causing consternation and sending shockwaves through schools and society. These reports attest to the kind of risky sexual behavior which makes children vulnerable to HIV infection. In spite of more than twenty years of HIV and AIDS education, teachers and society at large remain uncertain and uncomfortable about teenage sexual behavior, HIV infection and the inability of adults to protect young people from sexual exploitation. South Africa 2013-08-14T13:28:46Z 2011/06/22 07:04 2011/06/22 2013-08-14T13:28:46Z 2010 Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/11394/1933 en University of the Western Cape University of the Western Cape
collection NDLTD
language en
sources NDLTD
topic Discourse
Discursive practices
HIV Prevention
Self-reflection
Teachers
South Africa
Schools
Foucault
Policy
Sexuality
spellingShingle Discourse
Discursive practices
HIV Prevention
Self-reflection
Teachers
South Africa
Schools
Foucault
Policy
Sexuality
Davids, Mogamat Noor
An understanding of HIV and AIDS discourses of teachers in Cape Town, South Africa, and its' relevance for HIV prevention in schools
description Philosophiae Doctor - PhD === This study investigates the content and nature of the HIV and AIDS "discourses" of teachers, which I have identified as a knowledge gap in the existing HIV and AIDS education literature that, presumably, is informing practice. The argument is that, without an understanding of teachers' HIV and AIDS discourses, we will continue to speculate about why HIV education often does not have the effect we expect of it - reduced HIV infection, reduced risk behaviour, reduced teenage pregnancies - and why it has been regarded as a failure by many. The public media often expose rampant teenage sexual behaviour, such as abortions, pregnancies, and an addiction for electronically generated pornographic materials, causing consternation and sending shockwaves through schools and society. These reports attest to the kind of risky sexual behavior which makes children vulnerable to HIV infection. In spite of more than twenty years of HIV and AIDS education, teachers and society at large remain uncertain and uncomfortable about teenage sexual behavior, HIV infection and the inability of adults to protect young people from sexual exploitation. === South Africa
author2 Lees, James
author_facet Lees, James
Davids, Mogamat Noor
author Davids, Mogamat Noor
author_sort Davids, Mogamat Noor
title An understanding of HIV and AIDS discourses of teachers in Cape Town, South Africa, and its' relevance for HIV prevention in schools
title_short An understanding of HIV and AIDS discourses of teachers in Cape Town, South Africa, and its' relevance for HIV prevention in schools
title_full An understanding of HIV and AIDS discourses of teachers in Cape Town, South Africa, and its' relevance for HIV prevention in schools
title_fullStr An understanding of HIV and AIDS discourses of teachers in Cape Town, South Africa, and its' relevance for HIV prevention in schools
title_full_unstemmed An understanding of HIV and AIDS discourses of teachers in Cape Town, South Africa, and its' relevance for HIV prevention in schools
title_sort understanding of hiv and aids discourses of teachers in cape town, south africa, and its' relevance for hiv prevention in schools
publisher University of the Western Cape
publishDate 2013
url http://hdl.handle.net/11394/1933
work_keys_str_mv AT davidsmogamatnoor anunderstandingofhivandaidsdiscoursesofteachersincapetownsouthafricaanditsrelevanceforhivpreventioninschools
AT davidsmogamatnoor understandingofhivandaidsdiscoursesofteachersincapetownsouthafricaanditsrelevanceforhivpreventioninschools
_version_ 1718510193855168512