Teachers’ perceptions of reading instruction in selected primary schools in the Eastern Cape

Background: There is a general outcry that too many South African Foundation Phase (Grades 1–3) teachers do not know how to teach reading and are currently teaching reading in an ad hoc, unsystematic way. Objectives: In response to this, this study explored the Foundation Phase teachers’ perception...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Madoda Cekiso
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: AOSIS 2017-11-01
Series:Reading & Writing
Subjects:
Online Access:https://rw.org.za/index.php/rw/article/view/158
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spelling doaj-c808aa5e469b4dbe8565583ddc58b6352020-11-24T22:39:23ZengAOSISReading & Writing2079-82452308-14222017-11-0181e1e810.4102/rw.v8i1.15880Teachers’ perceptions of reading instruction in selected primary schools in the Eastern CapeMadoda Cekiso0Department of Applied Languages, Tshwane University of TechnologyBackground: There is a general outcry that too many South African Foundation Phase (Grades 1–3) teachers do not know how to teach reading and are currently teaching reading in an ad hoc, unsystematic way. Objectives: In response to this, this study explored the Foundation Phase teachers’ perceptions of their role in teaching reading. The focus was on the relevance of the initial training, awareness of reading strategies and how these strategies were reflected in their classroom practice. Method: The study was qualitative in nature and a case study design was followed. Semi-structured interviews were conducted with nine teachers who were purposively selected from three public schools. Content analysis was used to analyse the data. Results: Regarding the initial training programme, teachers received at tertiary institutions, the findings of the study showed that the majority of teachers were not adequately prepared to teach reading and to deal with learners who experience problems in reading. Some teachers indicated that they were not even trained to teach in the Foundation Phase. The findings also showed that the majority of respondents doubted if their classroom practice would yield positive results as far as reading instruction is concerned. The findings further indicated that the majority of respondents only paid attention to oral reading (observing punctuation marks and pronunciation), without attending to reading comprehension. There was a general consensus that the new ways of teaching reading were necessary in order to improve the reading ability of learners. Conclusion: Recommendations based on the findings are that institutions of higher learning that train Foundation Phase teachers should do so in ways that adequately equip them to produce student teachers who are knowledgeable about research and theory regarding how individuals learn to read. Workshops on appropriate instruction of reading strategies are recommended for in-service teachers.https://rw.org.za/index.php/rw/article/view/158Reading strategyAcademic achievementTeacher developmentStrategy instructionQuality teacherInteractional characteristics
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Madoda Cekiso
spellingShingle Madoda Cekiso
Teachers’ perceptions of reading instruction in selected primary schools in the Eastern Cape
Reading & Writing
Reading strategy
Academic achievement
Teacher development
Strategy instruction
Quality teacher
Interactional characteristics
author_facet Madoda Cekiso
author_sort Madoda Cekiso
title Teachers’ perceptions of reading instruction in selected primary schools in the Eastern Cape
title_short Teachers’ perceptions of reading instruction in selected primary schools in the Eastern Cape
title_full Teachers’ perceptions of reading instruction in selected primary schools in the Eastern Cape
title_fullStr Teachers’ perceptions of reading instruction in selected primary schools in the Eastern Cape
title_full_unstemmed Teachers’ perceptions of reading instruction in selected primary schools in the Eastern Cape
title_sort teachers’ perceptions of reading instruction in selected primary schools in the eastern cape
publisher AOSIS
series Reading & Writing
issn 2079-8245
2308-1422
publishDate 2017-11-01
description Background: There is a general outcry that too many South African Foundation Phase (Grades 1–3) teachers do not know how to teach reading and are currently teaching reading in an ad hoc, unsystematic way. Objectives: In response to this, this study explored the Foundation Phase teachers’ perceptions of their role in teaching reading. The focus was on the relevance of the initial training, awareness of reading strategies and how these strategies were reflected in their classroom practice. Method: The study was qualitative in nature and a case study design was followed. Semi-structured interviews were conducted with nine teachers who were purposively selected from three public schools. Content analysis was used to analyse the data. Results: Regarding the initial training programme, teachers received at tertiary institutions, the findings of the study showed that the majority of teachers were not adequately prepared to teach reading and to deal with learners who experience problems in reading. Some teachers indicated that they were not even trained to teach in the Foundation Phase. The findings also showed that the majority of respondents doubted if their classroom practice would yield positive results as far as reading instruction is concerned. The findings further indicated that the majority of respondents only paid attention to oral reading (observing punctuation marks and pronunciation), without attending to reading comprehension. There was a general consensus that the new ways of teaching reading were necessary in order to improve the reading ability of learners. Conclusion: Recommendations based on the findings are that institutions of higher learning that train Foundation Phase teachers should do so in ways that adequately equip them to produce student teachers who are knowledgeable about research and theory regarding how individuals learn to read. Workshops on appropriate instruction of reading strategies are recommended for in-service teachers.
topic Reading strategy
Academic achievement
Teacher development
Strategy instruction
Quality teacher
Interactional characteristics
url https://rw.org.za/index.php/rw/article/view/158
work_keys_str_mv AT madodacekiso teachersperceptionsofreadinginstructioninselectedprimaryschoolsintheeasterncape
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