Teaching of writing in two rural multigrade classes in the Western Cape

The purpose of this research project was to understand how Cambourne’s theory of social constructivism, particularly his four instructional principles, was applied to the teaching of writing in two rural multigrade Foundation Phase classrooms in the Western Cape. Multigrade schools account for 30% o...

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Main Authors: Bernita Blease, Janet Condy
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: AOSIS 2015-09-01
Series:Reading & Writing
Online Access:https://rw.org.za/index.php/rw/article/view/58
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spelling doaj-d29e20e61cd94a4396f170c84ad641982020-11-24T20:59:00ZengAOSISReading & Writing2079-82452308-14222015-09-0161e1e910.4102/rw.v6i1.5848Teaching of writing in two rural multigrade classes in the Western CapeBernita Blease0Janet Condy1Faculty of Education and Social Sciences, Cape Peninsula University of Technology, South AfricaFaculty of Education and Social Sciences, Cape Peninsula University of TechnologyThe purpose of this research project was to understand how Cambourne’s theory of social constructivism, particularly his four instructional principles, was applied to the teaching of writing in two rural multigrade Foundation Phase classrooms in the Western Cape. Multigrade schools account for 30% of all primary schools in South Africa, but in most cases teachers are not able to provide quality education to learners. Writing in rural multigrade Foundation Phase schools is a largely neglected area for teacher development and research. Even those teaching multigrade classes are not sure how to approach it. The national curriculum, as well as our South African constitution, encourages teachers to inspire children with values based on respect, democracy, equality, human dignity and social justice. However, the two rural multigrade classes in this research project faced many challenges that hindered their ability to reach these goals. The main theoretical framework underpinning this study was based on Cambourne’s social constructivist theory, particularly his instructional principles including explicit, systematic, mindful and contextual teaching principles. This research was a qualitative study embedded within an interpretive case study. Two Foundation Phase teachers working in multigrade classrooms were purposively selected for this research. In conclusion, there is evidence that these two teachers used some of Cambourne’s instructional principles, in varying degrees, when teaching writing in their multigrade classes. [PDF to follow]https://rw.org.za/index.php/rw/article/view/58
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Bernita Blease
Janet Condy
spellingShingle Bernita Blease
Janet Condy
Teaching of writing in two rural multigrade classes in the Western Cape
Reading & Writing
author_facet Bernita Blease
Janet Condy
author_sort Bernita Blease
title Teaching of writing in two rural multigrade classes in the Western Cape
title_short Teaching of writing in two rural multigrade classes in the Western Cape
title_full Teaching of writing in two rural multigrade classes in the Western Cape
title_fullStr Teaching of writing in two rural multigrade classes in the Western Cape
title_full_unstemmed Teaching of writing in two rural multigrade classes in the Western Cape
title_sort teaching of writing in two rural multigrade classes in the western cape
publisher AOSIS
series Reading & Writing
issn 2079-8245
2308-1422
publishDate 2015-09-01
description The purpose of this research project was to understand how Cambourne’s theory of social constructivism, particularly his four instructional principles, was applied to the teaching of writing in two rural multigrade Foundation Phase classrooms in the Western Cape. Multigrade schools account for 30% of all primary schools in South Africa, but in most cases teachers are not able to provide quality education to learners. Writing in rural multigrade Foundation Phase schools is a largely neglected area for teacher development and research. Even those teaching multigrade classes are not sure how to approach it. The national curriculum, as well as our South African constitution, encourages teachers to inspire children with values based on respect, democracy, equality, human dignity and social justice. However, the two rural multigrade classes in this research project faced many challenges that hindered their ability to reach these goals. The main theoretical framework underpinning this study was based on Cambourne’s social constructivist theory, particularly his instructional principles including explicit, systematic, mindful and contextual teaching principles. This research was a qualitative study embedded within an interpretive case study. Two Foundation Phase teachers working in multigrade classrooms were purposively selected for this research. In conclusion, there is evidence that these two teachers used some of Cambourne’s instructional principles, in varying degrees, when teaching writing in their multigrade classes. [PDF to follow]
url https://rw.org.za/index.php/rw/article/view/58
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