Promoting reading skills or wasting time? Students’ perceived benefits of reading in an intermediary programme at the Vaal University of Technology

Notwithstanding the substantial transformation of education in South Africa in the last 20 years, specifically to redress the past inequalities, the challenges are ongoing. These challenges include tertiary institutions having to accommodate a culturally and linguistically diverse group of students,...

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Main Authors: Linda Scott, Elaine Saaiman
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: AOSIS 2016-05-01
Series:Reading & Writing
Subjects:
Online Access:https://rw.org.za/index.php/rw/article/view/82
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spelling doaj-fac9eb64fea047538595c295634a5df42020-11-24T22:45:57ZengAOSISReading & Writing2079-82452308-14222016-05-0171e1e1110.4102/rw.v7i1.8255Promoting reading skills or wasting time? Students’ perceived benefits of reading in an intermediary programme at the Vaal University of TechnologyLinda Scott0Elaine Saaiman1Education, Vaal University of TechnologyEducation, Vaal University of TechnologyNotwithstanding the substantial transformation of education in South Africa in the last 20 years, specifically to redress the past inequalities, the challenges are ongoing. These challenges include tertiary institutions having to accommodate a culturally and linguistically diverse group of students, often second-language (L2) English speakers, in an English lingua franca classroom. This study investigated the reading attitudes and habits of students in an intermediary programme of a tertiary institution and any perceived changes to these attitudes or habits, as well as their perceptions of the promotion of reading by the programme. On successful completion of the intermediary programme, students register for the compulsory first-year English distance learning course and are required to complete a placement test. Results for students who attended the intermediary programme were compared with those of students who did not attend the intermediary programme but registered directly for mainstream. The teaching of reading appeared invaluable at the tertiary level with the indication that students’ attitudes and behaviour changed and that they inter alia realised the academic value thereof, made decisions to take up reading as a hobby and discovered new genres. Keywords: Reading; Linguistically diversehttps://rw.org.za/index.php/rw/article/view/82ReadingLinguistically diverse
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Linda Scott
Elaine Saaiman
spellingShingle Linda Scott
Elaine Saaiman
Promoting reading skills or wasting time? Students’ perceived benefits of reading in an intermediary programme at the Vaal University of Technology
Reading & Writing
Reading
Linguistically diverse
author_facet Linda Scott
Elaine Saaiman
author_sort Linda Scott
title Promoting reading skills or wasting time? Students’ perceived benefits of reading in an intermediary programme at the Vaal University of Technology
title_short Promoting reading skills or wasting time? Students’ perceived benefits of reading in an intermediary programme at the Vaal University of Technology
title_full Promoting reading skills or wasting time? Students’ perceived benefits of reading in an intermediary programme at the Vaal University of Technology
title_fullStr Promoting reading skills or wasting time? Students’ perceived benefits of reading in an intermediary programme at the Vaal University of Technology
title_full_unstemmed Promoting reading skills or wasting time? Students’ perceived benefits of reading in an intermediary programme at the Vaal University of Technology
title_sort promoting reading skills or wasting time? students’ perceived benefits of reading in an intermediary programme at the vaal university of technology
publisher AOSIS
series Reading & Writing
issn 2079-8245
2308-1422
publishDate 2016-05-01
description Notwithstanding the substantial transformation of education in South Africa in the last 20 years, specifically to redress the past inequalities, the challenges are ongoing. These challenges include tertiary institutions having to accommodate a culturally and linguistically diverse group of students, often second-language (L2) English speakers, in an English lingua franca classroom. This study investigated the reading attitudes and habits of students in an intermediary programme of a tertiary institution and any perceived changes to these attitudes or habits, as well as their perceptions of the promotion of reading by the programme. On successful completion of the intermediary programme, students register for the compulsory first-year English distance learning course and are required to complete a placement test. Results for students who attended the intermediary programme were compared with those of students who did not attend the intermediary programme but registered directly for mainstream. The teaching of reading appeared invaluable at the tertiary level with the indication that students’ attitudes and behaviour changed and that they inter alia realised the academic value thereof, made decisions to take up reading as a hobby and discovered new genres. Keywords: Reading; Linguistically diverse
topic Reading
Linguistically diverse
url https://rw.org.za/index.php/rw/article/view/82
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