Perceptions of contemporary effects of colonialism among educational professionals in Ghana

This research study examined perceptions of contemporary effects of colonialism among education professionals in Ghana, and the extent to which education professionals express awareness of colonialism in Ghanaian school systems and contemporary Ghanaian society. An overview of literature in Critical...

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Main Author: Fletcher, Kingsley Atterh
Language:ENG
Published: ScholarWorks@UMass Amherst 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:https://scholarworks.umass.edu/dissertations/AAI3589021
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spelling ndltd-UMASS-oai-scholarworks.umass.edu-dissertations-69312020-12-02T14:33:05Z Perceptions of contemporary effects of colonialism among educational professionals in Ghana Fletcher, Kingsley Atterh This research study examined perceptions of contemporary effects of colonialism among education professionals in Ghana, and the extent to which education professionals express awareness of colonialism in Ghanaian school systems and contemporary Ghanaian society. An overview of literature in Critical Race Theory, Social Justice Education Theory, Oppression Theory and Post-Colonial Theory provided the theoretical foundation that was used to guide this study. Five factors emerged from this literature review as a framework for analysis of study data. These five factors included discourse, cultural imperialism, linguistic hegemony, racism and internalized racism, and oppression. The study participants included education policy makers, administrators, counselors, teachers, and teacher educators in the educational system of Ghana. A set of thirty-two individual interviews and six focus groups comprised of twenty-seven participants were conducted in which educators described their perspectives of Ghanaian society and Ghanaian educational systems in their own words in response to a predetermined set of twelve questions. A document analysis established a baseline of data regarding the curriculum of Ghanaian schools as presented in curriculum guides, textbooks, and policy statements, handbooks and reports that describe the educational systems in Ghana today. Ghanaian educators expressed the most awareness of colonial legacies related to cultural imperialism, linguistic hegemony, internalized oppression and discourse. The findings suggest that educational professionals in Ghana demonstrate limited awareness of colonial legacies of racism and internalized racism, sexism, classism, ethnoreligious oppression and neocolonialism. 2013-01-01T08:00:00Z text https://scholarworks.umass.edu/dissertations/AAI3589021 Doctoral Dissertations Available from Proquest ENG ScholarWorks@UMass Amherst Educational sociology
collection NDLTD
language ENG
sources NDLTD
topic Educational sociology
spellingShingle Educational sociology
Fletcher, Kingsley Atterh
Perceptions of contemporary effects of colonialism among educational professionals in Ghana
description This research study examined perceptions of contemporary effects of colonialism among education professionals in Ghana, and the extent to which education professionals express awareness of colonialism in Ghanaian school systems and contemporary Ghanaian society. An overview of literature in Critical Race Theory, Social Justice Education Theory, Oppression Theory and Post-Colonial Theory provided the theoretical foundation that was used to guide this study. Five factors emerged from this literature review as a framework for analysis of study data. These five factors included discourse, cultural imperialism, linguistic hegemony, racism and internalized racism, and oppression. The study participants included education policy makers, administrators, counselors, teachers, and teacher educators in the educational system of Ghana. A set of thirty-two individual interviews and six focus groups comprised of twenty-seven participants were conducted in which educators described their perspectives of Ghanaian society and Ghanaian educational systems in their own words in response to a predetermined set of twelve questions. A document analysis established a baseline of data regarding the curriculum of Ghanaian schools as presented in curriculum guides, textbooks, and policy statements, handbooks and reports that describe the educational systems in Ghana today. Ghanaian educators expressed the most awareness of colonial legacies related to cultural imperialism, linguistic hegemony, internalized oppression and discourse. The findings suggest that educational professionals in Ghana demonstrate limited awareness of colonial legacies of racism and internalized racism, sexism, classism, ethnoreligious oppression and neocolonialism.
author Fletcher, Kingsley Atterh
author_facet Fletcher, Kingsley Atterh
author_sort Fletcher, Kingsley Atterh
title Perceptions of contemporary effects of colonialism among educational professionals in Ghana
title_short Perceptions of contemporary effects of colonialism among educational professionals in Ghana
title_full Perceptions of contemporary effects of colonialism among educational professionals in Ghana
title_fullStr Perceptions of contemporary effects of colonialism among educational professionals in Ghana
title_full_unstemmed Perceptions of contemporary effects of colonialism among educational professionals in Ghana
title_sort perceptions of contemporary effects of colonialism among educational professionals in ghana
publisher ScholarWorks@UMass Amherst
publishDate 2013
url https://scholarworks.umass.edu/dissertations/AAI3589021
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