Understanding current teacher implementation of Zimbabwe's primary school AIDS curriculum: a case study

Zimbabwe’s Ministry of Education Sport, Arts and Culture offers as one of the primary school curricula, an AIDS curriculum which all Grades 4 to 7 teachers in Zimbabwe’s primary schools mandatorily implement with a view to contributing towards the prevention of the spread of HIV/AIDS among the young...

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Main Author: Musingarabwi, Starlin
Format: Others
Language:English
Published: Nelson Mandela Metropolitan University 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10948/d1020912
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spelling ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-nmmu-vital-95842017-12-21T04:22:42ZUnderstanding current teacher implementation of Zimbabwe's primary school AIDS curriculum: a case studyMusingarabwi, StarlinTeacher participation in curriculum planning -- ZimbabwePrimary school teachers -- ZimbabweEducation -- ZimbabweZimbabwe’s Ministry of Education Sport, Arts and Culture offers as one of the primary school curricula, an AIDS curriculum which all Grades 4 to 7 teachers in Zimbabwe’s primary schools mandatorily implement with a view to contributing towards the prevention of the spread of HIV/AIDS among the young primary school learners. The purpose of this research was to explore and describe teachers’ understanding and implementation of Zimbabwe’s primary school AIDS curriculum regarding the ways in which they articulated teaching practices and processes in their classrooms. The study also aimed to elicit the teachers’ views on how personal and contextual factors impact their adaptation and enactment of the curriculum. The study also sought to establish teachers’ perceptions of their practical experiences with the implementation of Zimbabwe’s primary school AIDS curriculum and their suggestions for improving practice. The study follows a qualitative case study design with minimal quantitative results. It involved three purposively selected primary school grade six teachers (n=3) each of whom was asked to teach five lessons while being observed over a period of three months. Each teacher availed his or her teaching scheme/plan to the researcher who conducted document analysis to glean their symbolic conceptualisation of actual classroom practice of the curriculum. This was followed by three semi-structured interviews with each participating teacher to elicit their perceptions. A content analysis using ideas borrowed from the grounded theory approach was employed resulting in thematic findings. The findings of the study confirm and enhance the theoretical significance of the phenomenological-adaptive perspective of educational change and Honig’s (people, policy, places) and cognition model for describing teacher implementation of the mandatory AIDS curriculum. The findings also confirm the complex ways in which human-generated personal and contextual factors played out in framing and shaping teachers’ personal adaptation of the mandatory AIDS curriculum. The study confirms the adaptation claim that as cognitive sense-makers, teachers mutate and enact a curriculum according to their personal subjective interpretations in the context of unique use-setting implementation realities. Although one of the participants’ understanding and practice displayed considerable comprehension of the requirements of the curriculum, the other teachers displayed an understanding of this curriculum in a superficial way, and experienced few positive experiences and several conceptual and operational constraints in its implementation. Drawing on their practical experiences with the implementation of the curriculum, teachers offered suggestions for transforming the implementation proficiency of this curriculum, which formed part of the conceptual strategy I developed for improving practice. Thus the resultant achievement of the study was a conceptual strategy that was constructed from the key findings of the study to provide educational change leaders with nuanced ideas and insights for improving practice.Nelson Mandela Metropolitan UniversityFaculty of Education2013ThesisDoctoralPhDv, 295 leavespdfvital:9584http://hdl.handle.net/10948/d1020912EnglishNelson Mandela Metropolitan University
collection NDLTD
language English
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Teacher participation in curriculum planning -- Zimbabwe
Primary school teachers -- Zimbabwe
Education -- Zimbabwe
spellingShingle Teacher participation in curriculum planning -- Zimbabwe
Primary school teachers -- Zimbabwe
Education -- Zimbabwe
Musingarabwi, Starlin
Understanding current teacher implementation of Zimbabwe's primary school AIDS curriculum: a case study
description Zimbabwe’s Ministry of Education Sport, Arts and Culture offers as one of the primary school curricula, an AIDS curriculum which all Grades 4 to 7 teachers in Zimbabwe’s primary schools mandatorily implement with a view to contributing towards the prevention of the spread of HIV/AIDS among the young primary school learners. The purpose of this research was to explore and describe teachers’ understanding and implementation of Zimbabwe’s primary school AIDS curriculum regarding the ways in which they articulated teaching practices and processes in their classrooms. The study also aimed to elicit the teachers’ views on how personal and contextual factors impact their adaptation and enactment of the curriculum. The study also sought to establish teachers’ perceptions of their practical experiences with the implementation of Zimbabwe’s primary school AIDS curriculum and their suggestions for improving practice. The study follows a qualitative case study design with minimal quantitative results. It involved three purposively selected primary school grade six teachers (n=3) each of whom was asked to teach five lessons while being observed over a period of three months. Each teacher availed his or her teaching scheme/plan to the researcher who conducted document analysis to glean their symbolic conceptualisation of actual classroom practice of the curriculum. This was followed by three semi-structured interviews with each participating teacher to elicit their perceptions. A content analysis using ideas borrowed from the grounded theory approach was employed resulting in thematic findings. The findings of the study confirm and enhance the theoretical significance of the phenomenological-adaptive perspective of educational change and Honig’s (people, policy, places) and cognition model for describing teacher implementation of the mandatory AIDS curriculum. The findings also confirm the complex ways in which human-generated personal and contextual factors played out in framing and shaping teachers’ personal adaptation of the mandatory AIDS curriculum. The study confirms the adaptation claim that as cognitive sense-makers, teachers mutate and enact a curriculum according to their personal subjective interpretations in the context of unique use-setting implementation realities. Although one of the participants’ understanding and practice displayed considerable comprehension of the requirements of the curriculum, the other teachers displayed an understanding of this curriculum in a superficial way, and experienced few positive experiences and several conceptual and operational constraints in its implementation. Drawing on their practical experiences with the implementation of the curriculum, teachers offered suggestions for transforming the implementation proficiency of this curriculum, which formed part of the conceptual strategy I developed for improving practice. Thus the resultant achievement of the study was a conceptual strategy that was constructed from the key findings of the study to provide educational change leaders with nuanced ideas and insights for improving practice.
author Musingarabwi, Starlin
author_facet Musingarabwi, Starlin
author_sort Musingarabwi, Starlin
title Understanding current teacher implementation of Zimbabwe's primary school AIDS curriculum: a case study
title_short Understanding current teacher implementation of Zimbabwe's primary school AIDS curriculum: a case study
title_full Understanding current teacher implementation of Zimbabwe's primary school AIDS curriculum: a case study
title_fullStr Understanding current teacher implementation of Zimbabwe's primary school AIDS curriculum: a case study
title_full_unstemmed Understanding current teacher implementation of Zimbabwe's primary school AIDS curriculum: a case study
title_sort understanding current teacher implementation of zimbabwe's primary school aids curriculum: a case study
publisher Nelson Mandela Metropolitan University
publishDate 2013
url http://hdl.handle.net/10948/d1020912
work_keys_str_mv AT musingarabwistarlin understandingcurrentteacherimplementationofzimbabwesprimaryschoolaidscurriculumacasestudy
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