Teacher responses to the Namibian education reform : a case study of two Caprivi schools

Effective implementation of education reforms consists of alterations in curriculum materials, instructional practices and behaviour, beliefs and understandings on the part of the teachers involved in the reform (Fullan and Hargreaves, 1993: 5). A process of implementation is therefore, a learning p...

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Main Author: Kamwi, Kamwi Kenneth
Format: Others
Language:English
Published: Rhodes University 2002
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10962/d1003676
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spelling ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-rhodes-vital-17912017-07-20T04:13:15ZTeacher responses to the Namibian education reform : a case study of two Caprivi schoolsKamwi, Kamwi KennethEducation -- NamibiaEducation and state -- NamibiaEducational change -- NamibiaEffective implementation of education reforms consists of alterations in curriculum materials, instructional practices and behaviour, beliefs and understandings on the part of the teachers involved in the reform (Fullan and Hargreaves, 1993: 5). A process of implementation is therefore, a learning process, learning how to do something new (ibid.). This study was done to establish how Biology teachers in Caprivi have responded to the reform process ten years down the line. I used a qualitative case study of two secondary schools. Four Biology teachers, two school principals and two groups of learners participated in the study. Data was collected by means of interviews, lesson observations, a workshop, and school inventories. The data was analysed within an interpretive framework. The results of the study show a move into 'activity-based teaching'. It shows a shift from the traditional transmission teaching approach. In general teachers seem to equate 'activity-based teaching' with the learner-centred approach.Rhodes UniversityFaculty of Education, Education2002ThesisMastersMEd162 leavespdfvital:1791http://hdl.handle.net/10962/d1003676EnglishKamwi, Kamwi Kenneth
collection NDLTD
language English
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Education -- Namibia
Education and state -- Namibia
Educational change -- Namibia
spellingShingle Education -- Namibia
Education and state -- Namibia
Educational change -- Namibia
Kamwi, Kamwi Kenneth
Teacher responses to the Namibian education reform : a case study of two Caprivi schools
description Effective implementation of education reforms consists of alterations in curriculum materials, instructional practices and behaviour, beliefs and understandings on the part of the teachers involved in the reform (Fullan and Hargreaves, 1993: 5). A process of implementation is therefore, a learning process, learning how to do something new (ibid.). This study was done to establish how Biology teachers in Caprivi have responded to the reform process ten years down the line. I used a qualitative case study of two secondary schools. Four Biology teachers, two school principals and two groups of learners participated in the study. Data was collected by means of interviews, lesson observations, a workshop, and school inventories. The data was analysed within an interpretive framework. The results of the study show a move into 'activity-based teaching'. It shows a shift from the traditional transmission teaching approach. In general teachers seem to equate 'activity-based teaching' with the learner-centred approach.
author Kamwi, Kamwi Kenneth
author_facet Kamwi, Kamwi Kenneth
author_sort Kamwi, Kamwi Kenneth
title Teacher responses to the Namibian education reform : a case study of two Caprivi schools
title_short Teacher responses to the Namibian education reform : a case study of two Caprivi schools
title_full Teacher responses to the Namibian education reform : a case study of two Caprivi schools
title_fullStr Teacher responses to the Namibian education reform : a case study of two Caprivi schools
title_full_unstemmed Teacher responses to the Namibian education reform : a case study of two Caprivi schools
title_sort teacher responses to the namibian education reform : a case study of two caprivi schools
publisher Rhodes University
publishDate 2002
url http://hdl.handle.net/10962/d1003676
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