Non-racial schooling in selected Cape Town schools : language, attitudes and language learning

Bibliography: pages 111-118. === This study examines some elements of the language environment, language learning processes, and language inter-actions between child and teacher, and child and child in the changing South African education system. As more classrooms become non-racial, new dimensions...

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Main Author: Schlebusch, Anne
Other Authors: Young, D N
Format: Dissertation
Language:English
Published: University of Cape Town 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11427/17504
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spelling ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-uct-oai-localhost-11427-175042020-10-06T05:11:23Z Non-racial schooling in selected Cape Town schools : language, attitudes and language learning Schlebusch, Anne Young, D N Education - South Africa School integration Language and education Applied Language Studies Bibliography: pages 111-118. This study examines some elements of the language environment, language learning processes, and language inter-actions between child and teacher, and child and child in the changing South African education system. As more classrooms become non-racial, new dimensions are arising in language use and in learning: classrooms are perforce multilingual as different language groups come together to receive instruction through the medium of English. What dynamic do these multilingual elements bring to the standard classroom? I focus on part of the Standard Six population of 5 Western Cape English medium schools. The schools are different in many respects and similar in others; some have more Black pupils than others. By using a variety of research methods, including questionnaires, worksheets, personal observation, interviews and essays, I explore the experiences and attitudes of pupils, teachers and principals. My object is to try to identify trends: to look for positive features arising out of present classrooms and to look for possible points of tension as well, in order to extract central features to analyse. These are highlighted, and cross-referenced with relevant international studies, as matters of interest for practitioners in the classroom and for education planners. The field is immense: the study essentially provides a broad-based platform for further research. I tried not to have any preconceptions about what I would find, so made it a comprehensive and far-ranging study. It uncovers important elements which teachers and schools may attend to, relatively easily, indicates the importance of development of one's Mother Tongue and exposes deeply-felt emotions about Language and identity. It asks questions about Bridging Programmes and about the language of the teacher in the classroom and in testing. I also ask about the future of English in this country, about feelings about learning Afrikaans and about learning Xhosa. The main target in the recommendations is the teacher, as the generator of learning opportunities in the classroom. I call for more specific communication between teacher and pupil and the evolution of child-specific language learning processes. It is every teacher in every classroom who needs to adjust consciously to the new classroom profiles. Differing patterns clearly emerge from the schools with different intake profiles. This suggests the need for further studies to examine these findings for generalisability. The situation in schools is both volatile and exciting, calling for concrete and imaginative attention to aspects emerging from the personal, perceptive and wide-ranging input of the sample studied in this research project. 2016-03-04T16:50:00Z 2016-03-04T16:50:00Z 1994 Master Thesis Masters MPhil http://hdl.handle.net/11427/17504 eng application/pdf University of Cape Town Faculty of Humanities School of Education
collection NDLTD
language English
format Dissertation
sources NDLTD
topic Education - South Africa
School integration
Language and education
Applied Language Studies
spellingShingle Education - South Africa
School integration
Language and education
Applied Language Studies
Schlebusch, Anne
Non-racial schooling in selected Cape Town schools : language, attitudes and language learning
description Bibliography: pages 111-118. === This study examines some elements of the language environment, language learning processes, and language inter-actions between child and teacher, and child and child in the changing South African education system. As more classrooms become non-racial, new dimensions are arising in language use and in learning: classrooms are perforce multilingual as different language groups come together to receive instruction through the medium of English. What dynamic do these multilingual elements bring to the standard classroom? I focus on part of the Standard Six population of 5 Western Cape English medium schools. The schools are different in many respects and similar in others; some have more Black pupils than others. By using a variety of research methods, including questionnaires, worksheets, personal observation, interviews and essays, I explore the experiences and attitudes of pupils, teachers and principals. My object is to try to identify trends: to look for positive features arising out of present classrooms and to look for possible points of tension as well, in order to extract central features to analyse. These are highlighted, and cross-referenced with relevant international studies, as matters of interest for practitioners in the classroom and for education planners. The field is immense: the study essentially provides a broad-based platform for further research. I tried not to have any preconceptions about what I would find, so made it a comprehensive and far-ranging study. It uncovers important elements which teachers and schools may attend to, relatively easily, indicates the importance of development of one's Mother Tongue and exposes deeply-felt emotions about Language and identity. It asks questions about Bridging Programmes and about the language of the teacher in the classroom and in testing. I also ask about the future of English in this country, about feelings about learning Afrikaans and about learning Xhosa. The main target in the recommendations is the teacher, as the generator of learning opportunities in the classroom. I call for more specific communication between teacher and pupil and the evolution of child-specific language learning processes. It is every teacher in every classroom who needs to adjust consciously to the new classroom profiles. Differing patterns clearly emerge from the schools with different intake profiles. This suggests the need for further studies to examine these findings for generalisability. The situation in schools is both volatile and exciting, calling for concrete and imaginative attention to aspects emerging from the personal, perceptive and wide-ranging input of the sample studied in this research project.
author2 Young, D N
author_facet Young, D N
Schlebusch, Anne
author Schlebusch, Anne
author_sort Schlebusch, Anne
title Non-racial schooling in selected Cape Town schools : language, attitudes and language learning
title_short Non-racial schooling in selected Cape Town schools : language, attitudes and language learning
title_full Non-racial schooling in selected Cape Town schools : language, attitudes and language learning
title_fullStr Non-racial schooling in selected Cape Town schools : language, attitudes and language learning
title_full_unstemmed Non-racial schooling in selected Cape Town schools : language, attitudes and language learning
title_sort non-racial schooling in selected cape town schools : language, attitudes and language learning
publisher University of Cape Town
publishDate 2016
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/17504
work_keys_str_mv AT schlebuschanne nonracialschoolinginselectedcapetownschoolslanguageattitudesandlanguagelearning
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