The Skills Development Act : an exploratory study of its perceived implications for companies in the service industry in Durban.

This project is a survey research work, which investigates the perceptions and implications of the Skills Development Act on the service industry in Durban. The study contained a qualitative and quantitative section, through the use of structured and open questionnaires. Target interviewees/ recipie...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Adeniji, Ademola.
Other Authors: De Kadt, Raphael.
Language:en
Published: 2011
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10413/3983
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spelling ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-ukzn-oai-http---researchspace.ukzn.ac.za-10413-39832014-02-08T03:49:21ZThe Skills Development Act : an exploratory study of its perceived implications for companies in the service industry in Durban.Adeniji, Ademola.Occupational training--Law and legislation--South Africa.Employees--Training of--KwaZulu-Natal--Durban.Industries--Durban.Theses--Political science.This project is a survey research work, which investigates the perceptions and implications of the Skills Development Act on the service industry in Durban. The study contained a qualitative and quantitative section, through the use of structured and open questionnaires. Target interviewees/ recipients of questionnaires were CEDs, financial managers or their designated representatives, who play a key role in making investment decisions in their respective companies. The sample took the form of a stratified judgment sample. The distribution of the companies in the sample was according to size, with an attempt made to reflect as accurately as possible the proportion of companies in the sector that are small, medium and large. The number of employees determined the categorisation by size. For the purposes of this study, a large company will have between 65 and 100 employees, a medium sized company will have between 30 and 64 employees. A small company will have between one and 29 employees. Because service sector companies tend to be small, this classification departs somewhat from that used in the National Skills Development Strategy. Information derived from the questionnaires and interviews were analysed using the SPSS package. This served as the basis for the discussion of findings and the recommendations, which appear in last chapter of this work.Thesis (M.A.)-University of Natal, Durban, 2002De Kadt, Raphael.Coldwell, David A. L.2011-10-31T12:36:06Z2011-10-31T12:36:06Z20022002Thesishttp://hdl.handle.net/10413/3983en
collection NDLTD
language en
sources NDLTD
topic Occupational training--Law and legislation--South Africa.
Employees--Training of--KwaZulu-Natal--Durban.
Industries--Durban.
Theses--Political science.
spellingShingle Occupational training--Law and legislation--South Africa.
Employees--Training of--KwaZulu-Natal--Durban.
Industries--Durban.
Theses--Political science.
Adeniji, Ademola.
The Skills Development Act : an exploratory study of its perceived implications for companies in the service industry in Durban.
description This project is a survey research work, which investigates the perceptions and implications of the Skills Development Act on the service industry in Durban. The study contained a qualitative and quantitative section, through the use of structured and open questionnaires. Target interviewees/ recipients of questionnaires were CEDs, financial managers or their designated representatives, who play a key role in making investment decisions in their respective companies. The sample took the form of a stratified judgment sample. The distribution of the companies in the sample was according to size, with an attempt made to reflect as accurately as possible the proportion of companies in the sector that are small, medium and large. The number of employees determined the categorisation by size. For the purposes of this study, a large company will have between 65 and 100 employees, a medium sized company will have between 30 and 64 employees. A small company will have between one and 29 employees. Because service sector companies tend to be small, this classification departs somewhat from that used in the National Skills Development Strategy. Information derived from the questionnaires and interviews were analysed using the SPSS package. This served as the basis for the discussion of findings and the recommendations, which appear in last chapter of this work. === Thesis (M.A.)-University of Natal, Durban, 2002
author2 De Kadt, Raphael.
author_facet De Kadt, Raphael.
Adeniji, Ademola.
author Adeniji, Ademola.
author_sort Adeniji, Ademola.
title The Skills Development Act : an exploratory study of its perceived implications for companies in the service industry in Durban.
title_short The Skills Development Act : an exploratory study of its perceived implications for companies in the service industry in Durban.
title_full The Skills Development Act : an exploratory study of its perceived implications for companies in the service industry in Durban.
title_fullStr The Skills Development Act : an exploratory study of its perceived implications for companies in the service industry in Durban.
title_full_unstemmed The Skills Development Act : an exploratory study of its perceived implications for companies in the service industry in Durban.
title_sort skills development act : an exploratory study of its perceived implications for companies in the service industry in durban.
publishDate 2011
url http://hdl.handle.net/10413/3983
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