Guidelines for an effective staff induction programme at a special school in Gauteng : a case study

This case study explores the experiences of eight newly appointed teachers at a school for intellectually disabled learners. A qualitative phenomenological approach was employed to interpret interview data. The literature study investigates the phenomenon of staff turnover and includes key literatu...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Kempen, Maria Elizabeth
Other Authors: Steyn, G.M.
Format: Others
Language:en
Published: 2010
Subjects:
Online Access:Kempen, Maria Elizabeth (2010) Guidelines for an effective staff induction programme at a special school in Gauteng : a case study, University of South Africa, Pretoria, <http://hdl.handle.net/10500/3574>
http://hdl.handle.net/10500/3574
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spelling ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-unisa-oai-uir.unisa.ac.za-10500-35742018-11-19T17:14:18Z Guidelines for an effective staff induction programme at a special school in Gauteng : a case study Kempen, Maria Elizabeth Steyn, G.M. Special education Intellectual disability Adult learning Staff induction guidelines Professional needs Teacher problems Staff turnover Beginner teachers Personal needs Teacher needs 371.20109682 School personnel management -- South Africa -- Gauteng -- Case studies Special education teachers -- In-service training -- South Africa -- Gauteng -- Case studies This case study explores the experiences of eight newly appointed teachers at a school for intellectually disabled learners. A qualitative phenomenological approach was employed to interpret interview data. The literature study investigates the phenomenon of staff turnover and includes key literature themes such as adult learning theories of Senge and Vygotski, the life cycle of a teacher, the special school context and problems and needs experienced by beginning teachers. The key findings of the research were that beginning special education teachers experienced various problems and needs but that, with well planned structured support, these problems could successfully be overcome. The researcher has developed a set of guidelines, which could be used in developing a staff induction programme, aimed at raising the effectiveness of newly appointed teachers at a school for intellectually disabled learners. This research once again emphasizes the need for a well planned, structured induction programme. Further Teacher Education M. Ed. (Education Management) 2010-09-09T12:52:34Z 2010-09-09T12:52:34Z 2010-06 Dissertation Kempen, Maria Elizabeth (2010) Guidelines for an effective staff induction programme at a special school in Gauteng : a case study, University of South Africa, Pretoria, <http://hdl.handle.net/10500/3574> http://hdl.handle.net/10500/3574 en 1 online resource (143 leaves)
collection NDLTD
language en
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Special education
Intellectual disability
Adult learning
Staff induction guidelines
Professional needs
Teacher problems
Staff turnover
Beginner teachers
Personal needs
Teacher needs
371.20109682
School personnel management -- South Africa -- Gauteng -- Case studies
Special education teachers -- In-service training -- South Africa -- Gauteng -- Case studies
spellingShingle Special education
Intellectual disability
Adult learning
Staff induction guidelines
Professional needs
Teacher problems
Staff turnover
Beginner teachers
Personal needs
Teacher needs
371.20109682
School personnel management -- South Africa -- Gauteng -- Case studies
Special education teachers -- In-service training -- South Africa -- Gauteng -- Case studies
Kempen, Maria Elizabeth
Guidelines for an effective staff induction programme at a special school in Gauteng : a case study
description This case study explores the experiences of eight newly appointed teachers at a school for intellectually disabled learners. A qualitative phenomenological approach was employed to interpret interview data. The literature study investigates the phenomenon of staff turnover and includes key literature themes such as adult learning theories of Senge and Vygotski, the life cycle of a teacher, the special school context and problems and needs experienced by beginning teachers. The key findings of the research were that beginning special education teachers experienced various problems and needs but that, with well planned structured support, these problems could successfully be overcome. The researcher has developed a set of guidelines, which could be used in developing a staff induction programme, aimed at raising the effectiveness of newly appointed teachers at a school for intellectually disabled learners. This research once again emphasizes the need for a well planned, structured induction programme. === Further Teacher Education === M. Ed. (Education Management)
author2 Steyn, G.M.
author_facet Steyn, G.M.
Kempen, Maria Elizabeth
author Kempen, Maria Elizabeth
author_sort Kempen, Maria Elizabeth
title Guidelines for an effective staff induction programme at a special school in Gauteng : a case study
title_short Guidelines for an effective staff induction programme at a special school in Gauteng : a case study
title_full Guidelines for an effective staff induction programme at a special school in Gauteng : a case study
title_fullStr Guidelines for an effective staff induction programme at a special school in Gauteng : a case study
title_full_unstemmed Guidelines for an effective staff induction programme at a special school in Gauteng : a case study
title_sort guidelines for an effective staff induction programme at a special school in gauteng : a case study
publishDate 2010
url Kempen, Maria Elizabeth (2010) Guidelines for an effective staff induction programme at a special school in Gauteng : a case study, University of South Africa, Pretoria, <http://hdl.handle.net/10500/3574>
http://hdl.handle.net/10500/3574
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