The responsiveness of social studies teacher training curriculum towards democratic citizenship education in Botswana

This is a qualitative interpretive study undertaken through a case study design. The study was carried out to investigate the responsiveness of Social Studies teacher training curriculum towards democratic citizenship education (DCE) with two colleges of education (primary) in Botswana, and the Univ...

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Main Author: Oats, Reginald
Other Authors: Gumbo, Mishack Thiza
Format: Others
Language:en
Published: 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10500/13307
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record_format oai_dc
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language en
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Democratic citizenship education
Social studies education
Curriculum development
Qualitative research
Case study research
Constructivism
Active methods of teaching
Teacher training
Citizenship
Tertiary education
370.115096883
Social sciences -- Study and teaching -- Botswana -- Evaluation -- Case studies
Social science teachers -- Training of -- Curricula -- Botswana -- Evaluation -- Case studies
Democracy -- Study and teaching -- Botswana -- Evaluation -- Case studies
spellingShingle Democratic citizenship education
Social studies education
Curriculum development
Qualitative research
Case study research
Constructivism
Active methods of teaching
Teacher training
Citizenship
Tertiary education
370.115096883
Social sciences -- Study and teaching -- Botswana -- Evaluation -- Case studies
Social science teachers -- Training of -- Curricula -- Botswana -- Evaluation -- Case studies
Democracy -- Study and teaching -- Botswana -- Evaluation -- Case studies
Oats, Reginald
The responsiveness of social studies teacher training curriculum towards democratic citizenship education in Botswana
description This is a qualitative interpretive study undertaken through a case study design. The study was carried out to investigate the responsiveness of Social Studies teacher training curriculum towards democratic citizenship education (DCE) with two colleges of education (primary) in Botswana, and the University of Botswana. The following instruments were used as a means to gather data: individual interviews, group interviews, qualitative-questionnaire and document analysis. The participants for the study were drawn from colleges of education Social Studies lecturers and student-teachers with Social Studies as a major subject and the University of Botswana lecturers in the Faculty of Education. The study was inspired by the quest for democratisation of the school system in Botswana through a responsive curriculum. Botswana is dubbed a shining example of democracy, yet active participation of citizens in the national agenda is far to be admired. The best genesis for this enormous task is with teacher training because teachers play a pivotal role in transforming the society through the diffusion of requisite knowledge, skills, behaviours and attitudes. Thus, this argument positions this study to explore the responsiveness of teacher training curriculum at primary teacher training colleges towards DCE. This study was informed by the constructivist perspective on education and teaching. Constructivism is defined by Darforth and Smith (2005) as a broad set of interrelated theories that suggest that knowledge is human creation. This means that, the ideas, attitudes and practices referred to as constructivism are about how humans who learn by building knowledge cooperatively through social interaction and application of prior knowledge in a continual interpretation of ongoing experiences. Moreover, this explains that people explore events and environments, interact among themselves and confront situations and challenge they encounter. The findings of the study show that the teaching of DCE at colleges of education has not been successful as was expected. Firstly, according to the participants, the curriculum does not have adequate content on DCE. Secondly, the values of DCE which are capable of developing student-teachers to be effective citizenship education teachers are not well included in the syllabus. Thirdly, college lecturers believe in active methods of teaching for DCE but perform the opposite in their classes. Lastly, colleges have a lot of challenges that hamper effective transmission of DCE. These range from lack of appropriate educational material for DCE to college leadership that does not recognise the voices of the students in decision making. This study, however, recognises efforts made by colleges to train formidable Social Studies teachers for the transmission of DCE. The study elevates an argument that in-service teachers need support in their effort to transmit DCE to pupils in primary schools. Thus, in the light of the pervasive influence of findings from this study I recommend that policy makers and curriculum planners should consider updating lecturers about the type of Social Studies teacher they are expected to produce. Also I recommend that colleges should review their study materials to align them to the ideals of DCE, with a view to fill the gaps and deficiencies that exist in some topics. Lastly, the study concludes by raising an essential argument that with the current teacher training curriculum and classroom atmosphere in colleges of education, Botswana’s goal of training effective and functional citizenry is an illusion. === Curriculum and Instructional Studies === D. Ed. (Curriculum studies)
author2 Gumbo, Mishack Thiza
author_facet Gumbo, Mishack Thiza
Oats, Reginald
author Oats, Reginald
author_sort Oats, Reginald
title The responsiveness of social studies teacher training curriculum towards democratic citizenship education in Botswana
title_short The responsiveness of social studies teacher training curriculum towards democratic citizenship education in Botswana
title_full The responsiveness of social studies teacher training curriculum towards democratic citizenship education in Botswana
title_fullStr The responsiveness of social studies teacher training curriculum towards democratic citizenship education in Botswana
title_full_unstemmed The responsiveness of social studies teacher training curriculum towards democratic citizenship education in Botswana
title_sort responsiveness of social studies teacher training curriculum towards democratic citizenship education in botswana
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/10500/13307
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spelling ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-unisa-oai-umkn-dsp01.int.unisa.ac.za-10500-133072016-04-16T04:08:24Z The responsiveness of social studies teacher training curriculum towards democratic citizenship education in Botswana Oats, Reginald Gumbo, Mishack Thiza Democratic citizenship education Social studies education Curriculum development Qualitative research Case study research Constructivism Active methods of teaching Teacher training Citizenship Tertiary education 370.115096883 Social sciences -- Study and teaching -- Botswana -- Evaluation -- Case studies Social science teachers -- Training of -- Curricula -- Botswana -- Evaluation -- Case studies Democracy -- Study and teaching -- Botswana -- Evaluation -- Case studies This is a qualitative interpretive study undertaken through a case study design. The study was carried out to investigate the responsiveness of Social Studies teacher training curriculum towards democratic citizenship education (DCE) with two colleges of education (primary) in Botswana, and the University of Botswana. The following instruments were used as a means to gather data: individual interviews, group interviews, qualitative-questionnaire and document analysis. The participants for the study were drawn from colleges of education Social Studies lecturers and student-teachers with Social Studies as a major subject and the University of Botswana lecturers in the Faculty of Education. The study was inspired by the quest for democratisation of the school system in Botswana through a responsive curriculum. Botswana is dubbed a shining example of democracy, yet active participation of citizens in the national agenda is far to be admired. The best genesis for this enormous task is with teacher training because teachers play a pivotal role in transforming the society through the diffusion of requisite knowledge, skills, behaviours and attitudes. Thus, this argument positions this study to explore the responsiveness of teacher training curriculum at primary teacher training colleges towards DCE. This study was informed by the constructivist perspective on education and teaching. Constructivism is defined by Darforth and Smith (2005) as a broad set of interrelated theories that suggest that knowledge is human creation. This means that, the ideas, attitudes and practices referred to as constructivism are about how humans who learn by building knowledge cooperatively through social interaction and application of prior knowledge in a continual interpretation of ongoing experiences. Moreover, this explains that people explore events and environments, interact among themselves and confront situations and challenge they encounter. The findings of the study show that the teaching of DCE at colleges of education has not been successful as was expected. Firstly, according to the participants, the curriculum does not have adequate content on DCE. Secondly, the values of DCE which are capable of developing student-teachers to be effective citizenship education teachers are not well included in the syllabus. Thirdly, college lecturers believe in active methods of teaching for DCE but perform the opposite in their classes. Lastly, colleges have a lot of challenges that hamper effective transmission of DCE. These range from lack of appropriate educational material for DCE to college leadership that does not recognise the voices of the students in decision making. This study, however, recognises efforts made by colleges to train formidable Social Studies teachers for the transmission of DCE. The study elevates an argument that in-service teachers need support in their effort to transmit DCE to pupils in primary schools. Thus, in the light of the pervasive influence of findings from this study I recommend that policy makers and curriculum planners should consider updating lecturers about the type of Social Studies teacher they are expected to produce. Also I recommend that colleges should review their study materials to align them to the ideals of DCE, with a view to fill the gaps and deficiencies that exist in some topics. Lastly, the study concludes by raising an essential argument that with the current teacher training curriculum and classroom atmosphere in colleges of education, Botswana’s goal of training effective and functional citizenry is an illusion. Curriculum and Instructional Studies D. Ed. (Curriculum studies) 2014-04-03T09:04:08Z 2014-04-03T09:04:08Z 2014-02 Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/10500/13307 en 1 online resource (xv, 196 leaves)