The attitude of learners towards language choice: a case study of Welbedene Secondary School

Submitted in fulfillment of the requirements for the degree Doctor Educationis in the Department of Educational Psychology and Special Education Faculty of Education University of Zululand, South Africa, 2012. === The aim of this investigation was to determine learners’ attitudes towards language...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Balan, Devasagren Madurai
Other Authors: Vos, M.S.
Format: Others
Language:en
Published: 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10530/1069
id ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-uzulu-oai-uzspace.unizulu.ac.za-10530-1069
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-uzulu-oai-uzspace.unizulu.ac.za-10530-10692020-01-07T03:13:42Z The attitude of learners towards language choice: a case study of Welbedene Secondary School Balan, Devasagren Madurai Vos, M.S. Language choice -- learners’ attitudes towards Submitted in fulfillment of the requirements for the degree Doctor Educationis in the Department of Educational Psychology and Special Education Faculty of Education University of Zululand, South Africa, 2012. The aim of this investigation was to determine learners’ attitudes towards language choice in secondary school. The focus was on secondary school learners attending schools where the medium of instruction is not in their mother tongue. An introductory literature review was provided of mother tongue education versus English as medium of instruction. Advocates of mother tongue education argue that a child learns better and quicker through the mother tongue than through an unfamiliar linguistic medium and it is also an important means of identification among the members of the community to which the child belongs. However, black communities are generally opposed to instruction in their home language because they view the indigenous languages as low status languages and as barriers to their upward mobility in a world dominated by English. In the South African society English is associated with prestige as it is in many other countries. An overview of the current language-in-education practices in South African high schools revealed that depending on which language is taught, as first language either English or Afrikaans is compulsory as a second language. English, as a first language and Afrikaans, which is their third or fourth language, as a second language. The problems experienced with second language instruction were discussed with reference to reading, writing, speaking and listening. For the purpose of the empirical investigation, a self-structured interview was conducted with the educators. A quantitative descriptive analysis was undertaken of the completed questionnaires and a qualitative analysis of the interviews. In conclusion a summary of the study and findings emanating from the literature and empirical investigation was presented. Based on these findings the following recommendations were made:  A school based language policy should be formulated in accordance with the national language-in-education policy but must also take into consideration the language needs of the learners in the school.  Indigenous languages must be developed and promoted by providing financial assistance and/or incentives for literature works and textbooks in the indigenous languages.  Educator training should include strategies to teach multilingual classes. 2012-06-07T08:19:28Z 2012-06-07T08:19:28Z 2012 Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/10530/1069 en application/pdf
collection NDLTD
language en
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Language choice -- learners’ attitudes towards
spellingShingle Language choice -- learners’ attitudes towards
Balan, Devasagren Madurai
The attitude of learners towards language choice: a case study of Welbedene Secondary School
description Submitted in fulfillment of the requirements for the degree Doctor Educationis in the Department of Educational Psychology and Special Education Faculty of Education University of Zululand, South Africa, 2012. === The aim of this investigation was to determine learners’ attitudes towards language choice in secondary school. The focus was on secondary school learners attending schools where the medium of instruction is not in their mother tongue. An introductory literature review was provided of mother tongue education versus English as medium of instruction. Advocates of mother tongue education argue that a child learns better and quicker through the mother tongue than through an unfamiliar linguistic medium and it is also an important means of identification among the members of the community to which the child belongs. However, black communities are generally opposed to instruction in their home language because they view the indigenous languages as low status languages and as barriers to their upward mobility in a world dominated by English. In the South African society English is associated with prestige as it is in many other countries. An overview of the current language-in-education practices in South African high schools revealed that depending on which language is taught, as first language either English or Afrikaans is compulsory as a second language. English, as a first language and Afrikaans, which is their third or fourth language, as a second language. The problems experienced with second language instruction were discussed with reference to reading, writing, speaking and listening. For the purpose of the empirical investigation, a self-structured interview was conducted with the educators. A quantitative descriptive analysis was undertaken of the completed questionnaires and a qualitative analysis of the interviews. In conclusion a summary of the study and findings emanating from the literature and empirical investigation was presented. Based on these findings the following recommendations were made:  A school based language policy should be formulated in accordance with the national language-in-education policy but must also take into consideration the language needs of the learners in the school.  Indigenous languages must be developed and promoted by providing financial assistance and/or incentives for literature works and textbooks in the indigenous languages.  Educator training should include strategies to teach multilingual classes.
author2 Vos, M.S.
author_facet Vos, M.S.
Balan, Devasagren Madurai
author Balan, Devasagren Madurai
author_sort Balan, Devasagren Madurai
title The attitude of learners towards language choice: a case study of Welbedene Secondary School
title_short The attitude of learners towards language choice: a case study of Welbedene Secondary School
title_full The attitude of learners towards language choice: a case study of Welbedene Secondary School
title_fullStr The attitude of learners towards language choice: a case study of Welbedene Secondary School
title_full_unstemmed The attitude of learners towards language choice: a case study of Welbedene Secondary School
title_sort attitude of learners towards language choice: a case study of welbedene secondary school
publishDate 2012
url http://hdl.handle.net/10530/1069
work_keys_str_mv AT balandevasagrenmadurai theattitudeoflearnerstowardslanguagechoiceacasestudyofwelbedenesecondaryschool
AT balandevasagrenmadurai attitudeoflearnerstowardslanguagechoiceacasestudyofwelbedenesecondaryschool
_version_ 1719307103779160064