Perceptions of factors affecting the pursuit of higher education among disadvantaged grade 12 learners.

Prior to 1994, education in South Africa was formally and legally segregated according to race and ethnicity. The pre-eminent transformation demand for the educational policies of the post-1994 democratic government was therefore to promote equity in enrolments and staffing across educational sector...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Ebrahim, Tasneem
Format: Others
Language:en
Published: 2010
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10539/8177
id ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-wits-oai-wiredspace.wits.ac.za-10539-8177
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-wits-oai-wiredspace.wits.ac.za-10539-81772019-05-11T03:40:58Z Perceptions of factors affecting the pursuit of higher education among disadvantaged grade 12 learners. Ebrahim, Tasneem Prior to 1994, education in South Africa was formally and legally segregated according to race and ethnicity. The pre-eminent transformation demand for the educational policies of the post-1994 democratic government was therefore to promote equity in enrolments and staffing across educational sectors, so that equal opportunities can exist for the broader society. Fifteen years after democracy the expectation is that diversity and inclusivity would not be in question. However, it appears that access and participation in higher education still remains reserved for a small elite. Policy gains have therefore been modest. This study attempts to understand the reasons for the slow transformation in equity gains in higher education by interviewing disadvantaged Grade 12 learners in a school south of Johannesburg. The qualitative approach using a semi-structured questionnaire was utilized to facilitate a dialogue about their perceptions of what prevents these learners from accessing higher education. Thematic content analysis of the participants’ responses revealed four salient themes: perceptions of the economic, educational, socio-cultural and political constraints to higher education which are discussed using Paulo Freire’s theory of conscientisation as a conceptual framework. The results of this research imply that a broader more purposeful approach to social reform and more comprehensive and equitable strategies of redistribution of wealth and income are required to empower disadvantaged communities to access higher learning institutions in South Africa. 2010-06-15T09:17:02Z 2010-06-15T09:17:02Z 2010-06-15T09:17:02Z Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/10539/8177 en application/pdf application/pdf
collection NDLTD
language en
format Others
sources NDLTD
description Prior to 1994, education in South Africa was formally and legally segregated according to race and ethnicity. The pre-eminent transformation demand for the educational policies of the post-1994 democratic government was therefore to promote equity in enrolments and staffing across educational sectors, so that equal opportunities can exist for the broader society. Fifteen years after democracy the expectation is that diversity and inclusivity would not be in question. However, it appears that access and participation in higher education still remains reserved for a small elite. Policy gains have therefore been modest. This study attempts to understand the reasons for the slow transformation in equity gains in higher education by interviewing disadvantaged Grade 12 learners in a school south of Johannesburg. The qualitative approach using a semi-structured questionnaire was utilized to facilitate a dialogue about their perceptions of what prevents these learners from accessing higher education. Thematic content analysis of the participants’ responses revealed four salient themes: perceptions of the economic, educational, socio-cultural and political constraints to higher education which are discussed using Paulo Freire’s theory of conscientisation as a conceptual framework. The results of this research imply that a broader more purposeful approach to social reform and more comprehensive and equitable strategies of redistribution of wealth and income are required to empower disadvantaged communities to access higher learning institutions in South Africa.
author Ebrahim, Tasneem
spellingShingle Ebrahim, Tasneem
Perceptions of factors affecting the pursuit of higher education among disadvantaged grade 12 learners.
author_facet Ebrahim, Tasneem
author_sort Ebrahim, Tasneem
title Perceptions of factors affecting the pursuit of higher education among disadvantaged grade 12 learners.
title_short Perceptions of factors affecting the pursuit of higher education among disadvantaged grade 12 learners.
title_full Perceptions of factors affecting the pursuit of higher education among disadvantaged grade 12 learners.
title_fullStr Perceptions of factors affecting the pursuit of higher education among disadvantaged grade 12 learners.
title_full_unstemmed Perceptions of factors affecting the pursuit of higher education among disadvantaged grade 12 learners.
title_sort perceptions of factors affecting the pursuit of higher education among disadvantaged grade 12 learners.
publishDate 2010
url http://hdl.handle.net/10539/8177
work_keys_str_mv AT ebrahimtasneem perceptionsoffactorsaffectingthepursuitofhighereducationamongdisadvantagedgrade12learners
_version_ 1719083290100498432