- Title
- Using a classroom library to promote extensive reading in a Grade 8 class in a Fort Beaufort District School, Eastern Cape : an action research case study.
- Creator
- Bushula, Bruce Simphiwe
- ThesisAdvisor
- Murray, Sarah
- ThesisAdvisor
- Robertson, Sally-Ann
- ThesisAdvisor
- Van der Mescht, Caroline
- Subject
- Classroom libraries -- South africa -- Eastern Cape -- Case studies
- Subject
- Reading (Secondary)
- Subject
- Literacy -- Study and teaching (Secondary)
- Subject
- Literacy programs
- Date
- 2015
- Type
- Thesis
- Type
- Masters
- Type
- MEd
- Identifier
- vital:2022
- Identifier
- http://hdl.handle.net/10962/d1017333
- Description
- This thesis reports on a collaborative action research case study with Grade 8 learners in a rural high school in Fort Beaufort District, Eastern Cape, South Africa. The goals of the case study were firstly, to understand best practices for promoting extensive reading using a classroom library, and secondly, to use these insights to put an extensive reading programme in place with a view to improving my practice as a language teacher and to gain better understanding of ways of enhancing my Grade 8 learners’ literacy skills. The following qualitative methods were used to collect data: observation, semi-structured interviews, class discussion, questionnaires, journal reflections and document analysis. Analysis of data involved identification of emerging themes and patterns. The findings suggest that the strategies used in the extensive reading intervention improved my learners’ levels of engagement with reading. Putting these strategies into practice, and reflecting critically on how to refine them helped enrich my own professional insight and development in relation to the implementation of extensive reading programmes. Since action research is usually designed in spirals of action, this research serves as a first spiral and a foundation upon which to build second and subsequent spirals (which do not form part of this research). The study highlighted the fact that certain challenges that emerged (for example, shortage of books at the learners’ level, and a lack of parental cooperation) need to be addressed in a second spiral of intervention. The study further suggested that the implementation of effective extensive reading programmes by teachers in the middle and upper phases of secondary schooling requires further investigation.
- Format
- 150 leaves, pdf
- Publisher
- Rhodes University, Faculty of Education, Education
- Language
- English
- Rights
- Bushula, Bruce Simphiwe
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