An investigation of the relationship between the Grade 7 English Second Language curriculum expectations and learners English literacy life histories
- Authors: Shimbudhi, Barakias Baby Benita
- Date: 2017
- Language: English
- Type: Thesis , Masters , MEd
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10962/7866 , vital:21313
- Description: Drawing from Pinar’s Curriculum Theory and Hallidayan Systematic Functional Linguistics theory respectively, this study investigates the relationship between Namibia’s Grade 7 English Second Language’s curriculum expectations and learners’ English literacy life histories. Located within the qualitative interpretive paradigm and life history research, this study uses learners’ written autobiographical narratives and spoken stories from narrative interviews with participants to generate data. The research site and participants were purposively selected, from the Grade 7 rural combined school classroom where many learners perform poorly as no learner in the research population at this research site performed successfully in English Second Language examinations. The study investigated whether the Grade 7 curriculum expectations ‘speak’ to the Grade 7 learners’ English literacy life histories in order to establish whether there is a correlation between the formal education English Second Language curriculum expectations and learners’ English literacy life histories. The findings for this study revealed that formal education curriculum designers and policy makers do not consider the cultural identities and backgrounds that learners bring to the classrooms. There are very few language activities, events both at home, school, and within the literate community necessary, to develop communicative competencies in these rural combined school learners. The interpersonal relationship between parents and child; learner and teacher; and children to community members do not provide favourable conditions for effective English language learning. There are very limited teaching and learning resources both at home; school; and within the immediate community to nurture and meet English curriculum demands. A further factor is that English usage is disregarded in all three contexts. Very alarming is the fact that, if the Namibian government continues to fail to put interventions in places where, schoolteachers are educated on their required role in helping to ameliorate negative learning conditions in rural school, then the education outcomes for Namibian learners specifically in English Second Language will be severely affected. This in turn makes the government aspirations towards Accessible; Equitable; Qualitative; and Democratic Education for all learners hard to accomplish.
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An investigation of the role of a selected out of school time reading programme on learners’ reading behaviours and attitudes
- Authors: Williams, Sarah Marcella
- Date: 2017
- Language: English
- Type: Thesis , Masters , MEd
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10962/7511 , vital:21268
- Description: Due to the lingering damage from the Apartheid era and Bantu education, South Africa is still battling to rectify the inequalities in schools in previously disadvantaged areas. The lack of a reading culture and very poor literacy assessment scores in these areas is cause to include even out-of-school time to help remedy these problems. This study seeks to add to the body of literature by investigating the influence of two selected out-of-school time reading programmes on learners’ reading attitudes and behaviours within the South African context. Drawing from the New Literacy Studies (Gee, 1991; Street, 1995) and the Theory of Planned Behaviour (Ajzen, 1991), this Mixed- Method approach study examined the role that two out of school reading programmes played in the development of reading behaviours and attitudes of learners from township area called Simonstown, in the Eastern Cape Province. Located within the Pragmativist Paradigm, Mixed Method Research Approach, and Explanatory Design Method as a research design, the study used pre- and post-intervention quantitative questionnaires, semi-structured interpreter-facilitated interviews, structured observations, and the out of school reading programme as an intervention to generate data. The research site and study participants were purposively selected. They included 10 learners from 2 out of school reading programmes that benefited from funding and literacy project training and support called Nal’ibali. The study was designed to evaluate the effectiveness of these out of school reading programmes in improving learners reading behaviours and attitudes, and how the OST reading programmes influenced the reading behaviours and attitudes of the parents. Findings from the data concluded that the certain factors in the OST reading programme in conjunction with the positive influence of the parents and siblings own reading attitudes had a positive effect on learners’ reading attitudes and behaviours.
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Language and literacy development for a Grade 10 English first additional language classroom: a reading to learn case study
- Authors: Mataka, Tawanda Wallace
- Date: 2017
- Subjects: English language -- Study and teching (Secondary) -- South Africa Reading -- Study and teching (Secondary) -- South Africa Literacy -- Study and teching (Secondary) -- South Africa
- Language: English
- Type: Thesis , Masters , MEd
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10962/249 , vital:19941
- Description: The problem of poor reading skills is a serious one in South Africa, with negative implications for learners’ educational achievement. The failure of learners to read at age- and grade-appropriate levels presents a major challenge to the teaching of reading in South African schools. It is against this background that this study aimed at ascertaining the positive impact of the Reading to Learn methodology in improving the literacy levels of learners in a Grade 10 English First Additional Language classroom in a township school. Reading ability levels were established via a passage extracted from a Grade Platinum English First Additional Learner’s book. Pronunciation and word recognition formed the basis of the reading assessment. Reading translates into writing, so the learners were also assessed in comprehension and creative writing. The results indicated that the learners’ reading abilities were weak, the methodology used to teach reading led to research findings that caused the study to yield findings that suggest that RtL may be the solution to reading problems in the classroom. In addition the study revealed that the ability to read corresponds with cognitive development. The study therefore calls for the adoption of RtL to assist in alleviating reading problems in the classroom.
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