Opportunities and Challenges for Teacher Education Curriculum in South Africa potx

206 497 0
Opportunities and Challenges for Teacher Education Curriculum in South Africa potx

Đang tải... (xem toàn văn)

Tài liệu hạn chế xem trước, để xem đầy đủ mời bạn chọn Tải xuống

Thông tin tài liệu

Free download from www.hsrcpress.ac.za Free download from www.hsrcpress.ac.za Published by HSRC Press Private Bag X9182, Cape Town, 8000, South Africa www.hsrcpress.ac.za First published 2009 ISBN (paperback) 978-0-7969-2238-0 ISBN (pdf) 978-0-7969-2255-7 © 2009 Human Sciences Research Council Copyedited by Lisa Compton Typeset by Robin Taylor Cover by Fuel Design Print management by comPress Distributed in Africa by Blue Weaver Tel: +27 (0) 21 701 4477; Fax: +27 (0) 21 701 7302 www.oneworldbooks.com Distributed in Europe and the United Kingdom by Eurospan Distribution Services (EDS) Tel: +44 (0) 20 7240 0856; Fax: +44 (0) 20 7379 0609 www.eurospanbookstore.com Distributed in North America by Independent Publishers Group (IPG) Call toll-free: (800) 888 4741; Fax: +1 (312) 337 5985 www.ipgbook.com Tables and figures iv Preface v Acknowledgements vii Acronyms and abbreviations viii Glenda Kruss – Glenda Kruss Free download from www.hsrcpress.ac.za Ursula Hoadley Chaya Herman and Venitha Pillay Crispin Hemson Adele Gordon Adele Gordon Glenda Kruss Appendix List of interviews conducted at each university 175 Appendix Research questions for interviews and documentary analysis 181 Tables A comparison of IPET enrolments at the five cases: 2007 Table 1.2 Total enrolment in IPET across the remainder of the system: 2007 Table 1.3 HEQC accreditation of ACE, BEd and PGCE programmes Table 2.1 Curriculum restructuring in teacher education: 1994–2007 28 Table 3.1 IPET student numbers at Mafikeng campus: 2005–2007 Table 3.2 IPET student numbers at Potchefstroom campus: 2005–2007 Table 5.1 Student numbers in education at UZ: 2000–2005 Table 5.2 UZ Education Faculty structure Table 5.3 UZ Education Faculty research output, measured in South African postsecondary education (SAPSE) units 99 Table 6.1 CPUT academic staff complement by position and campus: 2008 Table 6.2 IPET programme enrolments at CPUT by campus, race and gender: 2007 111 Table 6.3 Free download from www.hsrcpress.ac.za Table 1.1 Assessment and weightings: mathematics and specific subject didactics 33 35 83 91 110 Figure Figure 3.1 iv Steps in the development of the aligned BEd curriculum at NWU 39 118 The Teacher Education in South Africa series is produced as part of the Teacher Education Programme (TEP), funded by the Embassy of the Kingdom of the Netherlands from 2005 to 2008 Free download from www.hsrcpress.ac.za The programme took place at a critical juncture in the development of teacher education in post-apartheid South Africa Since 2004, sustained attention has been given to the improvement of teacher education consequent on the revision of the curriculum and the restructuring of higher education In October 2004, the Council on Higher Education (CHE) initiated a review of teacher education programmes On 26 April 2007, a National Policy Framework for Teacher Education and Development was gazetted This provided the basis for a new system of teacher education and development for a new generation of South African teachers The TEP emerged within this overall context of enhanced attention being given to the improvement of teacher education Its overall goal was ‘to contribute to the knowledge and information base for policy formulation and implementation regarding the organisation and practice of teacher education, with a particular emphasis on initial teacher education (both pre-service and upgrading), as well as the professional development of school leaders and managers’ (CEA, CEPD, EFT, HSRC & SAIDE 2005) The work was organised under four major themes: teacher supply and demand; institutional culture and governance; the development of education management; and literacy and teacher development The programme was designed by a consortium of agencies with considerable expertise and experience in the field: the Centre for Education Policy Development (CEPD); the Human Sciences Research Council (HSRC); the South African Institute for Distance Education (SAIDE); the Centre for Evaluation and Assessment (CEA) at the University of Pretoria; and the Education Foundation Trust (EFT).1 The TEP was developed in consultation with stakeholders such as the national Department of Education, the Ministerial Working Group on Teacher Education, the Deans’ Forum and the Council on Higher Education/HEQC, among others Briefing and consultation continued through the process of research, for the consortium as a whole and in relation to specific projects This is the second of two monographs on the work of a project defined under the theme of institutional culture and governance The project aimed to explore, empirically and conceptually, the impact of two interrelated moments in specific public higher education settings across the provinces: created within specific public higher education institutions, as the outcome of complex forms of institutional restructuring since 1995? impact on the preparation of future educators? The EFT has been disbanded, and uncompleted projects have been taken over by the consortium v The project was operationalised in sequential components Component One comprised a set of literature, conceptual, contextual and empirical overviews, to lay the foundation for the study Component Two focused on the history of the restructuring of teacher education institutions and examined, through a set of 11 case studies, the nature, forms and impact of distinct college incorporation, higher education restructuring and merger processes on the institutional conditions and base for teacher education in universities and technikons Case-study site visits were conducted between February and April 2006 Returning to five of the same sites a year or more later, Component Three built on this analysis by conducting in-depth case studies of curriculum restructuring in the education schools and faculties of each institution Free download from www.hsrcpress.ac.za The present monograph reports on the study conducted to address the second aim, on curriculum restructuring in the new configurations Both monographs are usefully complemented by reports from the other consortium research projects, particularly under the themes of supply and demand of teachers, and of the design and delivery of initial teacher education programmes Michael Cosser, HSRC Organisational Manager, Teacher Education Programme Glenda Kruss, Project Leader vi This study would not have been possible without the active participation of the team of insightful and rigorous researchers who have committed themselves to the project over the past three years It has been a privilege and a pleasure to work with all of them Nor would it have been possible without the ongoing support and willing participation of the managers and academics of the five teacher education faculties and schools, at times under extremely vexing circumstances To the deans, senior managers and academics in education at Cape Peninsula University of Technology, North West University, University of South Africa, University of Witwatersrand and University of Zululand who opened their daily practice to scrutiny, I give grateful acknowledgement of their contribution to research on teacher education Free download from www.hsrcpress.ac.za On the production side, there are those who have contributed to the final product The manuscript has been reviewed by Linda Chisholm of HSRC, Tessa Welch of SAIDE and Jonathan Jansen Their comments and suggestions have helped to create a more nuanced argument and product, in order to open up the debate At the HSRC Press, Inga Norenius has been a wonderful editorial project manager and Lisa Compton has been a meticulous and patient copy editor I am grateful to the Embassy of the Kingdom of the Netherlands for the funding which afforded the opportunity to conduct this research vii Advanced Certificate in Education AELS Applied English Language Studies BEd Bachelor of Education C2005 Curriculum 2005 CHE Council on Higher Education CNE Christian National Education COTEP Committee on Teacher Education Policy CPTD continuing professional teacher development CPUT Cape Peninsula University of Technology DoE Department of Education DoL Department of Labour ECD early childhood development EFT Education Foundation Trust FET Further Education and Training FP Foundation Phase GET General Education and Training HDE Higher Diploma in Education HEDCOM Free download from www.hsrcpress.ac.za ACE Heads of Education Departments Committee HEQC Higher Education Qualifications Framework IP Intermediate Phase IPET initial professional education of teachers JCE Johannesburg College of Education MCTE Ministerial Committee on Teacher Education MEd Master of Education NCHE National Commission on Higher Education NCS National Curriculum Statement NPDE National Professional Diploma in Education NPFTED National Policy Framework for Teacher Education and Development NQF National Qualifications Framework NSE Norms and Standards for Educators NWU North West University OBE outcomes-based education PGCE Postgraduate Certificate in Education SAQA South African Qualifications Authority SP Senior Phase UCT University of Cape Town UNISA University of South Africa UZ University of Zululand Wits University of the Witwatersrand WSoE viii Higher Education Quality Committee HEQF Wits School of Education Introduction Glenda Kruss Free download from www.hsrcpress.ac.za Any contemporary analysis of development and growth prospects in South Africa quickly moves to highlight the low levels of education and the shortage of critical skills among the population – which in turn shifts the focus to the poor quality of the schooling system Analysts and activists ponder why it has not been possible to transform more substantially the legacy of the apartheid schooling system Explanations are sought and strategies have been initiated in relation to unequal financing and resourcing, the nature of school leadership and administration, the controversial change to an outcomes-based curriculum and the quality of teachers However, there has not been enough sustained focus on the pivotal role of the teacher education system that produces South Africa’s future teachers After 1994, the recommendations of the National Teacher Education Audit (Hofmeyr & Hall 1995) initiated a process to enhance the ability of the teacher education system to produce quality teachers who can produce quality students – that is, students who can become well-educated citizens able to participate actively in a democratic society and in the modern globalised economy Over a 10-year period, the teacher education landscape was transformed significantly As each new policy shift occurred, there has been analysis of the proposed change and its likely implications, but to date there has been little systematic, longitudinal reflection on the impact on individual institutions and the system as a whole over the past decade Such was the impetus for the initiation of a research project to investigate the nature of institutional restructuring, and the impact of change on the ability of the teacher education system to produce the kinds of teachers required (Kruss 2008) This monograph contributes to that research agenda, focusing on shifts in the official and espoused curricula of initial professional education of teachers (IPET) programmes – the Bachelor of Education (BEd) and the Postgraduate Certificate in Education (PGCE) qualifications – at institutional level in the context of national institutional and curriculum restructuring It aims to delineate the conditions of possibility and constraint for the development of future teachers – the opportunities and challenges faced by teacher educators in diverse university contexts Curriculum restructuring in diverse institutional contexts The research project drew on and extended research on systemic change in teacher education begun in the late 1990s by scholars such as Jansen (2002, 2004) and Lewin, Samuel and Sayed (2003), among others (Mfusi 2004; Sehoole 2005) It attempted a broad systemic sweep of the complex interplay between dynamics at the macro-, meso- and micro-levels: the interaction between national policy, institutional strategies and education faculties or schools with their academics The premise was that in order to understand the potential of the emerging new teacher education system, we need to research the ways in which distinct universities are changing, shaped by institutional micro-politics in complex forms of interaction with government frameworks and actions The first set of case studies we conducted in 2006 was extremely ambitious and wide-ranging in its focus on the macro-, meso- and micro-levels simultaneously In effect, the analysis provided the basis for the construction of an institutional history of teacher education over the last 10 years (Kruss 2008) The case studies covered internal and external trajectories of institutional restructuring in diverse university contexts and began to elaborate the impact on IPET programmes in terms of organisational shifts, staff and student shifts, and programme and curriculum shifts The longitudinal multiple comparative case-study design of the research meant that specific trends and dynamics in 11 of the 22 universities that offer teacher education could be aggregated with confidence to illuminate conditions of possibility and constraint across the national teacher education system Free download from www.hsrcpress.ac.za The initial intention was that on this basis we would investigate emerging new institutional cultures and the ways in which they impact on future teachers While the challenge of merging unequal partners had been reported on in the international literature to a limited extent (Harman 2002), in the South African research literature there had not yet been a study of the challenges of institutional cultures that emerge out of externally mandated mergers, particularly where the merged institutions are very diverse in their missions (such as the merger of a university and technikon, as at the University of South Africa (UNISA)), or culturally uncomplementary (as in the merger of Potchefstroom and North-West at North West University (NWU)) or unequal in status (as in the merger of a university and college, as at the University of the Witwatersrand (Wits) and the Cape Peninsula University of Technology (CPUT)) However, a study of institutional culture as intended proved implausible when the time came to begin research in 2007, for a combination of pragmatic, conceptual and methodological reasons The study of institutional cultures in South African higher education is not yet advanced and is conceptually relatively limited The focus has tended to be on the ‘fit’ between an institution’s historical identity, tradition and culture, and those of a shifting student population, with the emphasis on student access and success (Barnes 2005; Cross 2004; Erasmus 2006; McKinney 2004; Steyn & Van Zyl 2000; Thaver 2006; Van Zyl, Steyn & Orr 2003; Walker 2005) The purpose of our study was different Ideally, we wanted to focus on how academic teacher educators were shifting their identities as they became located in new institutions that were created by external mandate of government policy, how these dynamics were informing their curricula and approaches towards their roles as teacher educators, and how the conditions for teacher education were shifting as a result.2 What are the conditions for initial teacher education in an institutional context characterised by potentially conflicting values and identities, and shaped by former old and emerging new institutional cultures, that have to be managed to create a synergy of purpose? In 2007, we found that South African universities were too close to the point of grappling with the demands of merger implementation for substantial change in identifiable institutional cultures to be discernible and ‘researchable’ We felt that it was premature to study emerging new institutional cultures, given the typical definition of institutional culture as deep-rooted or historically transmitted sets of values and assumptions (Harman 2002; Van Zyl, Steyn & Orr 2003) We thus sought Trowler (1998) has conducted research along these lines on academic responses to a new national policy framework in higher education in the United Kingdom What kind of commitment is there within your university for education in general and for IPET specifically? faculties or schools? What changes have you tried to initiate to facilitate integration of academics and programmes? Free download from www.hsrcpress.ac.za In what ways have you tried to change the content and form of your IPET curriculum since 2000 and why? curriculum restructuring: – Introduction of norms and standards – College incorporation – University merger – HEQC processes 2005/06 – NPFTED 2007 What are the processes of IPET curriculum restructuring that you have initiated in your faculty or school since 2000? curriculum restructuring: – Introduction of norms and standards – College incorporation – University merger – HEQC processes 2005/06 – NPFTED 2007 IV Interview questions: university managers 184 What changes has your university tried to initiate to facilitate integration of IPET academics, programmes and curricula? What is the relative position and standing of IPET within the university? example, what is proposed in the institutional operating plan? What is proposed in the programme qualification mix? to produce future teachers? to IPET within the university? – State of buildings – Suitability for methodology employed publications? Free download from www.hsrcpress.ac.za programmes and for accrediting new programmes? What support does your university offer faculties and academics for curriculum restructuring processes? V Data on IPET programmes, student numbers and staff profiles Update/obtain a clear description of programmes and qualifications offered, to ascertain relative significance/status of IPET and to analyse IPET in terms of school phase and niche specialisation Update/obtain total student numbers in IPET, continuing professional development and postgraduate programmes – if possible, trend data – to ascertain relative significance/status of IPET over last ten (or three, as required in the HEQC documents) years, and shifts in student demographic profile over time/following incorporation or merger Obtain figures on the financial support offered to IPET students – including how many students in what school phase or niche specialisation: 2007 to increase number of IPET enrolments) Update/obtain a clear description of the staff profile: position/status in the organisation and demographic profile (especially higher degree qualifications) in relation to total staff complement profile 185 VI Documentary analysis: IPET programmes and curricula Based on an analysis of IPET programmes and curricula as reflected in formal documents such as faculty handbooks, course outlines or student notes, describe the main thrust of subject content in the curriculum programme structure? content of the subject? ‘expert’ or at the level they will teach? Describe the pedagogical theory underpinning curriculum Free download from www.hsrcpress.ac.za and weight in the programme structure? How are students grouped for instruction, if evident? What knowledge about the contexts within which teaching will take place is important for future teachers? programme structure? How long is teaching practice and when does it occur? programme structure? VII Documentary analysis: the university and the faculty/school/department 186 Describe the main thrust of the restructured university’s current mission and vision from formal documents (accessed via websites and promotional material) Analyse the main thrust of the restructured education faculty, school or department’s current vision in general and in relation to IPET programmes ADELE GORDON is an independent education consultant working in the area of policy and rural development CRISPIN HEMSON is a Senior Lecturer in the Faculty of Education at the University of KwaZulu-Natal and Policy Studies in the Faculty of Education at the University of Pretoria a post-doctoral fellow in the School of Education at the University of Cape Town GLENDA KRUSS is a Chief Research Specialist in the Education, Science and Skills Development research programme at the Human Sciences Research Council Free download from www.hsrcpress.ac.za University of Pretoria 187 Free download from www.hsrcpress.ac.za Adler, J & Davis, Z 2006 Opening another black box: Researching mathematics for teaching in mathematics teacher education Journal for Research in Mathematics Education 37(4): 270–296 Allais, M.S 2007 Beneath the assumptions: Understanding the failures of the South African National Qualifications Framework as a driver of educational reform in post-apartheid South Africa Paper presented at the Kenton Phumula Conference, Pumula Beach, KwaZulu-Natal (25–28 October) Barnes, T 2005 Politics of the mind and body: Gender and institutional culture in African universities Paper prepared for the South African Association for Research and Development in Higher Education (SAARDHE) Conference, University of KwaZulu-Natal (June) Bernstein, B 1990 The structuring of pedagogic discourse Vol of Class, codes and control London: Routledge Free download from www.hsrcpress.ac.za Bernstein, B 1996 Pedagogy, symbolic control and identity: Theory, research, critique London: Taylor and Francis Bernstein, B 2000 Pedagogy, symbolic control and identity: Theory, research and critique (revised edition) Oxford: Rowman and Littlefield Breier, M (ed.) 2001 Curriculum restructuring in higher education in post-apartheid South Africa Bellville: Education Policy Unit, University of the Western Cape Brodie, K 2004 Textures of talking and thinking in secondary mathematics classrooms PhD thesis, Stanford University Bunting, I 2004 The higher education landscape under apartheid In N Cloete, R Fehnel, P Maassen, T Moja, H Perold & T Gibbon (eds), Transformation in higher education: Global pressures and local realities in South Africa Cape Town: Juta Carnoy, M., Elmore, R & Santee, L 2003 The new accountability: High schools and highstakes testing Carrim, N., Postma, D & Christie, P 2003 The incorporation of colleges of education into universities in the provision of teacher education: The case of the Johannesburg College Sayed (eds), Changing patterns of teacher education in South Africa: Policy, practice and prospects Johannesburg: Heinemann CEA, CEPD, EFT, HSRC & SAIDE 2005 Teacher education in South Africa Proposal for a research and development programme to be conducted by a consortium comprising Centre for Evaluation and Assessment (CEA), University of Pretoria; Centre for Education Policy Development (CEPD); Education Foundation Trust (EFT); Human Sciences Research Council (HSRC); and South African Institute for Distance Education (SAIDE) Unpublished funding proposal submitted to the Royal Netherlands Embassy CEPD (Centre for Education Policy Development) 2007 A survey analysis of initial professional education of teachers (IPET) programmes in South Africa Johannesburg: CEPD CHE (Council on Higher Education) 2002 Proceedings of the Colloquium on Building Relationships between Higher Education and the Private and Public Sectors (Johannesburg, 27–28 June) Pretoria: CHE 189 Chisholm, L., Volmink, J., Ndhlovu, T., Potenza, E., Mahomed, H., Muller, J., Lubisi, C., Vinjevold, P., Ngozi, L., Malan, B & Mphahlele, L 2000 A South African curriculum for the twenty-first century: Report of the Review Committee on Curriculum 2005 Pretoria: Department of Education Crook, D 2002 Educational studies and teacher education British Journal of Educational Studies 50(1): 57–75 Cross, M 1998 Procedures and criteria for quality-assuring teacher education in South Africa Document produced for the Committee on Teacher Education Policy (COTEP), Ministry of Education, and to be used by providers of teacher education until the Higher Education Council and the South African Qualifications Authority (SAQA) define a quality-assurance policy Cross, M 2004 Institutionalising campus diversity in South African higher education: Review of diversity scholarship and diversity education Higher Education 47: 387–410 Cross, M., Loots, M & Fourie, J 1998 Guidelines for quality assurance in teacher education Pretoria: DoE Free download from www.hsrcpress.ac.za De Clercq, F 1991 Black universities as contested terrains: The politics of progressive engagement Perspectives in Education 12(2): 49–64 DoE (Department of Education) 2000a Norms and standards for educators Government Gazette No 20844, February Pretoria: DoE DoE 2000b Criteria for recognition and evaluation of qualifications Government Gazette No 21565, 22 September Pretoria: DoE DoE 2000c A South African curriculum for the twenty-first century: Report of the Review Committee on Curriculum 2005 Pretoria: DoE DoE 2001a National curriculum statement: Overview Pretoria: DoE DoE 2001b Revised national curriculum statement grades R–9 (schools) Pretoria: DoE DoE 2003 Higher education restructuring and transformation: Guidelines for mergers and incorporations Pretoria: DoE DoE 2004 The higher education qualifications framework Draft for discussion Pretoria: DoE DoE 2005 A national framework for teacher education in South Africa Report of the Ministerial Committee on Teacher Education, 16 June Pretoria: DoE DoE 2006 The national policy framework for teacher education and development in South Africa Draft for discussion Pretoria: DoE DoE 2007a Fundza Lushaka bursary programme: Frequently asked questions Occasional pamphlet Pretoria: DoE DoE 2007b The higher education qualifications framework Government Gazette No 30353 Pretoria: DoE DoE 2007c The national policy framework for teacher education and development in South Africa Government Gazette No 29832, 26 April Pretoria: DoE DoE & DoL (Department of Labour) 2003 Report of the study team on the implementation of the National Qualifications Framework Pretoria: DoE and DoL 190 DoE, SAQA (South African Qualifications Authority) & CHE 2007 Frequently asked questions on the Higher Education Qualifications Framework (HEQF): Joint FAQs by DoE, SAQA and CHE Pretoria: DoE, SAQA and CHE Eloff, T 2007 Vice-chancellor’s letter 29 June Accessed August 2007, http://www.nwu ac.za/news/lettervc/index.html Ensor, P 2001 Academic programme planning in South African higher education: Three institutional case studies In M Brier (ed.), Curriculum restructuring in higher education in post-apartheid South Africa Bellville: Education Policy Unit, University of the Western Cape Ensor, P 2002 Curriculum In N Cloete, R Fehnel, P Maassen, T Moja, H Perold & T Gibbon (eds), Transformation in higher education: Global pressures and local realities in South Africa Cape Town: Juta Free download from www.hsrcpress.ac.za Ensor, P 2004 Contesting discourses in higher education curriculum restructuring in South Africa Higher Education 48: 339–359 Erasmus, A 2005 Design considerations in the development of a new academic programme structure Paper prepared for the Higher Education Quality Committee/ Council for Higher Education Workshop: Developing a New Academic Organisational and Programme Structure in Merged Higher Education Institutions, Pretoria (18–20 September) http://www.che.ac.za/documents/d000132/index.php Erasmus, Z.E 2006 Living the future now: ‘Race’ and challenges of transformation in higher education South African Journal of Higher Education 20(3): 51–63 Fataar, A 2007 Address at the Seminar for Management of the WCED: Strengthening Ideals of a Developmental State, Cape Town (31 August) Furlong, J 2005 New labour and teacher education: The end of an era Oxford Review of Education 31(1): 119–134 Goodson, I 1991 Studying curriculum: A social constructionist perspective In I.F Goodson and R Walker (eds), Biography, identity and schooling: Episodes in educational research London: Falmer Press Griesel, H 2002 Universities and the world of work: A case study on graduate attributes Paper presented at the CHE Colloquium on Building Relationships between Higher Education and the Private and Public Sectors, Johannesburg (27–28 June) Griesel, H (ed.) 2004 Curriculum responsiveness: Case studies in higher education Pretoria: South African University Vice Chancellors Association (SAUVCA) Habib, A., Bentley, K & Morrow, S 2006 Academic freedom, institutional autonomy and the corporatised university in South Africa Research report prepared for the CHE Task Team on HEIAAF (Higher Education Institutional Autonomy and Academic Freedom), Pretoria Harley, K & Menon, K 2007 Preliminary insights from the national teacher education review Paper presented at the Conference on Teacher Education, Johannesburg (28–29 May) Harley, K & Parker, B 2006 Teacher education in South Africa: Social change, quality assurance and democracy South African Journal of Higher Education 20(6): 867–878 Harley, K & Wedekind, V 2003 A time for discipline: Disciplinary displacement and mythological truths Journal of Education 31: 25–46 191 Harley, K & Wedekind, V 2004 Political change, curriculum change and social formation, 1990 to 2002 In L Chisholm (ed.), Changing class: Education and social change in post-apartheid South Africa Cape Town: HSRC Press Harman, K 2002 Merging divergent campus cultures into coherent educational communities: Challenges for higher education leaders Higher Education 44: 91–114 Hemson, C 2005 Teacher education: The challenge of diversity in South Africa Cape Town: HSRC Press HEQC (Higher Education Quality Committee) 2004a Framework for a national review of professional and academic education programmes offered by higher education institutions in South Africa Pretoria: CHE HEQC 2004b Criteria for programme accreditation Pretoria: CHE HEQC 2005 National review of professional and academic programmes in education offered by higher education institutions in South Africa Briefing document Pretoria: CHE Free download from www.hsrcpress.ac.za HEQC 2007 HEQC evaluative study of institutional audits 2006 Pretoria: CHE and HEQC Sayed (eds), Changing patterns of teacher education in South Africa: Policy, practice and prospects Johannesburg: Heinemann Hofmeyr, J & Hall, G 1995 The national teacher education audit: Synthesis report Johannesburg: Edupol Jansen, J 1998 Curriculum reform in South Africa: A critical analysis of outcomes-based education Cambridge Journal of Education (28)3: 321–331 Jansen, J 2000 Mode knowledge and institutional life: Taking Gibbons on a walk through a South African university In A Kraak (ed.), Changing modes: New knowledge production and its implications for higher education in South Africa Pretoria: HSRC Jansen, J (ed.) 2002 Mergers in higher education: Lessons learned in transitional contexts Pretoria: UNISA Press Jansen, J 2004 How mergers shape the institutional curriculum Education as Change 7(2): 3–19 Also published as guest editorial in South African Journal of Higher Education 18(1): 5–18 Jansen, J 2006 What three new books tell us about the state of education scholarship in South Africa Perspectives in Education 24(2): 187–190 Jansen, J (forthcoming) Knowledge in the blood: How white students remember and enact the past Palo Alto, CA: Stanford University Press Jansen, J & Christie, P (eds) 1999 Changing curriculum: Studies on outcomes-based education in South Africa Cape Town: Juta Jonathan, R 2007 Academic freedom, institutional autonomy and public accountability in higher education: A framework for analysis of the ‘state–sector’ relationship in South Africa Research report prepared for the CHE Task Team on HEIAAF (Higher Education Institutional Autonomy and Academic Freedom), Pretoria Kaniki, P 2007 A survey analysis of initial professional education of teachers (IPET) programmes in South Africa Paper presented at the Conference on Teacher Education, Johannesburg (28–29 May) 192 Kies, H.N (ed.) 1997 Rationalisation at colleges of education Education Journal 67(3): 6–10 Kraak, A 2000 Changing modes: A brief overview of the mode knowledge debate and its impact on South African policy formulation In A Kraak, Changing modes: New knowledge production and its implications for higher education in South Africa Pretoria: HSRC Kruss, G 2002 Educational restructuring in South Africa at provincial level: The case of the Western Cape In P Kallaway, G Kruss, A Fataar & G Donn, Education after apartheid: South African education in transition Cape Town: University of Cape Town Press Kruss, G 2007 Trajectories of restructuring: The changing context for initial teacher education in South Africa Paper presented at the conference, Teacher development and institutional change in an evolving education context, 28 and 29 May 2007, Kopanong, Johannesburg Free download from www.hsrcpress.ac.za Kruss, G 2008 Teacher education and institutional change in South Africa Cape Town: HSRC Press Kuhn, T 1962 The structure of scientific revolutions Chicago: University of Chicago Press Changing patterns of teacher education in South Africa: Policy, practice and prospects Johannesburg: Heinemann Leyendecker, R 2005 Curriculum, assessment and examinations in sub-Saharan secondary education Report presented at a World Bank Seminar, Windhoek Ludlow, H 2007 Using local history to apprentice undergraduate students into the practices of the historian South African Historical Journal 57: 201–219 Mawasha, A.L 2006 Turfloop: Where an idea was expressed, hijacked and redeemed In M Nkomo & D Swart (eds), Within the realm of possibility: From disadvantage to development at the University of Fort Hare and the University of the North, 65–84 Cape Town: HSRC Press McKinney, C 2004 ‘It’s just a story’: White students’ difficulties in reading the apartheid past Perspectives in Education 22(4): 37–45 McMillan, W 2001 Explaining differential performance of teacher college students PhD thesis, University of Western Cape McMillan, W 2002 Research report for the Faculty of Education, Cape Technikon Unpublished research report MCTE (Ministerial Committee on Teacher Education) 2006 Report of the Ministerial Committee on Teacher Education Cape Town: Ministry of Education Menon, K & Harley, K 2007 Preliminary insights from the national teacher education review Paper presented at the Conference on Teacher Development and Institutional Change in an Evolving Education Context, Kopanong, Gauteng (28–29 May) Mfusi, M.X 2004 The effects of higher education mergers on the resultant curriculum of the combined institutions South African Journal of Higher Education 18(1): 98–110 Ministers of Education and Labour 2007 Enhancing the efficacy and efficiency of the National Qualifications Framework Joint policy statement Pretoria: Ministry of Education and Ministry of Labour 193 Ministry of Education 2002 Transformation and restructuring: A new institutional landscape for higher education in South Africa June Accessed 23 July 2008, http:// www.education.gov.za/dynamic/dynamic.aspx?pageid=329&catid=10&category=Reports &legtype=null Ministry of Education 2006 Ministerial statement on higher education funding: 2006/7 to 2008/9 May Pretoria: Ministry of Education Moll, I 2002 Clarifying constructivism in a context of curriculum change Journal of Education 27: 5–32 Morrow, S 2008 Race, redress and historically black universities In K Bentley & A Habib (eds), Racial redress and citizenship in South Africa Cape Town: HSRC Press Morrow, W 2001 Scriptures and practices Perspectives in Education (19)1: 87–106 Morrow, W 2003 Epistemic values in curriculum transformation In P Naude & N Cloete (eds), A tale of three countries: Social sciences curriculum transformations in southern Africa Cape Town: Juta and Centre for Higher Education Transformation (CHET) Free download from www.hsrcpress.ac.za Morrow, W 2004a Investigation into the future configuration of the College of Education and the School of Education at Wits, May 2004 Report to the vice-chancellor, University of Witwatersrand Morrow, W 2004b Consolidated sector response to the draft Higher Education Qualifications Framework (HEQF) policy, July 2004 Pretoria: South African University Vice Chancellors Association (SAUVCA) Morrow, W 2007 What is teacher’s work? Journal of Education 41: 3–20 Creating critical discursive spaces for professional teacher development: Research, policy, theory and practice of teacher education in context National Framework for Teacher Education: Document Pretoria: Ministry of Education Mosia, N.T 2005 Operational planning for the new programme structure in merged higher education institutions Paper prepared for the Higher Education Quality Committee/ Council for Higher Education Workshop: Developing a New Academic Organisational and Programme Structure in Merged Higher Education Institutions, Pretoria (18–20 September) http://www.che.ac.za/documents/d000132/index.php Muller, J 2000 Reclaiming knowledge: Social theory, curriculum and education policy London: Routledge Falmer Education in retrospect: Policy and implementation since 1990 Pretoria: HSRC; London: Institute of Education, University of London (eds), Knowledge, curriculum and qualifications for South African further education Cape Town: HSRC Press Muller, J & Gamble, J 2007 Curriculum and structuralist sociology: The theory of codes and knowledge structures In B McGraw, E Baker & P Peterson (eds), International encyclopedia of education (3rd edition) Oxford: Elsevier Muller, J & Taylor, N 1995 Knowledges sacred and profane: Schooling and everyday life Social Epistemology 9(3): 257–275 194 Naidoo, D 2005 Establishing baseline programme intelligence: Programme review at Tshwane University of Technology Paper prepared for the Higher Education Quality Committee/Council for Higher Education Workshop: Developing a New Academic Organisational and Programme Structure in Merged Higher Education Institutions, Pretoria (18–20 September) http://www.che.ac.za/documents/d000132/index.php Naude, P 2003 Where has my department gone? Curriculum transformation and academic restructuring In P Naude & N Cloete, A tale of three countries: Social sciences curriculum transformations in southern Africa Cape Town: Juta and Centre for Higher Education Transformation (CHET) NCHE (National Commission on Higher Education) 1996 Framework for transformation Discussion document Nieman, M.M & Monyai, R.B 2005 The educator as mediator of learning Pretoria: Van Schaik Free download from www.hsrcpress.ac.za Nkomo, M & Swart, D 2006 Introduction In M Nkomo & D Swart (eds), Within the realm of possibility: From disadvantage to development at the University of Fort Hare and the University of the North, 1–14 Cape Town: HSRC Press Odora-Hoppers, C 2006 Constructing a conceptual framework for HBUs in a developmental paradigm In M Nkomo & D Swart (eds), Within the realm of possibility: From disadvantage to development at the University of Fort Hare and the University of the North, 47–64 Cape Town: HSRC Press Ogude, N., Nel, H & Oosthuizen, M 2005 The challenge of curriculum responsiveness in South African higher education Paper prepared for the Higher Education Quality Committee/Council for Higher Education Workshop: Developing a New Academic Organisational and Programme Structure in Merged Higher Education Institutions, Pretoria (18–20 September) http://www.che.ac.za/documents/d000132/index.php Parker, B 2003 Roles and responsibilities, institutional landscapes and curriculum mindscapes: A partial view of teacher education policy in South Africa, 1990 to 2000 In Changing patterns of teacher education in South Africa: Policy, practice and prospects Johannesburg: Heinemann Parker, D & Adler, J 2005 Constraint or catalyst? The regulation of teacher education in South Africa Journal of Education 36: 59–78 Parker, B., Cross, M., Rees, S & Gultig, J 1997a A systemic model for teacher education in South Africa Discussion document produced for the Ministry of Education by the Technical Committee appointed by the National Department of Education to revise norms and standards for teacher education Pretoria: DoE Parker, B., Cross, M., Rees, S & Gultig, J 1997b Norms and standards for teacher education, training and development Discussion document Technical Committee on the Revision of Norms and Standards for Teacher Education Parker, B., Cross, M., Rees, S & Gultig, J 1998 Norms and standards for educators Technical Committee on the Revision of Norms and Standards for Educators Pretoria: DoE Parker, B & Deacon, R 2006 Theory and practice: South African teacher educators on teacher education Johannesburg: CEPD 195 Parker, B & Harley, K 2006 The NQF as a socially inclusive and cohesive system: Communities of practice and trust Paper presented at the 2nd Annual NQF Colloquium, Johannesburg (August) Patrick, H 1986 From Cross to CATE: The universities and teacher education over the past century Oxford Review of Education 1(3): 243–261 Phillips, R & Furlong, J (eds) 2001 Education, reform and the state: Twenty-five years of policy, politics and practice London: Routledge Prinsloo, R 2005 Process for and conduct of programme review: The UNISA case study Paper prepared for the Higher Education Quality Committee/Council for Higher Education Workshop: Developing a New Academic Organisational and Programme Structure in Merged Higher Education Institutions, Pretoria (18–20 September) http:// www.che.ac.za/documents/d000132/index.php Reeves, C 2005 The effect of ‘Opportunity to Learn’ and classroom pedagogy on mathematics achievement in schools serving low socio-economic status communities in the Cape Peninsula PhD thesis, University of Cape Town Free download from www.hsrcpress.ac.za Robinson, M n.d The capacity of teacher education in the Western Cape to meet the needs and demands of the education system Unpublished presentation Cape Technikon Robinson, M & McMillan, W 2006 Who teachers the teachers? Identity, discourse and policy in teacher education Teaching and Teacher Education 22(3): 327–336 Rusznyak, L 2008 Learning to teach: Developmental teaching patterns of student teachers PhD thesis, University of the Witwatersrand and priorities In L Chisholm, Changing class: Education and social change in postapartheid South Africa Cape Town: HSRC Press Schofield, J 1993 Increasing the generalisability of qualitative research In M Hammersley (ed.), Social research: Philosophy, politics and practice London: Sage Publications in association with Open University Press Sehoole, M.T.C 2005 The politics of mergers in higher education in South Africa Higher Education 50:159–179 have to lose? Journal of Education 34: 23–38 The Star Series: Education in South Africa Today Wits School of Education, University of the Witwatersrand education Journal of Education 24: 5–30 Simpson, M 2006 Field experience in distance-delivered initial education programmes Journal of Technology and Teacher Education 14(2): 241–256 Singh, M 2001 ‘Solutions’ for the future Paper presented at Privileges Lost, Responsibilities Gained: Reconstructing Higher Education, a Global Symposium on the Future of Higher Education, Columbia University Teachers College, the Futures Project, the Centre for Higher Education Policy Studies, the Centre for Higher Education 196 Slonimsky, L 2007 Untangling authority, authoring democracy: Towards a South African teacher education research agenda Paper presented at the 14th International Learning Conference, University of the Witwatersrand, June 26–29 2007 Griesel (ed.) Curriculum responsiveness: Case studies in higher education Pretoria: SAUVCA Soudien, C 2003 Notions of teacher professionalism in the context of a racially Changing patterns of teacher education in South Africa: Policy, practice and prospects Johannesburg: Heinemann Soudien, C 2008 Misrecognition: Policy in pursuit of justice? Paper presented at the EASA/ OVSA Conference, Langebaan (11 January) Free download from www.hsrcpress.ac.za Steyn, M.E & Van Zyl, M 2000 ‘Like that statue on Jammie Stairs’: Some students’ perceptions of UCT’s institutional culture in 1999 Cape Town: Institute for Intercultural and Diversity Studies of Southern Africa (INCUDISA), University of Cape Town http:// incudisa.uct.ac.za Taylor, N 2000 ‘Anything but knowledge’: The case of the undisciplined curriculum Paper presented at the International Conference on Designing Education for the Learning Society, Enschede, Netherlands (5–8 November) Taylor, N & Vinjevold, P 1999 Getting learning right Johannesburg: Joint Education Trust (JET) Thaver, L 2006 ‘At home’, institutional culture and higher education: Some methodological considerations Perspectives in Education 24(1): 15–26 Trowler, P 1998 Academics responding to change: New higher education frameworks and academic cultures Buckingham: Society for Research into Higher Education and Open University Press Van Aswegen, S 2006 North West University BEd coordinating committee (Potchefstroom, Mafikeng, Vaal Triangle campuses): Steps in the alignment process of BEd programmes Mimeo Van Zyl, M., Steyn, M & Orr, W 2003 ‘This is where I want to belong’: Institutional culture at Wits – staff perceptions and experiences in 2002 Cape Town: Institute for Intercultural and Diversity Studies of Southern Africa (INCUDISA), University of Cape Town Walker, M 2005 Race is nowhere and race is everywhere: Narratives from black and white South African university students in post-apartheid South Africa British Journal of Sociology of Education 26(1): 41–54 Weiler, H.N 2005 Ambivalence and the politics of knowledge: The struggle for change in German higher education Higher Education (49): 177–195 Welch, T & Gultig, J 2002 Becoming competent: Initiatives for the improvement of teacher education in South Africa, 1995–2002 Paper presented at Pan-Commonwealth Conference, Durban (July) Designing and delivering distance education: Quality criteria and case studies from South Africa Johannesburg: National Association of Distance Education Organisation in South Africa (NADEOSA) 197 Wheelahan, L 2007 How competency-based training locks the working class out of powerful knowledge: A modified Bernsteinian analysis British Journal of Sociology of Education 28(5): 637–651 Woodward, R 2005 Approaches to academic programme consolidation Paper prepared for the Higher Education Quality Committee/Council for Higher Education Workshop: Developing a New Academic Organisational and Programme Structure in Merged Higher Education Institutions, Pretoria (18–20 September) http://www.che.ac.za/documents/d000132/index.php WSoE (Wits School of Education) 2006 PGCE submission, HEQC review English Journal of Education for Teaching 24(1): 51–62 A reply to Michelson’s ‘On trust, desire and the sacred: A response to Johan Muller’s Reclaiming Knowledge’ Journal of Education 36: 7–18 Free download from www.hsrcpress.ac.za Education in retrospect: Policy and implementation since 1990 Cape Town: HSRC Press Knowledge, curriculum and qualifications for South African further education, chap Cape Town: HSRC Press Knowledge, curriculum and qualifications for South African further education Cape Town: HSRC Press 198 ... within the new South African policy framework teacher educators have the potential power to ‘redefine knowledge and practices for teacher education and to re-insert disciplined and disciplinary inquiry... nature, forms and impact of distinct college incorporation, higher education restructuring and merger processes on the institutional conditions and base for teacher education in universities and. .. funding Programme and curriculum change within institutions may increasingly be driven by changing funding regimes and pressures (efficiency and financial viability concerns) Curriculum change in

Ngày đăng: 22/03/2014, 19:20

Từ khóa liên quan

Tài liệu cùng người dùng

  • Đang cập nhật ...

Tài liệu liên quan