Educational Change in South Africa

Reflections on Local Realities, Practices, and Reforms

Volume Editor:
The literature on Educational Change has been dominated by research published in the established, liberal democracies. This volume examines Educational Change in South Africa, a country undergoing rapid social and political change, and situated geographically, historically and culturally in the South. What are the meanings and processes of change? How do we explain the contours and contexts of change? What has changed? What has remained the same?

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Preliminary Material
Pages: i–xvii
The Scholarship of Educational Change:
Concepts, Contours, and Contexts
Pages: 1–22
Why do teachers do what they do?
Teacher decision-making in the context of curriculum change in South Africa
Pages: 23–40
Assessing curriculum change in underdeveloped contexts:
A case study of science curriculum reform in South Africa
Pages: 41–56
Between stagnation and unrealistic innovation in the science education curriculum:
Exploring the concept of change within a zone of feasible innovation
Pages: 57–76
Fundamental change in mathematics education:
An analysis of teachers’ classroom practices and conceptions of their discipline
Pages: 77–92
Improving teacher education:
An analysis of the relations of power in mentorship, collaboration and reflection during a teaching practice programme
Pages: 127–146
Diversity and School Reform:
A critique of the scholarship on School Effectiveness and School Improvement
Pages: 147–165
Seeking security:
Jewish education in post-apartheid South Africa
Pages: 167–182
Changing Teachers’ Work at Tshwane High School:
History, Management, Accountability, and Politics
Pages: 183–201
Community engagement at higher education institutions in South Africa:
From a philanthropic approach to a scholarship of engagement
Pages: 203–225
From antiquity to infancy:
Changing institutional cultures at higher education institutions
Pages: 227–246
Organisational change:
From adjusting the clock to morphogenesis
Pages: 267–285
Democratic intent and democratic practice:
Tensions in South African school governance
Pages: 287–299
Index
Pages: 339–341
The book is divided into seven sections: Introduction and Overview, Curriculum and Pedagogy, Teacher Education, Schools, Higher Education, Systemic Change and a Conclusion. Several chapters argue that there is a strong relationship between national and international developments, and educational change. Samoff asks, “Whither Education in South Africa” in the context of history: Bantu Education, People’s Education, and Outcomes-based Education. Other writers analyse the relative autonomy of educational change from the wider social world. De Kock and Slabbert explore the personal growth and professional development of student teachers through teacher education programmes. Soudien and Gilmour conclude by stating the greatest systemic challenge is the poor quality of learning among black students. They say the state produces and reproduces inequities because, inter alia, it has not adequately addressed the apartheid legacy.
South African scholars and students, researchers and change-agents in civil society, and policy-makers will find this collection useful. Academics and practitioners in International Education will also profit from this book.
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