Inclusive education in South Africa : the challenges posed to the teacher of the child with a hearing loss
Author(s)
Pottas, LidiaKeywords
Children with hearing lossChallenges in inclusive education
Inclusion of the child with a hearing loss
Inclusive education
Teacher training
Inclusion
Teachers of children with hearing loss
Educational audiologist
Teacher support
Teachers attitudes
Teachers knowledge
Educational audiology
Full record
Show full item recordOnline Access
http://hdl.handle.net/2263/27804http://upetd.up.ac.za/thesis/available/etd-09072005-105219/
Abstract
The entire context of South African education is undergoing a slow, yet definite metamorphosis, and inclusion is now nationally both a constitutional imperative and an unequivocal reality. Teachers are the key role-players in determining the quality of implementation of this new policy. They are expected to embrace the new philosophy, to think and to work in a new frame of reference. Unfortunately, too often change in education has failed because insufficient attention has been paid to the challenges posed to those who are expected to put the change into effect. Against this background the aim of this study is to determine the challenges posed to the teacher of the child with a hearing loss in inclusive education. In order to attain this aim, the study was divided into two sections: a literature study and an empirical study. The literature study offers a review of the development of the inclusive philosophy, with specific reference to the educational inclusion of the child with a hearing loss. The knowledge and attitude of teachers towards inclusive education as well the responsibilities of the teachers of a child with a hearing loss within the South African education system are critically discussed. During the empirical research a descriptive design was followed comprising of questionnaire surveys followed by focus group discussions. The questionnaire surveys explored the knowledge, attitudes and training needs of 220 teachers and 81 student teachers. Focus group discussions were conducted with four parents, five speech therapist/audiologist and four teachers (all actively involved in inclusion programmes) and these results were used to substantiate findings from the questionnaire survey. The results of this study indicate that the teachers in regular education as well as the student teachers had sufficient knowledge about the theoretical aspects of inclusion but they lack knowledge regarding the child with a hearing loss. Aspects that were significantly related to the teachers’ lack of knowledge were their unwillingness to include a child with hearing loss and to a lesser extent their years of teaching experience. It was clear that both the teachers and student teachers appear to have negative attitudes towards the inclusion of children with hearing loss. The negative attitudes of the teachers were, as in the case of knowledge, significantly related to their unwillingness to include a child with a hearing loss and their years of teaching experience, but also to their personal experience with hearing loss. The teachers and student teachers indicated specific needs in terms of further training and the content of training. A wide variety of demands that are posed to teachers with regard to the unique South African context were identified, for example lack of support, lack of training, high teacher/child ratios etc. The implications of this study, which amongst other factors include the motivation for the promotion of educational audiology in order to support and train the teachers of children with a hearing loss in inclusive education, are discussed. The education system is challenged to address the needs of teachers in order to ensure the successful implementation of inclusive education for children with hearing loss.Date
2004-12-04Type
ThesisIdentifier
oai:repository.up.ac.za:2263/27804http://hdl.handle.net/2263/27804
http://upetd.up.ac.za/thesis/available/etd-09072005-105219/
Pottas, L 2004, Inclusive education in South Africa : the challenges posed to the teacher of the child with a hearing loss, DPhil thesis, University of Pretoria, Pretoria, viewed yymmdd < http://upetd.up.ac.za/thesis/available/etd-09072005-105219/ >
Copyright/License
© 2004, University of Pretoria. All rights reserved. The copyright in this work vests in the University of Pretoria. No part of this work may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, without the prior written permission of the University of Pretoria.Collections
Related items
Showing items related by title, author, creator and subject.
-
International Conference on Use of ICT and ODL in Teacher Education : Bihar, IndiaWorld Bank (Washington, DC, 2014-09-10)With Sarva Shiksha Abhiyan (SSA) transitioning towards the Right To Education (RTE), teacher education institutions and systems need to be fully geared up to meet the demands of pre-service and in-service teacher education and their ongoing professional development. Most states do not have adequate systems to provide the necessary cadres of trained elementary level school teachers. It is thus important to enhance the roles and capacities of teacher education institutions in India to support them to become globally competitive, professionally managed, and futuristically progressive to cater to the needs of huge back logs of untrained teachers. This training is crucial to ensure that children at the elementary levels get quality education in accordance with the National Curriculum Framework (NCF) 2005 and its basic tenets of child centered pedagogy.
-
Indonesia - Spending More or Spending Better : Improving Education Financing in IndonesiaWorld Bank (World Bank, Jakarta, 2013-03)The report is divided into two parts.
 The first three chapters show that the vast increase in
 education resources has not been accompanied by a similar
 increase in learning outcomes, and thus highlight the urgent
 need to improve the quality of spending. Chapter one starts
 by describing the complex financing and governance systems.
 With this policy framework in mind, Chapter two focuses on
 the 20 percent rule, analyzing its consequences for budget
 planning and management and examining where resources went
 after this vast increase in spending. The chapter also
 provides some estimates of the cost of meeting future
 government objectives, in the context of discussions on
 expanding compulsory education, and broadening teacher
 certification. Chapter three looks at education outcomes,
 reviewing the significant improvements in access and equity,
 as well as the worrisome trends in learning outcomes. It
 points to improving the quality of education and expanding
 access to secondary and above (especially for the poor) as
 the main challenges in the sector. Given the cost of
 achieving these goals, and the fact that current expenditure
 patterns are unlikely to lead to improvements in learning
 outcomes, the chapter concludes that improving the quality
 of spending in education is now critical. The second part of
 the report focuses on how to improve the quality of spending
 in order to continue expansion and improve learning
 outcomes. In chapter four, the quality of spending issue is
 divided into two areas: i) reassigning or improving programs
 at the central level, and ii) improving management at the
 district and school levels. At the central level, this
 chapter analyzes the Scholarships for the Poor program (BSM)
 and recommends that it be expanded and improved. At the
 sub-national level, the report explores how a combination of
 more efficient teacher management and stronger support for
 schools can improve efficiency and learning outcomes, and
 what the central government s role should be in ensuring
 that these changes occur. Finally, chapter five summarizes
 these recommendations, providing a framework for improving
 the quality of spending and, ultimately, ensuring that this
 spending leads to an improvement in the quality of the
 Indonesian education system.
-
Addressing Gender Inequalities in Curriculum and Education : Review of Literature and Promising Practices to Inform Education Reform Initiatives in ThailandLevtov, Ruti (World Bank, Washington, DC, 2014)In Thailand and worldwide, despite increases in educational enrollment, rigid gender norms dictating appropriate roles and behaviors contribute to the persistence of the gender inequalities. Since education systems are embedded in the broader social context, they reflect the inequalities that exist in society. The structure and content of schooling, textbooks, curricular choices, sex distribution of teachers and administrators, teacher attitudes and behaviors, classroom and discipline practices, and the presence of violence, reflect discriminatory and harmful social norms about the appropriate roles and opportunities for boys and girls (Connell, 1996, 2000, 2010). At the same time, schools have enormous potential to effect social change, transform gender relations, expanding the range of possibilities for both boys and girls (UNGEI, 2012a). This report provides a brief review of the literature and of interventions to promote gender equity through education in several specific areas: textbooks and curriculum; teacher distribution, attitudes, and behaviors; and school violence and discipline. And the report looks at holistic interventions that address multiple dimensions. This review also gives an overview of important steps for assessing gender issues in the educational system, emphasizes the need for rigorous interventions that measure a broad range of outcomes, provides recommendations for policy and programming, and highlights tools and resources.