The crisis in South African schooling is not new. It predates the achievement of democracy in 1994 and has been an ongoing refrain in public discourse since 1994. What is new is the emerging consensus on its dimensions and causes. Since the 1990s, both the government and donors have invested substantial resources in understanding what exactly the problems may be. The government has not been slow to respond to such findings, but in the welter of everyday crisis talk, these responses have gone largely unnoticed and are rarely analysed and discussed. The resulting public debate is the poorer for it. It is important to analyse these directions, however, and to understand them, as they form part of a wider palimpsest of debates and approaches ...
In Learning as Development, Daniel A. Wagner offers a timely intervention in the discussion of what ...
Since the dawn of democracy in South Africa, education has been promulgated as an equalizing princip...
All families would like to see their children attain success through formal education. The child is ...
In 1995, eminent social scientist Mark Orkin described the apartheid-era Human Sciences Research Cou...
Assessment of the legacy of apartheid at the end of the apartheid era in South Africa highlighted ma...
Press. pp 238. At present there is a particular concern in South Africa about the poor reading perfo...
That education has the potential for transformation, despite its obvious potential for repression, i...
Democratic Education: Ethnographic Challenges is an important resource for all who are interested no...
The focus of this collection (comprised of two main sections, seventeen chapters and a synthesis) is...
Review articleEducation for transformation Four events on educational responses to neoliberalism and...
D. REYNOLDS, B. CREEMERS, S. STRING FIELD, C. TEDDLIE & G. SCHAFFER. World Class Schools: Intern...
Bitzer, E. (Ed.). (2009) Higher education in South Africa: Ascholarly look behind the scenes. Stelle...
Abstract: SEARLE's book is crucial reading for those interested in critical pedagogy. Based on ...
Education has been identified as a priority area by the South African government, in particular by t...
This paper's primary endeavour is to redress part ia l ly a pervasive tendency in analyses of S...
In Learning as Development, Daniel A. Wagner offers a timely intervention in the discussion of what ...
Since the dawn of democracy in South Africa, education has been promulgated as an equalizing princip...
All families would like to see their children attain success through formal education. The child is ...
In 1995, eminent social scientist Mark Orkin described the apartheid-era Human Sciences Research Cou...
Assessment of the legacy of apartheid at the end of the apartheid era in South Africa highlighted ma...
Press. pp 238. At present there is a particular concern in South Africa about the poor reading perfo...
That education has the potential for transformation, despite its obvious potential for repression, i...
Democratic Education: Ethnographic Challenges is an important resource for all who are interested no...
The focus of this collection (comprised of two main sections, seventeen chapters and a synthesis) is...
Review articleEducation for transformation Four events on educational responses to neoliberalism and...
D. REYNOLDS, B. CREEMERS, S. STRING FIELD, C. TEDDLIE & G. SCHAFFER. World Class Schools: Intern...
Bitzer, E. (Ed.). (2009) Higher education in South Africa: Ascholarly look behind the scenes. Stelle...
Abstract: SEARLE's book is crucial reading for those interested in critical pedagogy. Based on ...
Education has been identified as a priority area by the South African government, in particular by t...
This paper's primary endeavour is to redress part ia l ly a pervasive tendency in analyses of S...
In Learning as Development, Daniel A. Wagner offers a timely intervention in the discussion of what ...
Since the dawn of democracy in South Africa, education has been promulgated as an equalizing princip...
All families would like to see their children attain success through formal education. The child is ...