Trainee teachers' observation of learner-centered instruction and assessment as applied by history and social sciences teachers
Abstract
A growing body of research shows that the overall quality of teaching and learning
is improved when learners have the opportunity to become actively involved in the
learning process through which ample opportunities are given to question, apply
and consolidate new knowledge. With the dawning of a new South Africa in 1994,
more emphasis was placed on learner-centred instruction and assessment which
is the reason why policy documents such as the National Curriculum Statement
(NCS) and the Curriculum and Assessment Policy Statement (CAPS) endorsed
this educational approach. The aim of this study is to investigate through the
observation of trainee teachers to what extent History and Social Sciences teachers
have adjusted from their predominately traditional educational paradigm of
transmitted and absorbed knowledge by passive learners to employ different learnercentred
instructional and assessment practices that emphasise the responsibility of
learning into actively engaging learners.
By means of a structured questionnaire a small scale study (n=51) was done
in urban, rural, township, and private schools in the North West and Gauteng
provinces. The findings, inter alia, suggest that although History and Social Sciences
teachers showed a willingness to utilise some of the learner-centred instruction
strategies, their tendency to implement the traditional teacher-centred instruction
strategies were much stronger. The findings further show that teachers preferred to
be the primary assessors of the learning results
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