- Authors: Phakama
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10353/16151 , vital:40672
- Full Text:
- Authors: Phakama
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10353/20639 , vital:46416
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MYALEZO MATO THESIS.pdf
- Authors: Busisiwe Ngcobo
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10353/28980 , vital:75700
- Full Text:
- Authors: Busisiwe Ngcobo
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10353/28980 , vital:75700
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MYALEZO MATO THESIS.pdf
- Authors: Busisiwe Ngcobo
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10353/28972 , vital:75699
- Full Text:
- Authors: Busisiwe Ngcobo
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10353/28972 , vital:75699
- Full Text:
- Authors: PK
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10353/13017 , vital:39433
- Full Text:
- Authors: Vusiwe
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10353/29519 , vital:77975
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- Authors: PK
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10353/13081 , vital:39463
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Remedial interventions in public procurement processes: an appraisal of recent appellate jurisprudence in search of principles
- Authors: Osode, Patrick
- Language: English
- Type: Inaugural lecture
- Identifier: vital:11969 , http://hdl.handle.net/10353/d1007279
- Full Text:
- Authors: Osode, Patrick
- Language: English
- Type: Inaugural lecture
- Identifier: vital:11969 , http://hdl.handle.net/10353/d1007279
- Full Text:
Role of early childhood development practitioners in developing children’s oral language in three selected centres in Buffalo City
- Authors: Nodlela, Lumka
- Subjects: Early childhood education , Language acquisition , Early childhood teachers
- Language: English
- Type: text
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10353/27887 , vital:70453
- Description: The child's language development is one of the most notable achievements of the preschool years. Children must develop their language skills effectively to access the curriculum. Practitioners of Early Childhood Development (ECD) have a substantial impact on children's spoken language development. As a result, three centers in the Buffalo City Education District are the subject of this dissertation's investigation into how ECD practitioners contribute to children's oral language development. The applicable theory used in the study was Vygotsky's Zone of Proximal Development (ZPD) theory. The existent phenomenon was examined using the interpretivist research paradigm and the qualitative research methodology. The study used a phenomenological research approach to examine the perspectives, functions, and experiences of individuals (ECD practitioners) in the growth of children's oral language. The study used purposive sampling. Participants were purposively selected as because of their proximity to the researcher’s workplace. The fifteen practitioners in the chosen ECD centers were interviewed in semi-structured interviews, and data were also gathered through observations. Following transcription, sorting, and categorization, the gathered data were thematically analysed using themes inferred from the study objectives. The study's conclusions showed that ECD specialists help children improve their oral language in a useful way. As a result, they require training in the creation and application of various strategies for fostering oral language in young children. Short courses will also assist practitioners in fostering the overall development of children. One of the key elements that interferes with effective teaching and learning at ECD centers, though, is a shortage of resources. , Thesis (MEd) -- Faculty of Education, 2023
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- Authors: Nodlela, Lumka
- Subjects: Early childhood education , Language acquisition , Early childhood teachers
- Language: English
- Type: text
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10353/27887 , vital:70453
- Description: The child's language development is one of the most notable achievements of the preschool years. Children must develop their language skills effectively to access the curriculum. Practitioners of Early Childhood Development (ECD) have a substantial impact on children's spoken language development. As a result, three centers in the Buffalo City Education District are the subject of this dissertation's investigation into how ECD practitioners contribute to children's oral language development. The applicable theory used in the study was Vygotsky's Zone of Proximal Development (ZPD) theory. The existent phenomenon was examined using the interpretivist research paradigm and the qualitative research methodology. The study used a phenomenological research approach to examine the perspectives, functions, and experiences of individuals (ECD practitioners) in the growth of children's oral language. The study used purposive sampling. Participants were purposively selected as because of their proximity to the researcher’s workplace. The fifteen practitioners in the chosen ECD centers were interviewed in semi-structured interviews, and data were also gathered through observations. Following transcription, sorting, and categorization, the gathered data were thematically analysed using themes inferred from the study objectives. The study's conclusions showed that ECD specialists help children improve their oral language in a useful way. As a result, they require training in the creation and application of various strategies for fostering oral language in young children. Short courses will also assist practitioners in fostering the overall development of children. One of the key elements that interferes with effective teaching and learning at ECD centers, though, is a shortage of resources. , Thesis (MEd) -- Faculty of Education, 2023
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- Authors: Vusiwe
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10353/29538 , vital:77977
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- Authors: SD
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10353/19006 , vital:43012
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Social acts and projections of change
- Authors: Minkley, G
- Language: English
- Type: Inaugural lecture
- Identifier: vital:11982 , http://hdl.handle.net/10353/d1011241
- Description: This lecture considers the question of the social from within the workings of the SARChI Chair in Social Change. Rather than accepting ‘the social’ as something that is given, it proposes that we problematize and ‘re: work’ the social as being a hybrid domain, as being spatially diverse and as being enacted. An argument for ‘social acts’, which are related to, but not the same as actors and actions is proposed as a means to read and understand the social and projections of social change in new ways. While social acts produce actors and need actors to be actualised, social acts themselves produce ruptures in the given, entail a remaining in the scene and they always involve others and the Other in altering projections of the social, of ‘other socials’, and of projections of change. In practice too, the enactment of the social and the material as integrally associative decentre the object, bringing it into view as one that is also socially enacted, requiring continuing effort, choreography, staging, repetition, but also rupture. To enact, then, is to realize a rupture in the given-ness of the social and to necessarily attend to the unexpected, unpredictable and unknown of the social and its equally enacted and re-worked projections of change.
- Full Text:
- Authors: Minkley, G
- Language: English
- Type: Inaugural lecture
- Identifier: vital:11982 , http://hdl.handle.net/10353/d1011241
- Description: This lecture considers the question of the social from within the workings of the SARChI Chair in Social Change. Rather than accepting ‘the social’ as something that is given, it proposes that we problematize and ‘re: work’ the social as being a hybrid domain, as being spatially diverse and as being enacted. An argument for ‘social acts’, which are related to, but not the same as actors and actions is proposed as a means to read and understand the social and projections of social change in new ways. While social acts produce actors and need actors to be actualised, social acts themselves produce ruptures in the given, entail a remaining in the scene and they always involve others and the Other in altering projections of the social, of ‘other socials’, and of projections of change. In practice too, the enactment of the social and the material as integrally associative decentre the object, bringing it into view as one that is also socially enacted, requiring continuing effort, choreography, staging, repetition, but also rupture. To enact, then, is to realize a rupture in the given-ness of the social and to necessarily attend to the unexpected, unpredictable and unknown of the social and its equally enacted and re-worked projections of change.
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South Africa`s democracy: Mandela's "Cherished Ideal"
- Authors: Tom, Mvuyo
- Subjects: Twenty Years of Democracy - Mandela's "Cherished Ideal" , South Africa -- Democracy
- Language: English
- Identifier: vital:12229 , http://hdl.handle.net/10353/d1014366
- Description: Dr Tom was in the UK from 17-23 September 2014 to: attend events surrounding the Exhibition, give talks at these, raise awareness of Fort Hare, especially the 2016 Centenary, and renew acquaintance and meet with friends of and potential donors to Fort Hare.Report of Visit of Dr Mvuyo Tom, Vice Chancellor of the University of Fort Hare, one of three participating SA universities.
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- Authors: Tom, Mvuyo
- Subjects: Twenty Years of Democracy - Mandela's "Cherished Ideal" , South Africa -- Democracy
- Language: English
- Identifier: vital:12229 , http://hdl.handle.net/10353/d1014366
- Description: Dr Tom was in the UK from 17-23 September 2014 to: attend events surrounding the Exhibition, give talks at these, raise awareness of Fort Hare, especially the 2016 Centenary, and renew acquaintance and meet with friends of and potential donors to Fort Hare.Report of Visit of Dr Mvuyo Tom, Vice Chancellor of the University of Fort Hare, one of three participating SA universities.
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South Africa`s reflections and juxtapositions of puffery psychodynamic evaluation of public administration shortcomings: public protests versus elections outcomes
- Ijeoma, Edwin Okechukwu Chikata
- Authors: Ijeoma, Edwin Okechukwu Chikata
- Subjects: Public procurement , Service delivery , Corruption , Tender fraud , Cadre deployment , Law courts
- Language: English
- Type: Inaugural lecture
- Identifier: vital:11972 , http://hdl.handle.net/10353/d1007762 , Public procurement , Service delivery , Corruption , Tender fraud , Cadre deployment , Law courts
- Description: As the country concludes the second decade since the dawn of the new democratic dispensation in South Africa, there has been an explosion in the magnitude and intensity of service delivery related protest in the entire country. Such grumbling actions are a sign of the perceived growing frustration of the citizens of the failure of their government to provide service to them or a situation catalysed by the “enemies of the state”?. The governing party has to reflect on its policies and practices so as to rectify these in line with satisfying the citizens since these are the voters-cum-tax payers. Ironically, the protests related to service rendering are more frequent in the strongholds of the governing party, a situation which has led to some scholars handpicking the cadre deployment policy of the governing party as a failure. There are various incidences where residents or citizens had to take to the streets in protest of the manner in which the government has addressed the plight of the ordinary citizens. Some of these protests have turned into running battles between the residents and the police, sometimes even leading to death of protestors. One case in point is the death in Ficksburg of Andres Tatane on the 13 of April 2011, a protester from rubber bullet wounds in the Free State Province. The death has also been labelled a failure on the side of the police, same as those of the Marikana miners and the Mozambican Mido Macia on the 27 of February 2013, who also succumbed to police inflicted injuries. This paper probes the outcomes of elections and service delivery in the wake of the protracted rise in public service delivery protests. The paper also provides some recommendations which the governing parties can consider in reshaping its mandate and policies aimed at elimination the frequency of Public protest everywhere in the country.
- Full Text:
- Authors: Ijeoma, Edwin Okechukwu Chikata
- Subjects: Public procurement , Service delivery , Corruption , Tender fraud , Cadre deployment , Law courts
- Language: English
- Type: Inaugural lecture
- Identifier: vital:11972 , http://hdl.handle.net/10353/d1007762 , Public procurement , Service delivery , Corruption , Tender fraud , Cadre deployment , Law courts
- Description: As the country concludes the second decade since the dawn of the new democratic dispensation in South Africa, there has been an explosion in the magnitude and intensity of service delivery related protest in the entire country. Such grumbling actions are a sign of the perceived growing frustration of the citizens of the failure of their government to provide service to them or a situation catalysed by the “enemies of the state”?. The governing party has to reflect on its policies and practices so as to rectify these in line with satisfying the citizens since these are the voters-cum-tax payers. Ironically, the protests related to service rendering are more frequent in the strongholds of the governing party, a situation which has led to some scholars handpicking the cadre deployment policy of the governing party as a failure. There are various incidences where residents or citizens had to take to the streets in protest of the manner in which the government has addressed the plight of the ordinary citizens. Some of these protests have turned into running battles between the residents and the police, sometimes even leading to death of protestors. One case in point is the death in Ficksburg of Andres Tatane on the 13 of April 2011, a protester from rubber bullet wounds in the Free State Province. The death has also been labelled a failure on the side of the police, same as those of the Marikana miners and the Mozambican Mido Macia on the 27 of February 2013, who also succumbed to police inflicted injuries. This paper probes the outcomes of elections and service delivery in the wake of the protracted rise in public service delivery protests. The paper also provides some recommendations which the governing parties can consider in reshaping its mandate and policies aimed at elimination the frequency of Public protest everywhere in the country.
- Full Text:
TLC Newsletter 1st Edition 2015
- Teaching and Learning Centre
- Authors: Teaching and Learning Centre
- Language: English
- Type: News bulletin
- Identifier: vital:12228 , http://hdl.handle.net/10353/d1018619
- Description: TEachng and Learning Centre Newsletter 1st Edition 2015
- Full Text:
- Authors: Teaching and Learning Centre
- Language: English
- Type: News bulletin
- Identifier: vital:12228 , http://hdl.handle.net/10353/d1018619
- Description: TEachng and Learning Centre Newsletter 1st Edition 2015
- Full Text:
This item does not have a title.
- Identifier: http://vital.seals.ac.za8080/10353/7174 , http://hdl.handle.net/10353/6233 , vital:29522
- Full Text: false
- Identifier: http://vital.seals.ac.za8080/10353/7174 , http://hdl.handle.net/10353/6233 , vital:29522
- Full Text: false