Living with HIV/AIDS in King Williams Town, Eastern Cape
- Authors: Chinyama, Ephraim
- Date: 2012
- Subjects: AIDS (Disease) -- South Africa -- Eastern Cape , HIV-positive persons -- South Africa -- Eastern Cape , HIV-positive persons -- Social aspects -- South Africa -- Eastern Cape , King William's Town (South Africa)
- Language: English
- Type: Thesis , Masters , M Soc Sc (Rural Development)
- Identifier: vital:11956 , http://hdl.handle.net/10353/d1005964 , AIDS (Disease) -- South Africa -- Eastern Cape , HIV-positive persons -- South Africa -- Eastern Cape , HIV-positive persons -- Social aspects -- South Africa -- Eastern Cape , King William's Town (South Africa)
- Description: This study examines the lifestyle decisions of people who are diagnosed with HIV/AIDS in King Williams Town, Eastern Cape. The study was motivated by the ever growing number of people who are now living with HIV/AIDS. Therefore the researcher intended to examine their decisions regarding sexual choices, reproductive health, diet, physical fitness and their coping strategies. The study found that there is very low uptake of Voluntary Counseling and Testing (VCT). Most people only get tested if they are compelled by other factors, like illness and pregnancy. It also found that HIV positive people continue to engage in risky sexual behaviour regardless of their positive status. In addition it also found that HIV positive status does not affect sexual activity and social support from family and friends is a very important factor that is helping the respondents to cope with HIV diagnosis.
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2012
- Authors: Chinyama, Ephraim
- Date: 2012
- Subjects: AIDS (Disease) -- South Africa -- Eastern Cape , HIV-positive persons -- South Africa -- Eastern Cape , HIV-positive persons -- Social aspects -- South Africa -- Eastern Cape , King William's Town (South Africa)
- Language: English
- Type: Thesis , Masters , M Soc Sc (Rural Development)
- Identifier: vital:11956 , http://hdl.handle.net/10353/d1005964 , AIDS (Disease) -- South Africa -- Eastern Cape , HIV-positive persons -- South Africa -- Eastern Cape , HIV-positive persons -- Social aspects -- South Africa -- Eastern Cape , King William's Town (South Africa)
- Description: This study examines the lifestyle decisions of people who are diagnosed with HIV/AIDS in King Williams Town, Eastern Cape. The study was motivated by the ever growing number of people who are now living with HIV/AIDS. Therefore the researcher intended to examine their decisions regarding sexual choices, reproductive health, diet, physical fitness and their coping strategies. The study found that there is very low uptake of Voluntary Counseling and Testing (VCT). Most people only get tested if they are compelled by other factors, like illness and pregnancy. It also found that HIV positive people continue to engage in risky sexual behaviour regardless of their positive status. In addition it also found that HIV positive status does not affect sexual activity and social support from family and friends is a very important factor that is helping the respondents to cope with HIV diagnosis.
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2012
An investigation into the anxiolytic properties of melatonin in humans
- McCallaghan, Johannes Jacobus
- Authors: McCallaghan, Johannes Jacobus
- Date: 1999
- Subjects: Melatonin , Pineal gland -- Secretions
- Language: English
- Type: Thesis , Masters , MSc
- Identifier: vital:3772 , http://hdl.handle.net/10962/d1003250 , Melatonin , Pineal gland -- Secretions
- Description: The purpose of this project was to investigate the role of melatonin in the pathophysiology of anxiety in humans. The literature study confirmed the intimate relationship between serotonin and melatonin. Melatonin is not only able to act as an agonist (in physiological concentrations) and an antagonist (at higher concentrations) on serotonin receptors but via control of brain pyridoxal kinase activity might have an effect on GABA, serotonin, dopamine and norepinephrine synthesis. A clinical trial to investigate melatonin's effect on anxiety in humans was conducted as a pilot study. Thirty patients complaining of anxiety participated in a liN of 1" double blind placebo controlled trial. During the experiment each subject was thus exposed to melatonin and a placebo for a week at a time on two occasions. During the first phase of the experiment, (Pair '1) patients showed a statistically significant reduction in their anxiety levels during the first period (P1P1), which was not the case during the second period (P1P2). The improvement however continued during the second phase of the experiment (Pair 2) so that there was also a statistically significant improvement during P 2 P 2 (Period 2 / Pair 2) when placebo was administered. It could not conclusively be shown that melatonin was responsible for the improvement in the patients' anxiety. The explanation for these results suggests thelt the improvement was due to a: 1) placebo effect throughout, 2) psychotherapeutic effect due to contact with a clinician, 3) melatonin induced phase shift in the patient's endogenous melatonin response curve, 4) combination of all 3 options. This pilot study lays the groundwork for a much more exhaustive study in which the melatonin of the patients is determined before melatonin is administered, the role of the clinician is clarified and the most appropriate time for melatonin administration is sought .
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 1999
- Authors: McCallaghan, Johannes Jacobus
- Date: 1999
- Subjects: Melatonin , Pineal gland -- Secretions
- Language: English
- Type: Thesis , Masters , MSc
- Identifier: vital:3772 , http://hdl.handle.net/10962/d1003250 , Melatonin , Pineal gland -- Secretions
- Description: The purpose of this project was to investigate the role of melatonin in the pathophysiology of anxiety in humans. The literature study confirmed the intimate relationship between serotonin and melatonin. Melatonin is not only able to act as an agonist (in physiological concentrations) and an antagonist (at higher concentrations) on serotonin receptors but via control of brain pyridoxal kinase activity might have an effect on GABA, serotonin, dopamine and norepinephrine synthesis. A clinical trial to investigate melatonin's effect on anxiety in humans was conducted as a pilot study. Thirty patients complaining of anxiety participated in a liN of 1" double blind placebo controlled trial. During the experiment each subject was thus exposed to melatonin and a placebo for a week at a time on two occasions. During the first phase of the experiment, (Pair '1) patients showed a statistically significant reduction in their anxiety levels during the first period (P1P1), which was not the case during the second period (P1P2). The improvement however continued during the second phase of the experiment (Pair 2) so that there was also a statistically significant improvement during P 2 P 2 (Period 2 / Pair 2) when placebo was administered. It could not conclusively be shown that melatonin was responsible for the improvement in the patients' anxiety. The explanation for these results suggests thelt the improvement was due to a: 1) placebo effect throughout, 2) psychotherapeutic effect due to contact with a clinician, 3) melatonin induced phase shift in the patient's endogenous melatonin response curve, 4) combination of all 3 options. This pilot study lays the groundwork for a much more exhaustive study in which the melatonin of the patients is determined before melatonin is administered, the role of the clinician is clarified and the most appropriate time for melatonin administration is sought .
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 1999
Mineralogy and geochemistry of permian black shales and carbonate concretions in the lower ECCA formations of the Steytlerville- Jansenville area, southern Karoo basin
- Authors: Maake, Laurentias Tebatso
- Date: 2019
- Subjects: Black shales -- South Africa -- Jansenville , Geochemistry Chemistry, Analytic Mineralogy -- Analysis
- Language: English
- Type: Thesis , Masters , MSc
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10948/40643 , vital:36206
- Description: The Lower Permian Ecca Group formations of the Karoo Basin of South Africa have recently been identified as a target for shale gas exploration. These units, named the Prince Albert, Whitehill and Collingham formations, comprise organic-rich shales with occasional associated carbonate deposits, and siliciclastic facies. Mineralogical and geochemical investigations were conducted into carbonaceous shales and associated sedimentary rocks in the Jansenville area of the southern Karoo Basin with the ultimate aim to decipher the paleoenvironment and post-depositional conditions of these shales and their associated features such as prominent intra-formational carbonate deposits. Sediments of the main Karoo Basin were deposited from ~350 Ma to ~182 Ma, the end of sedimentation being marked by eruption of basaltic lava. This period, which began with the Dwyka continental glaciation, included tectonism of the Cape Fold Belt, the end-Permian mass extinction at ~250 Ma, and major intrusion of dolerite associated with the lavas of the Karoo Large Igneous Province. Subsequent to this, the basin experienced faulting associated with Gondwana breakup, uplift and intrusion of small volume kimberlite and melilite magmas, and erosion resulting in formation of a major escarpment. Each episode was imprinted upon the Karoo rocks and to a greater or lesser extent erases the signature of older episodes. To decipher the depositional paleoenvironment and post-depositional conditions of the black shales and the dolomite concretions posed a challenge due to deformation, orogeny, metamorphism, and weathering and erosion. Therefore, deep borehole core-logging and sampling was generally preferred over surface fieldwork, and trace elements backed up by scanning electron microscopy-based petrography was the method most relied upon to decipher the redox conditions of the black shales and the intra-formational carbonates. Relevant sections from three SOEKOR boreholes SP1/69, AB1/65 and QU1/65 were logged and carbonate concretions localities studied in four field locations. Samples collected from the core and field localities were prepared for thin section optical, SEM petrographical analysis, mineral identification, modal estimation by XRD, major, and trace element analysis by XRF and Laser Ablation-ICPMS, and acid leaching of a sample subset to determine the degree of pyritization (DOP). Logging of the SOEKOR boreholes indicates that in the western part of the basin all three lower Ecca formations, namely the Prince Albert, Whitehill and Collingham, overlie the tillites of the Dwyka Group, whereas near East London only the Whitehill Formation is present. Dwyka diamictites occur in all the studied boreholes overlying the crystalline basement in AB 1/65 and QU 1/65 boreholes whereas in the SP 1/69 the tillites rest above the quartzite of Witteberg Group of the Cape Supergroup. The shale consists of discontinuous, wavy and straight parallel laminae. Parallel, discontinuous and elongate micro-lenses of very fine-grained quartz are diagnostic and suggest late-stage silicification. Thin laminae of black shale are interlaminated with grey clay. The black shales are composed of quartz and clay minerals (illite and chlorite) as the major crystalline minerals with minor quantities of sulphides and heavy minerals. Organic matter occurs as unstructured, anhedral patches of amorphous material. It contains abundant small (~10nm) and less common larger (~100 nm) pores of subsphaeroidal shape. Carbonates occur as cementation and concretions. Heavy minerals identified by SEM include detrital zircon, thorite, titanite, authigenic fluorite, galena, sphene, and sphalerite and apatite, monazite and epidote-group minerals that appear to be of later stage metamorphic origin, some a product of hydrothermal feldspar alteration. Zircon and monazite show evidence of partial corrosion and/or new overgrowth. Titanite occurs in greater abundance in the SP1/69 section than other boreholes, where it exhibits a porphyroblastic texture suggesting secondary growth. These features all suggest modification of detrital minerals by metamorphic fluids and therefore some possible modification of bulk geochemical composition. Pyrite is abundant, commonly occurring as framboidal and occasional euhedral grains. Pyrite-bearing, calcite veins are common in the Whitehill Formation. Some pyrite is metamorphosed to pyrrhotite in the shales adjacent to dolerite intrusions. The carbonate deposits in the lower Ecca occur mostly as large concretions of 0.5-2.5 m in diameter at intensely faulted areas, and as laterally continuous beds at less intensely faulted areas. They consist of dominant dolomite with calcite (differentiated by thin section staining) and minor associated quartz veins, and appear to have formed in an early diagenetic stage of the black shale. Five different dolomite-rock textures were identified indicating varying crystal growth conditions. Calcite cementation types accompany these dolomite textures. The major types include mosaic, sparry and bladed/prismatic calcite cement. Calcite occurs mainly as cement in pores and grain replacement, as well as crudely radial septerian veins. XRD indicates that the carbonate concretions are made up of more than 90% dolomite, especially within the intensely folded areas. The remaining 10% consist of post-depositional quartz veins and secondary calcite associated with the quartz veins. In one locality (VAAL) the carbonate samples are dominates by bladed/prismatic calcite. The black shales in this study have similar geochemical signature to previously analysed samples from the Karoo Basin and to black shales worldwide. The geochemical signature results from the combined input of detrital sedimentary materials as well as enrichment or depletions acquired from pore water, biological activity and during diagenesis. Positive correlation of K2O, Na2O with Al2O3 suggests control by the detrital contribution. CaO and P2O5, have a negative correlation with Al2O3 suggesting a biogenic source. Elemental ratios suggest that the sediments derive from felsic source rock, most likely Cape Supergroup and underlying crystalline basement. These shales exhibit different degrees of trace-element enrichment relative to global average shale, the approximate order being Pb> V> Zn> Cr> Cu> Co > Ni. Assessment of selected trace elements, V/(V+Ni), V/Cr, Ni/Co and EF Mn ratios describes the paleoenvironment of these sediments to have been partially oxygenated before sulphate reduction interface. The pyrite size distribution, DOP, Fe and S correlation points to an organic matter limited environment, where the main sulphur sink is pyrite rather than organic matter. The DOP and Fe/Al indicated that the sediments became anoxic at the sediment-water interface (early diagenetic stages). V/Cr assessment of the dolomite concretions suggested partially oxygenated environment corresponding to the black shale deposition. The occurrence of concretions at the base of the Whitehill Formation, which has the highest TOC content of 14% compared to other associated formations, is evidence that organic matter preservation was important to their origins. The parameters used here to assess the redox conditions of the black shales and the dolomite concretions in this region of the Karoo Basin suggest a normal marine redox environment, rather than the anoxic Black Sea-type environment. The conditions that affected the lower Ecca formations varied from semi-oxygenated to oxygen depletion environment. The oxygen depletion environment occurred during the deposition of the Whitehill Formation of which organic matter preservation was favoured..
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2019
- Authors: Maake, Laurentias Tebatso
- Date: 2019
- Subjects: Black shales -- South Africa -- Jansenville , Geochemistry Chemistry, Analytic Mineralogy -- Analysis
- Language: English
- Type: Thesis , Masters , MSc
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10948/40643 , vital:36206
- Description: The Lower Permian Ecca Group formations of the Karoo Basin of South Africa have recently been identified as a target for shale gas exploration. These units, named the Prince Albert, Whitehill and Collingham formations, comprise organic-rich shales with occasional associated carbonate deposits, and siliciclastic facies. Mineralogical and geochemical investigations were conducted into carbonaceous shales and associated sedimentary rocks in the Jansenville area of the southern Karoo Basin with the ultimate aim to decipher the paleoenvironment and post-depositional conditions of these shales and their associated features such as prominent intra-formational carbonate deposits. Sediments of the main Karoo Basin were deposited from ~350 Ma to ~182 Ma, the end of sedimentation being marked by eruption of basaltic lava. This period, which began with the Dwyka continental glaciation, included tectonism of the Cape Fold Belt, the end-Permian mass extinction at ~250 Ma, and major intrusion of dolerite associated with the lavas of the Karoo Large Igneous Province. Subsequent to this, the basin experienced faulting associated with Gondwana breakup, uplift and intrusion of small volume kimberlite and melilite magmas, and erosion resulting in formation of a major escarpment. Each episode was imprinted upon the Karoo rocks and to a greater or lesser extent erases the signature of older episodes. To decipher the depositional paleoenvironment and post-depositional conditions of the black shales and the dolomite concretions posed a challenge due to deformation, orogeny, metamorphism, and weathering and erosion. Therefore, deep borehole core-logging and sampling was generally preferred over surface fieldwork, and trace elements backed up by scanning electron microscopy-based petrography was the method most relied upon to decipher the redox conditions of the black shales and the intra-formational carbonates. Relevant sections from three SOEKOR boreholes SP1/69, AB1/65 and QU1/65 were logged and carbonate concretions localities studied in four field locations. Samples collected from the core and field localities were prepared for thin section optical, SEM petrographical analysis, mineral identification, modal estimation by XRD, major, and trace element analysis by XRF and Laser Ablation-ICPMS, and acid leaching of a sample subset to determine the degree of pyritization (DOP). Logging of the SOEKOR boreholes indicates that in the western part of the basin all three lower Ecca formations, namely the Prince Albert, Whitehill and Collingham, overlie the tillites of the Dwyka Group, whereas near East London only the Whitehill Formation is present. Dwyka diamictites occur in all the studied boreholes overlying the crystalline basement in AB 1/65 and QU 1/65 boreholes whereas in the SP 1/69 the tillites rest above the quartzite of Witteberg Group of the Cape Supergroup. The shale consists of discontinuous, wavy and straight parallel laminae. Parallel, discontinuous and elongate micro-lenses of very fine-grained quartz are diagnostic and suggest late-stage silicification. Thin laminae of black shale are interlaminated with grey clay. The black shales are composed of quartz and clay minerals (illite and chlorite) as the major crystalline minerals with minor quantities of sulphides and heavy minerals. Organic matter occurs as unstructured, anhedral patches of amorphous material. It contains abundant small (~10nm) and less common larger (~100 nm) pores of subsphaeroidal shape. Carbonates occur as cementation and concretions. Heavy minerals identified by SEM include detrital zircon, thorite, titanite, authigenic fluorite, galena, sphene, and sphalerite and apatite, monazite and epidote-group minerals that appear to be of later stage metamorphic origin, some a product of hydrothermal feldspar alteration. Zircon and monazite show evidence of partial corrosion and/or new overgrowth. Titanite occurs in greater abundance in the SP1/69 section than other boreholes, where it exhibits a porphyroblastic texture suggesting secondary growth. These features all suggest modification of detrital minerals by metamorphic fluids and therefore some possible modification of bulk geochemical composition. Pyrite is abundant, commonly occurring as framboidal and occasional euhedral grains. Pyrite-bearing, calcite veins are common in the Whitehill Formation. Some pyrite is metamorphosed to pyrrhotite in the shales adjacent to dolerite intrusions. The carbonate deposits in the lower Ecca occur mostly as large concretions of 0.5-2.5 m in diameter at intensely faulted areas, and as laterally continuous beds at less intensely faulted areas. They consist of dominant dolomite with calcite (differentiated by thin section staining) and minor associated quartz veins, and appear to have formed in an early diagenetic stage of the black shale. Five different dolomite-rock textures were identified indicating varying crystal growth conditions. Calcite cementation types accompany these dolomite textures. The major types include mosaic, sparry and bladed/prismatic calcite cement. Calcite occurs mainly as cement in pores and grain replacement, as well as crudely radial septerian veins. XRD indicates that the carbonate concretions are made up of more than 90% dolomite, especially within the intensely folded areas. The remaining 10% consist of post-depositional quartz veins and secondary calcite associated with the quartz veins. In one locality (VAAL) the carbonate samples are dominates by bladed/prismatic calcite. The black shales in this study have similar geochemical signature to previously analysed samples from the Karoo Basin and to black shales worldwide. The geochemical signature results from the combined input of detrital sedimentary materials as well as enrichment or depletions acquired from pore water, biological activity and during diagenesis. Positive correlation of K2O, Na2O with Al2O3 suggests control by the detrital contribution. CaO and P2O5, have a negative correlation with Al2O3 suggesting a biogenic source. Elemental ratios suggest that the sediments derive from felsic source rock, most likely Cape Supergroup and underlying crystalline basement. These shales exhibit different degrees of trace-element enrichment relative to global average shale, the approximate order being Pb> V> Zn> Cr> Cu> Co > Ni. Assessment of selected trace elements, V/(V+Ni), V/Cr, Ni/Co and EF Mn ratios describes the paleoenvironment of these sediments to have been partially oxygenated before sulphate reduction interface. The pyrite size distribution, DOP, Fe and S correlation points to an organic matter limited environment, where the main sulphur sink is pyrite rather than organic matter. The DOP and Fe/Al indicated that the sediments became anoxic at the sediment-water interface (early diagenetic stages). V/Cr assessment of the dolomite concretions suggested partially oxygenated environment corresponding to the black shale deposition. The occurrence of concretions at the base of the Whitehill Formation, which has the highest TOC content of 14% compared to other associated formations, is evidence that organic matter preservation was important to their origins. The parameters used here to assess the redox conditions of the black shales and the dolomite concretions in this region of the Karoo Basin suggest a normal marine redox environment, rather than the anoxic Black Sea-type environment. The conditions that affected the lower Ecca formations varied from semi-oxygenated to oxygen depletion environment. The oxygen depletion environment occurred during the deposition of the Whitehill Formation of which organic matter preservation was favoured..
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2019
A strategy to promote awareness and adherence to information security policy at Capricorn District Municipality
- Authors: Mamabolo, Mokgadi Hellen
- Date: 2019
- Subjects: Computer security -- Management , Data protection -- Management Computer security Computer networks -- Security measures
- Language: English
- Type: Thesis , Masters , MPhil
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10948/40867 , vital:36245
- Description: The purpose of this research was to investigate the reasons for non-adherence to the ISP and to measure the current level of adherence to the ISP. The research revealed that non adherence to the ISP is caused by lack of training or awareness, and through non-communication of the ISP to employees. The study was conducted at Capricorn District Municipality, Polokwane Local Municipality, Molemole Local Municipality and Blouberg Local Municipality. A web-based questionnaire (QuestionPro) was developed and it was directed to every official who uses or interacts with municipal information, to quantify the level of adherence to ISP by employees. An email with the questionnaire link administered by www.questionpro.com was then sent to the population of 152 employees. Presently ISP adherence is one of the key concerns that are faced by organisations. Employees are perceived as one of the reasons that there are security breaches within organisations; hence, it is of paramount importance that these security breaches are noticed, as well as technical matters. Most researchers have reasoned that non-adherence to ISP is one of the major challenges faced by organisations. The non-adherence to ISP will lead to potential information security threats and unauthorised access to information that might compromise municipal business operations. The Information Security Officer together with the help of management must educate employees regarding the value of IS and why it is crucial to adhere to these policies. The proposed strategy summarises the various concepts required in the promotion of awareness and adherence to an effective ISP. Ultimately, this research study concludes that if management continually trains employees, raising awareness about ISP and monitoring their adherence to ISP, this should increase the adherence level.
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2019
- Authors: Mamabolo, Mokgadi Hellen
- Date: 2019
- Subjects: Computer security -- Management , Data protection -- Management Computer security Computer networks -- Security measures
- Language: English
- Type: Thesis , Masters , MPhil
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10948/40867 , vital:36245
- Description: The purpose of this research was to investigate the reasons for non-adherence to the ISP and to measure the current level of adherence to the ISP. The research revealed that non adherence to the ISP is caused by lack of training or awareness, and through non-communication of the ISP to employees. The study was conducted at Capricorn District Municipality, Polokwane Local Municipality, Molemole Local Municipality and Blouberg Local Municipality. A web-based questionnaire (QuestionPro) was developed and it was directed to every official who uses or interacts with municipal information, to quantify the level of adherence to ISP by employees. An email with the questionnaire link administered by www.questionpro.com was then sent to the population of 152 employees. Presently ISP adherence is one of the key concerns that are faced by organisations. Employees are perceived as one of the reasons that there are security breaches within organisations; hence, it is of paramount importance that these security breaches are noticed, as well as technical matters. Most researchers have reasoned that non-adherence to ISP is one of the major challenges faced by organisations. The non-adherence to ISP will lead to potential information security threats and unauthorised access to information that might compromise municipal business operations. The Information Security Officer together with the help of management must educate employees regarding the value of IS and why it is crucial to adhere to these policies. The proposed strategy summarises the various concepts required in the promotion of awareness and adherence to an effective ISP. Ultimately, this research study concludes that if management continually trains employees, raising awareness about ISP and monitoring their adherence to ISP, this should increase the adherence level.
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2019
Mastering your fellowship
- Klaus von Pressentin, Mergan Naidoo, Frederick Mayanja, Tasleem Ras
- Authors: Klaus von Pressentin , Mergan Naidoo , Frederick Mayanja , Tasleem Ras
- Date: 2021
- Language: English
- Type: Journal article
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/11260/4024 , vital:43990
- Full Text:
- Authors: Klaus von Pressentin , Mergan Naidoo , Frederick Mayanja , Tasleem Ras
- Date: 2021
- Language: English
- Type: Journal article
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/11260/4024 , vital:43990
- Full Text:
LCT in mixed-methods research: evolving an instrument for quantitative data
- Maton, Karl, Howard, Sarah Katherine
- Authors: Maton, Karl , Howard, Sarah Katherine
- Date: 2016
- Language: English
- Type: text , book
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10962/66479 , vital:28954
- Description: publisher version , A mantra of social science declares a fundamental divide between the quantitative and the qualitative that involves more than methods. According to this depiction, the two methodologies are intrinsically associated with a range of ontological, epistemological, political and moral stances. Each of these constellations of stances is strongly integrated, such that choice of method is held to involve a series of associated choices. Each constellation is also strongly opposed to the other, along axes labelled positivism/constructivism, scientism/humanism, conservative/critical, old/new, among others. These ‘binary constellations’ (Maton 2014b: 148-70) offer a forced choice between two tightly-knit sets of practices that are portrayed as jointly exhaustive and mutually exclusive. So widespread is this methodological binarism that many scholars ‘are left with the impression that they have to pledge allegiance to one research school of thought or the other’ (Johnson and Onwuegbuzie 2004: 14). A competing mantra disclaims this divide. Distinctions underpinning the picture of binary constellations have been regularly dissolved. Arguments that one deals with numbers, the other with words, one studies behaviour, the other reveals meanings, one is hypothetico-deductive, the other inductive, one enables generalization, the other explores singular depth, among others, have been repeatedly undermined (e.g. Hammersley 1992). Indeed, the death of the divide is frequently declared. Calls for ‘transcending’ (Salomon 1991) or ‘getting over’ (Howe 1992) the quantitative-qualitative debate and arguments for mixed-methods research (Brannen 2005; Johnson and Onwuegbuzie 2004) are recurrent. These calls highlight how the methodologies offer complementary insights for research and demonstrate that eschewing either methodology on principle is unnecessarily renouncing potential explanatory power. However, the call to mixed-methods research remains more breached than honoured. Methodological monotheism remains dominant – studies of education and society typically adopt either quantitative or qualitative methods. As we shall discuss, the former is typically associated with the influence of psychology and the latter is often claimed as emblematic of sociology. Studies utilizing the sociological frameworks on which Legitimation Code Theory (LCT) builds have echoed this pattern by overwhelmingly adopting qualitative methods. Accordingly, Part I of this volume begins by exploring how LCT concepts can be enacted in qualitative research (Chapter 2). However, LCT is not limited to one methodology and a growing body of mixed-methods research is engaging with both qualitative and quantitative data. In this chapter we illustrate how this research works and the gains it offers. For resolutely qualitative researchers, the prospect of reading anything quantitative, even in mixed-methods research, may be unenticing. However, it would be a mistake to pass over this chapter, for several reasons. First, we offer insights into research practice that might surprise such scholars. As Bourdieu argued, ‘methodological indictments are too often no more than a disguised way of making a virtue out of necessity, of feigning to dismiss, to ignore in an active way, what one is ignorant of in fact’ (Bourdieu and Wacquant 1992: 226). Our aim is to contribute towards removing this reason for one-sidedness. We show, for example, how quantitative methods confound their common portrayal as neat, straightforward and procedural; they are complex and involved and require craft work and judgement. Our focus is, therefore, more practical than metaphysical. We shall not enter seemingly endless debates over whether the ‘quantitative-qualitative divide’ refers to paradigms, epistemologies or methods and whether these are complementary or incommensurable. Rather, we discuss the development of an instrument for enacting LCT concepts in quantitative methods and ground this account in real examples of mixed-methods research. Specifically, we trace the evolution of an instrument for embedding specialization codes within questionnaires through its creation for research into school music and then its development within studies of educational technology. Given that mathematics can be off-putting to the noviciate, we minimize discussion of statistics and explain measures in lay terms. Second, this is much more than a story of quantitative methods. The evolution of the instrument both shaped qualitative methods and was shaped by the data they generated, offering insights into how qualitative research can more fully engage with LCT. Its development also involved intimate dialogue with theory that shed fresh light on LCT itself, making explicit the ‘gaze’ embodied by the framework (Chapter 1, this volume). We shall highlight wider lessons learned about the craft of enacting LCT in research, lessons of direct relevance for studies using any methods. Third, we shall illustrate the explanatory power offered by using quantitative and qualitative methods together, such as providing a robust basis for detailed findings, identifying wider-scale trends typically inaccessible to qualitative methods that provide a context for their data, and facilitating knowledge-building through greater replicability across contexts and over time. For example, the technology studies built directly on the music studies to cumulatively develop the instrument and generated probably the largest data set in code sociology: 97,386 responses (83,937 student and 13,449 staff surveys) on the organizing principles of academic subjects, alongside 20 in-depth qualitative case studies of secondary schools. This offers a foundation of substantial breadth and depth for making claims about knowledge practices across the disciplinary map and a firm basis on which future research into disciplinary differences can build. Moreover, the quantitative instrument itself can be adopted or adapted in new studies, further enabling cumulative knowledge-building. Given these substantive, methodological and theoretical gains, it is perhaps surprising there exists any temptation to skip past discussion of mixed-methods research. This reflects the methodological character of the fields in which LCT emerged. We thus begin by briefly illustrating how the sociological frameworks on which the theory builds have become distanced from quantitative methods.
- Full Text: false
- Date Issued: 2016
- Authors: Maton, Karl , Howard, Sarah Katherine
- Date: 2016
- Language: English
- Type: text , book
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10962/66479 , vital:28954
- Description: publisher version , A mantra of social science declares a fundamental divide between the quantitative and the qualitative that involves more than methods. According to this depiction, the two methodologies are intrinsically associated with a range of ontological, epistemological, political and moral stances. Each of these constellations of stances is strongly integrated, such that choice of method is held to involve a series of associated choices. Each constellation is also strongly opposed to the other, along axes labelled positivism/constructivism, scientism/humanism, conservative/critical, old/new, among others. These ‘binary constellations’ (Maton 2014b: 148-70) offer a forced choice between two tightly-knit sets of practices that are portrayed as jointly exhaustive and mutually exclusive. So widespread is this methodological binarism that many scholars ‘are left with the impression that they have to pledge allegiance to one research school of thought or the other’ (Johnson and Onwuegbuzie 2004: 14). A competing mantra disclaims this divide. Distinctions underpinning the picture of binary constellations have been regularly dissolved. Arguments that one deals with numbers, the other with words, one studies behaviour, the other reveals meanings, one is hypothetico-deductive, the other inductive, one enables generalization, the other explores singular depth, among others, have been repeatedly undermined (e.g. Hammersley 1992). Indeed, the death of the divide is frequently declared. Calls for ‘transcending’ (Salomon 1991) or ‘getting over’ (Howe 1992) the quantitative-qualitative debate and arguments for mixed-methods research (Brannen 2005; Johnson and Onwuegbuzie 2004) are recurrent. These calls highlight how the methodologies offer complementary insights for research and demonstrate that eschewing either methodology on principle is unnecessarily renouncing potential explanatory power. However, the call to mixed-methods research remains more breached than honoured. Methodological monotheism remains dominant – studies of education and society typically adopt either quantitative or qualitative methods. As we shall discuss, the former is typically associated with the influence of psychology and the latter is often claimed as emblematic of sociology. Studies utilizing the sociological frameworks on which Legitimation Code Theory (LCT) builds have echoed this pattern by overwhelmingly adopting qualitative methods. Accordingly, Part I of this volume begins by exploring how LCT concepts can be enacted in qualitative research (Chapter 2). However, LCT is not limited to one methodology and a growing body of mixed-methods research is engaging with both qualitative and quantitative data. In this chapter we illustrate how this research works and the gains it offers. For resolutely qualitative researchers, the prospect of reading anything quantitative, even in mixed-methods research, may be unenticing. However, it would be a mistake to pass over this chapter, for several reasons. First, we offer insights into research practice that might surprise such scholars. As Bourdieu argued, ‘methodological indictments are too often no more than a disguised way of making a virtue out of necessity, of feigning to dismiss, to ignore in an active way, what one is ignorant of in fact’ (Bourdieu and Wacquant 1992: 226). Our aim is to contribute towards removing this reason for one-sidedness. We show, for example, how quantitative methods confound their common portrayal as neat, straightforward and procedural; they are complex and involved and require craft work and judgement. Our focus is, therefore, more practical than metaphysical. We shall not enter seemingly endless debates over whether the ‘quantitative-qualitative divide’ refers to paradigms, epistemologies or methods and whether these are complementary or incommensurable. Rather, we discuss the development of an instrument for enacting LCT concepts in quantitative methods and ground this account in real examples of mixed-methods research. Specifically, we trace the evolution of an instrument for embedding specialization codes within questionnaires through its creation for research into school music and then its development within studies of educational technology. Given that mathematics can be off-putting to the noviciate, we minimize discussion of statistics and explain measures in lay terms. Second, this is much more than a story of quantitative methods. The evolution of the instrument both shaped qualitative methods and was shaped by the data they generated, offering insights into how qualitative research can more fully engage with LCT. Its development also involved intimate dialogue with theory that shed fresh light on LCT itself, making explicit the ‘gaze’ embodied by the framework (Chapter 1, this volume). We shall highlight wider lessons learned about the craft of enacting LCT in research, lessons of direct relevance for studies using any methods. Third, we shall illustrate the explanatory power offered by using quantitative and qualitative methods together, such as providing a robust basis for detailed findings, identifying wider-scale trends typically inaccessible to qualitative methods that provide a context for their data, and facilitating knowledge-building through greater replicability across contexts and over time. For example, the technology studies built directly on the music studies to cumulatively develop the instrument and generated probably the largest data set in code sociology: 97,386 responses (83,937 student and 13,449 staff surveys) on the organizing principles of academic subjects, alongside 20 in-depth qualitative case studies of secondary schools. This offers a foundation of substantial breadth and depth for making claims about knowledge practices across the disciplinary map and a firm basis on which future research into disciplinary differences can build. Moreover, the quantitative instrument itself can be adopted or adapted in new studies, further enabling cumulative knowledge-building. Given these substantive, methodological and theoretical gains, it is perhaps surprising there exists any temptation to skip past discussion of mixed-methods research. This reflects the methodological character of the fields in which LCT emerged. We thus begin by briefly illustrating how the sociological frameworks on which the theory builds have become distanced from quantitative methods.
- Full Text: false
- Date Issued: 2016
Students’ intentions and attitudes towards using Information and Communication Technology (ICT) for the purpose of counselling.
- Authors: Dlaza, Zikhona
- Date: 2018
- Subjects: Internet -- Psychological aspects Internet users -- Psychology
- Language: English
- Type: Thesis , Masters , MSoc. Sci (Psychology)
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10353/17553 , vital:41090
- Description: Information Communication Technology (ICT) is becoming popular especially within a university campus setting not only as a learning tool but also for the purpose of communication. Internationally there is an acknowledgement of the popularity of ICT in delivering mental health services. This study is built on that premise which indicates that ICT could serve as a viable tool for counselling interventions within a university setting. However, limited research has been done in this area and conflicting results have been reported especially related to gender. This study therefore aimed at exploring the intentions and attitudes of male and female students towards using ICT for counselling at a South African university. A quantitative research approach was employed to collect and analyze data. Data was collected amongst students using self-administered questionnaires with a sample of 266 (N = 266) respondents. Descriptive and inferential statistics were employed. The main findings of the study indicate that students have an intention to seek psychological help through the use of ICT counselling, which consequently positively influenced attitudes towards the utilization of ICT counselling. Results further indicate that gender and age differences amongst university students is significantly related to the intention to use ICT counselling. The information generated from this study has contributed to the limited body of literature on ICT in counselling psychology, more specifically in a university setting in South Africa. Overall, it encourages critical reflection on modern psychological practice to meet student’s needs.
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2018
- Authors: Dlaza, Zikhona
- Date: 2018
- Subjects: Internet -- Psychological aspects Internet users -- Psychology
- Language: English
- Type: Thesis , Masters , MSoc. Sci (Psychology)
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10353/17553 , vital:41090
- Description: Information Communication Technology (ICT) is becoming popular especially within a university campus setting not only as a learning tool but also for the purpose of communication. Internationally there is an acknowledgement of the popularity of ICT in delivering mental health services. This study is built on that premise which indicates that ICT could serve as a viable tool for counselling interventions within a university setting. However, limited research has been done in this area and conflicting results have been reported especially related to gender. This study therefore aimed at exploring the intentions and attitudes of male and female students towards using ICT for counselling at a South African university. A quantitative research approach was employed to collect and analyze data. Data was collected amongst students using self-administered questionnaires with a sample of 266 (N = 266) respondents. Descriptive and inferential statistics were employed. The main findings of the study indicate that students have an intention to seek psychological help through the use of ICT counselling, which consequently positively influenced attitudes towards the utilization of ICT counselling. Results further indicate that gender and age differences amongst university students is significantly related to the intention to use ICT counselling. The information generated from this study has contributed to the limited body of literature on ICT in counselling psychology, more specifically in a university setting in South Africa. Overall, it encourages critical reflection on modern psychological practice to meet student’s needs.
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2018
Child sex tourism in South African law
- Authors: Chetty, Kasturi
- Date: 2007
- Subjects: Child sexual abuse -- South Africa , Sex tourism -- Law and legislation -- South Africa , Sex crimes -- South Africa , Child prostitution -- South Africa
- Language: English
- Type: Thesis , Masters , LLM
- Identifier: vital:10276 , http://hdl.handle.net/10948/485 , Child sexual abuse -- South Africa , Sex tourism -- Law and legislation -- South Africa , Sex crimes -- South Africa , Child prostitution -- South Africa
- Description: Child sex tourism is tourism organised with the primary purpose of facilitating a commercial sexual relationship with a child. It involves a segment of the local child sex industry that is directly connected to both an international and domestic tourist market. The increase of tourism has brought with it complications in that tourism is being used as a means for sex tourists to initiate contact with children. Aside from child sex tourists who are paedophiles, there are those who engage in the opportunistic exploitation of children while travelling on business or for other reasons. There are a number of social and economic factors leading to child sex tourism and the effect is that child victims are exposed to immediate harm, irreversible damage and even death. As South Africa's tourism industry expands into one of the country’s top earners of foreign currency, it is unfortunate to note that its child sex tourist trade is also on the increase. Reports show that sex tours are as easily organised as wine route tours in Cape Town. Commercial sexual exploitation of children is prevalent in South Africa and has become more organised in recent years. A comprehensive response to the problem is essential to ensure that South Africa does not become a “safe haven” for child sex tourists. Effective laws at home and the extraterritorial application of these laws to prosecute South African nationals for crimes committed abroad are imperative. Significant steps are being taken both nationally and internationally to target child sex tourism. South Africa has ratified several international instruments on children’s rights, trafficking in persons, child labour, and discrimination against women and young girls, all of which relate to child sex tourism. In doing so, South Africa has made an international commitment to uphold the provisions of these instruments and give effect to them. South Africa is therefore under an international obligation to create the necessary structures and apply mechanisms and resources to combat child sex tourism.
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2007
- Authors: Chetty, Kasturi
- Date: 2007
- Subjects: Child sexual abuse -- South Africa , Sex tourism -- Law and legislation -- South Africa , Sex crimes -- South Africa , Child prostitution -- South Africa
- Language: English
- Type: Thesis , Masters , LLM
- Identifier: vital:10276 , http://hdl.handle.net/10948/485 , Child sexual abuse -- South Africa , Sex tourism -- Law and legislation -- South Africa , Sex crimes -- South Africa , Child prostitution -- South Africa
- Description: Child sex tourism is tourism organised with the primary purpose of facilitating a commercial sexual relationship with a child. It involves a segment of the local child sex industry that is directly connected to both an international and domestic tourist market. The increase of tourism has brought with it complications in that tourism is being used as a means for sex tourists to initiate contact with children. Aside from child sex tourists who are paedophiles, there are those who engage in the opportunistic exploitation of children while travelling on business or for other reasons. There are a number of social and economic factors leading to child sex tourism and the effect is that child victims are exposed to immediate harm, irreversible damage and even death. As South Africa's tourism industry expands into one of the country’s top earners of foreign currency, it is unfortunate to note that its child sex tourist trade is also on the increase. Reports show that sex tours are as easily organised as wine route tours in Cape Town. Commercial sexual exploitation of children is prevalent in South Africa and has become more organised in recent years. A comprehensive response to the problem is essential to ensure that South Africa does not become a “safe haven” for child sex tourists. Effective laws at home and the extraterritorial application of these laws to prosecute South African nationals for crimes committed abroad are imperative. Significant steps are being taken both nationally and internationally to target child sex tourism. South Africa has ratified several international instruments on children’s rights, trafficking in persons, child labour, and discrimination against women and young girls, all of which relate to child sex tourism. In doing so, South Africa has made an international commitment to uphold the provisions of these instruments and give effect to them. South Africa is therefore under an international obligation to create the necessary structures and apply mechanisms and resources to combat child sex tourism.
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2007
Synthesis of silver nanoparticles from a Desmodium adscendens extract and its antibacterial evaluation on wound dressing material
- Lakkakula, Jaya R, Ndinteh, Derek T, van Vuuren, Sandy F, Olivier, Denise K, Krause, Rui W M
- Authors: Lakkakula, Jaya R , Ndinteh, Derek T , van Vuuren, Sandy F , Olivier, Denise K , Krause, Rui W M
- Date: 2017
- Subjects: To be catalogued
- Language: English
- Type: text , article
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10962/195025 , vital:45520 , xlink:href="https://doi.org/10.1049/iet-nbt.2017.0084"
- Description: The one-pot synthesis of silver nanoparticles (AgNPs) using the medium-polar extract of Desmodium adscendens (Sw.) DC. is presented here as an alternative synthesis of metal NPs. Characterisation of the formed NPs showed polydispersed AgNPs ranging from 15 to 100 nm where the concentration of metal ions was found to play a role in the size and shape of the prepared NPs. It could be established that the flavonoids, saponins, and alkaloids present in the extract acted as both reducing and stabilising agents during the formation of the capped metal NPs. This means of NP synthesis was also employed during the in situ immobilisation of AgNPs on gauze and plaster. An evaluation of the antibacterial activity of the medium-polar D. adscendens extract, AgNPs suspended in solution, and the immobilised AgNPs against Staphylococcus aureus (ATCC 25923), Bacillus cereus (ATCC 11778), and Escherichia coli (ATCC 25922) showed high efficacy against the latter in particular. This suggests that gauze, dilute silver nitrate solutions, and D. adscendens extract could be used successfully in the simple in situ preparation of effective antibacterial wound dressings.
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2017
- Authors: Lakkakula, Jaya R , Ndinteh, Derek T , van Vuuren, Sandy F , Olivier, Denise K , Krause, Rui W M
- Date: 2017
- Subjects: To be catalogued
- Language: English
- Type: text , article
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10962/195025 , vital:45520 , xlink:href="https://doi.org/10.1049/iet-nbt.2017.0084"
- Description: The one-pot synthesis of silver nanoparticles (AgNPs) using the medium-polar extract of Desmodium adscendens (Sw.) DC. is presented here as an alternative synthesis of metal NPs. Characterisation of the formed NPs showed polydispersed AgNPs ranging from 15 to 100 nm where the concentration of metal ions was found to play a role in the size and shape of the prepared NPs. It could be established that the flavonoids, saponins, and alkaloids present in the extract acted as both reducing and stabilising agents during the formation of the capped metal NPs. This means of NP synthesis was also employed during the in situ immobilisation of AgNPs on gauze and plaster. An evaluation of the antibacterial activity of the medium-polar D. adscendens extract, AgNPs suspended in solution, and the immobilised AgNPs against Staphylococcus aureus (ATCC 25923), Bacillus cereus (ATCC 11778), and Escherichia coli (ATCC 25922) showed high efficacy against the latter in particular. This suggests that gauze, dilute silver nitrate solutions, and D. adscendens extract could be used successfully in the simple in situ preparation of effective antibacterial wound dressings.
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2017
People get ready
- Monwabisi Gladstone Sabani, Tracey, Andrew T N
- Authors: Monwabisi Gladstone Sabani , Tracey, Andrew T N
- Date: 1987
- Subjects: Xhosa (African people) , Folk music -- South Africa , Topical song , Bass guitar , Steel drum (Musical instrument) , Popular music , Sub-Saharan African music , Africa South Africa Grahamstown f-sa
- Language: English
- Type: sound recordings , field recordings , sound recording-musical
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10962/105805 , vital:32571 , International Library of African Music, Rhodes University, Grahamstown, South Africa , ATC097b-02
- Description: Xhosa urban topical song accompanied by bass guitar and steel pan drum
- Full Text: false
- Date Issued: 1987
- Authors: Monwabisi Gladstone Sabani , Tracey, Andrew T N
- Date: 1987
- Subjects: Xhosa (African people) , Folk music -- South Africa , Topical song , Bass guitar , Steel drum (Musical instrument) , Popular music , Sub-Saharan African music , Africa South Africa Grahamstown f-sa
- Language: English
- Type: sound recordings , field recordings , sound recording-musical
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10962/105805 , vital:32571 , International Library of African Music, Rhodes University, Grahamstown, South Africa , ATC097b-02
- Description: Xhosa urban topical song accompanied by bass guitar and steel pan drum
- Full Text: false
- Date Issued: 1987
Characterization of the heat source of thermal aquifers within the Soutpansberg Basin in the Limpopo Province, South Africa: Evidence from geophysical and geological investigations
- Authors: Nyabeze, Peter Kushara
- Date: 2019
- Subjects: Basins (Geology) -- Analysis Geology, Structural -- South Africa
- Language: English
- Type: Thesis , Doctoral , PhD (Geology)
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10353/15167 , vital:40192
- Description: The research was conducted to contribute towards the knowledge base on the potential for geothermal energy in the Soutpansberg Basin, located in the Limpopo Province of South Africa. The focus area was Siloam, an area that hosts a hottest spring with the highest recorded temperature of 67.5°C. The research involved visits to the Soutpansberg Basin, water sampling, carrying out ground geophysical surveys, and high-level processing of airborne magnetic data to determine depths and temperatures of magnetic sources. The water samples from the hot springs were found to be enriched in sodium, bicarbonate and chlorine with very low concentrations of other element species. The chemical composition of the spring water indicated a source chemistry comprising of the Na-ClHCO3 water assemblage that is a typical signature for deep circulating groundwater of meteoric origin. The circulation depth was inferred to be 2.0 km. The increased resolution of the ground magnetic, electrical resistivity tomography, and electromagnetic conductivity methods data made it possible to delineate subsurface structures at the spring such as dykes, sills, faults and fractures from generated depth models. Modelling of ground magnetic data showed that the Siloam hot spring occurred between two interpreted north dipping dykes approximately 150 m apart. The minimum depth extent of the dykes was interpreted to be 650 m. The magnetic susceptibility values determined from rock measurements and modelling of magnetic data indicated the presence of volcanic and metamorphic rocks. Electromagnetic profiling data showed that there were three main high conductivity zones in the study area with values above 100 mS/m; A central zone associated with the spring; A zone to the south of the spring and a north zone associated with the Siloam Fault. Ground geophysics survey results confirmed the existence of the Siloam Fault. Two artesian boreholes with water warmer than 40 °C were identified to the south of the Siloam hot spring. Both electromagnetic conductivity and electrical resistivity tomography surveys delineated lateral and vertical variation in the bedrock to depths of 40 m to 60 m. Water bearing structures that could be faults, or fractures were identified. Layering due to weathering and water content was found to be in the depth range of 20 m to 40 m. The depths of the potential heat sources were computed from the radially averaged power spectrum of airborne magnetic data for square blocks with side dimensions L of 51 km, 103 km, and 129 km. Spectral analysis based approaches namely Centroid method, Spectral peak method, and the Fractal based approach were used for computing depth and temperatures to heat sources. Airborne magnetic data sets with larger window sizes were preferred for depth computations, as they preserved spectral signatures of deeper sources and reduced the contribution of shallower sources. The size of the data windows did not have a marked effect of depth and temperature values. Shallower magnetic sources depths of approximately 2.0 km were delineated using the Euler deconvolution method. An anticlinal feature at depths of 2.0 to 4.5 km was 4 Final Submission of Thesis, Dissertation or Research Report/Project, Conference or Exam Paper delineated in the central part of the basin. Spectral analysis results indicated that the depth to the top of magnetic sources was at 3.5 km to 6.2 km; the centroid of the basement at 7.92 km to 13.41 km, and the basal below 11.09 km and 14.08 km. The lower end depth spectrum was determined from application of the Centroid method with the deeper being results from the Fractal based approach. The Spectral peak method was useful for determining the depth to the top of magnetic sources. The temperature of the top of magnetic sources and basement centroid were computed to be in the range 234.00 °C to 281.34 °C. Magnetic source depths and basal temperatures that were in the Curie point range within which rocks lose magnetism due to heat were determined, using a computation approach that utilised fractal parameters, to be 21.39 km and 577.42 °C, respectively. Increasing the value of the fractal parameter β from 0 to 4, had an effect of retaining deeper depths and higher temperatures. The fractal parameter β range of 3 to 4 that gave the Curie point parameters indicated basal rock types with an igneous predisposition. The research highlighted evidence for the existence of the Soutpansberg Basin Geothermal Field (SBGF). The area around Siloam is a potential target for drilling exploration geothermal energy boreholes based on the occurrence of hot springs, shallow heat source depths, anticlinal structure, high formation temperatures, deep circulating water and the achieved Curie point temperature.
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2019
- Authors: Nyabeze, Peter Kushara
- Date: 2019
- Subjects: Basins (Geology) -- Analysis Geology, Structural -- South Africa
- Language: English
- Type: Thesis , Doctoral , PhD (Geology)
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10353/15167 , vital:40192
- Description: The research was conducted to contribute towards the knowledge base on the potential for geothermal energy in the Soutpansberg Basin, located in the Limpopo Province of South Africa. The focus area was Siloam, an area that hosts a hottest spring with the highest recorded temperature of 67.5°C. The research involved visits to the Soutpansberg Basin, water sampling, carrying out ground geophysical surveys, and high-level processing of airborne magnetic data to determine depths and temperatures of magnetic sources. The water samples from the hot springs were found to be enriched in sodium, bicarbonate and chlorine with very low concentrations of other element species. The chemical composition of the spring water indicated a source chemistry comprising of the Na-ClHCO3 water assemblage that is a typical signature for deep circulating groundwater of meteoric origin. The circulation depth was inferred to be 2.0 km. The increased resolution of the ground magnetic, electrical resistivity tomography, and electromagnetic conductivity methods data made it possible to delineate subsurface structures at the spring such as dykes, sills, faults and fractures from generated depth models. Modelling of ground magnetic data showed that the Siloam hot spring occurred between two interpreted north dipping dykes approximately 150 m apart. The minimum depth extent of the dykes was interpreted to be 650 m. The magnetic susceptibility values determined from rock measurements and modelling of magnetic data indicated the presence of volcanic and metamorphic rocks. Electromagnetic profiling data showed that there were three main high conductivity zones in the study area with values above 100 mS/m; A central zone associated with the spring; A zone to the south of the spring and a north zone associated with the Siloam Fault. Ground geophysics survey results confirmed the existence of the Siloam Fault. Two artesian boreholes with water warmer than 40 °C were identified to the south of the Siloam hot spring. Both electromagnetic conductivity and electrical resistivity tomography surveys delineated lateral and vertical variation in the bedrock to depths of 40 m to 60 m. Water bearing structures that could be faults, or fractures were identified. Layering due to weathering and water content was found to be in the depth range of 20 m to 40 m. The depths of the potential heat sources were computed from the radially averaged power spectrum of airborne magnetic data for square blocks with side dimensions L of 51 km, 103 km, and 129 km. Spectral analysis based approaches namely Centroid method, Spectral peak method, and the Fractal based approach were used for computing depth and temperatures to heat sources. Airborne magnetic data sets with larger window sizes were preferred for depth computations, as they preserved spectral signatures of deeper sources and reduced the contribution of shallower sources. The size of the data windows did not have a marked effect of depth and temperature values. Shallower magnetic sources depths of approximately 2.0 km were delineated using the Euler deconvolution method. An anticlinal feature at depths of 2.0 to 4.5 km was 4 Final Submission of Thesis, Dissertation or Research Report/Project, Conference or Exam Paper delineated in the central part of the basin. Spectral analysis results indicated that the depth to the top of magnetic sources was at 3.5 km to 6.2 km; the centroid of the basement at 7.92 km to 13.41 km, and the basal below 11.09 km and 14.08 km. The lower end depth spectrum was determined from application of the Centroid method with the deeper being results from the Fractal based approach. The Spectral peak method was useful for determining the depth to the top of magnetic sources. The temperature of the top of magnetic sources and basement centroid were computed to be in the range 234.00 °C to 281.34 °C. Magnetic source depths and basal temperatures that were in the Curie point range within which rocks lose magnetism due to heat were determined, using a computation approach that utilised fractal parameters, to be 21.39 km and 577.42 °C, respectively. Increasing the value of the fractal parameter β from 0 to 4, had an effect of retaining deeper depths and higher temperatures. The fractal parameter β range of 3 to 4 that gave the Curie point parameters indicated basal rock types with an igneous predisposition. The research highlighted evidence for the existence of the Soutpansberg Basin Geothermal Field (SBGF). The area around Siloam is a potential target for drilling exploration geothermal energy boreholes based on the occurrence of hot springs, shallow heat source depths, anticlinal structure, high formation temperatures, deep circulating water and the achieved Curie point temperature.
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2019
Locus of Human Empowerment: TST 311
- Authors: Williams, D T , Harold, G
- Date: 2011-06
- Language: English
- Type: Examination paper
- Identifier: vital:18169 , http://hdl.handle.net/10353/d1011107
- Description: Locus of Human Empowerment: TST 311, degree examination June 2011.
- Full Text: false
- Date Issued: 2011-06
- Authors: Williams, D T , Harold, G
- Date: 2011-06
- Language: English
- Type: Examination paper
- Identifier: vital:18169 , http://hdl.handle.net/10353/d1011107
- Description: Locus of Human Empowerment: TST 311, degree examination June 2011.
- Full Text: false
- Date Issued: 2011-06
Intercultural Communication: CMS 223
- Chigovanyika, M, Osunkule, O
- Authors: Chigovanyika, M , Osunkule, O
- Date: 2009-11
- Language: English
- Type: Examination paper
- Identifier: vital:18347 , http://hdl.handle.net/10353/d1011476
- Description: Intercultural Communication: CMS 223, examination November 2009.
- Full Text: false
- Date Issued: 2009-11
- Authors: Chigovanyika, M , Osunkule, O
- Date: 2009-11
- Language: English
- Type: Examination paper
- Identifier: vital:18347 , http://hdl.handle.net/10353/d1011476
- Description: Intercultural Communication: CMS 223, examination November 2009.
- Full Text: false
- Date Issued: 2009-11
Macleantown: a study of a small South African community
- Authors: Irving, James
- Date: 1959
- Subjects: Macleantown (South Africa) -- Social conditions Village communities -- South Africa South Africa -- Rural conditions South Africa -- Social conditions
- Language: English
- Type: Book , Text
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10962/2590 , vital:20306
- Description: For some years the Institute of Social and Economic Research at Rhodes University has been engaged in an intensive study of the area of the Eastern Province of the Union of South Africa known to South Africans as the Border Region. By a singular chance an invitation from the East London Divisional Council to investigate the condition of a Border village arose when, in the course of a visit from its Secretary, sufficient data was shown concerning the conditions of village life in the region, to suggest that a special study should be made of rural problems on an intensive basis. In the first instance the enquiry directed to the Institute was administrative in the sense that difficulties were arising in the villages to warrant the establishment of sufficient authentic facts to point the way to methods of solving the immediate difficulties of the Council. While this object has not been overlooked, and it would have been less than courteous to have overlooked the demand that brought-the research into being, it has been thought necessary to widen the scope of the investigation to include materials that go beyond the administrative needs of the Council. The scope of the investigation has been widened to include an analysis of the village community as well as a co-ordinated body of brute fact. While "irreducible fact" is the basis on which the investigation rests, the attempt has been made to isolate meaning and significance of the data; it is in the latter field that deeper aspects of administrative decisions lie more often than in mountains of fact no matter how reliable. A community is an organised unit; there is no simple explanation of the way in which human social institutions work except by analysing the behaviour of people in their everyday activity. The manner in which the organisation works and be more or less efficient and there was prima facie evidence that the community of Macleantown was not organised to yield maximal efficiency. The causative factors involved in this drop in efficiency thus becomes one of the basic tasks , Digitised by Rhodes University Library on behalf of the Institute of Social and Economic Research (ISER)
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 1959
- Authors: Irving, James
- Date: 1959
- Subjects: Macleantown (South Africa) -- Social conditions Village communities -- South Africa South Africa -- Rural conditions South Africa -- Social conditions
- Language: English
- Type: Book , Text
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10962/2590 , vital:20306
- Description: For some years the Institute of Social and Economic Research at Rhodes University has been engaged in an intensive study of the area of the Eastern Province of the Union of South Africa known to South Africans as the Border Region. By a singular chance an invitation from the East London Divisional Council to investigate the condition of a Border village arose when, in the course of a visit from its Secretary, sufficient data was shown concerning the conditions of village life in the region, to suggest that a special study should be made of rural problems on an intensive basis. In the first instance the enquiry directed to the Institute was administrative in the sense that difficulties were arising in the villages to warrant the establishment of sufficient authentic facts to point the way to methods of solving the immediate difficulties of the Council. While this object has not been overlooked, and it would have been less than courteous to have overlooked the demand that brought-the research into being, it has been thought necessary to widen the scope of the investigation to include materials that go beyond the administrative needs of the Council. The scope of the investigation has been widened to include an analysis of the village community as well as a co-ordinated body of brute fact. While "irreducible fact" is the basis on which the investigation rests, the attempt has been made to isolate meaning and significance of the data; it is in the latter field that deeper aspects of administrative decisions lie more often than in mountains of fact no matter how reliable. A community is an organised unit; there is no simple explanation of the way in which human social institutions work except by analysing the behaviour of people in their everyday activity. The manner in which the organisation works and be more or less efficient and there was prima facie evidence that the community of Macleantown was not organised to yield maximal efficiency. The causative factors involved in this drop in efficiency thus becomes one of the basic tasks , Digitised by Rhodes University Library on behalf of the Institute of Social and Economic Research (ISER)
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 1959
Form and idea in the fiction and non-fiction of John Fowles
- Authors: Etter, Julie-Anne
- Date: 1986
- Subjects: Fowles, John, 1926-2005
- Language: English
- Type: text , Thesis , Masters , MA
- Identifier: vital:2179 , http://hdl.handle.net/10962/d1001830
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 1986
- Authors: Etter, Julie-Anne
- Date: 1986
- Subjects: Fowles, John, 1926-2005
- Language: English
- Type: text , Thesis , Masters , MA
- Identifier: vital:2179 , http://hdl.handle.net/10962/d1001830
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 1986
Financial Management: AFA 311
- Fatoki, O O, Rowles, M, Tait, M
- Authors: Fatoki, O O , Rowles, M , Tait, M
- Date: 2011-06
- Subjects: Financial management
- Language: English
- Type: Examination paper
- Identifier: vital:17447 , http://hdl.handle.net/10353/d1010260
- Description: Supplementary examination on Financial Management: AFA 311, June 2011.
- Full Text: false
- Date Issued: 2011-06
- Authors: Fatoki, O O , Rowles, M , Tait, M
- Date: 2011-06
- Subjects: Financial management
- Language: English
- Type: Examination paper
- Identifier: vital:17447 , http://hdl.handle.net/10353/d1010260
- Description: Supplementary examination on Financial Management: AFA 311, June 2011.
- Full Text: false
- Date Issued: 2011-06
Plan of properties bounded by High Street [Roberts Street], African Street, [Cawood Street] and [Spring Street] being Block F of the lands granted to the municipality, giving Lot number and specific details of Lot 63
- Authors: Ford, John H , Piers, W W
- Date: 1864
- Subjects: Grahamstown (South Africa) -- Maps Maps , Streets -- South Africa -- Maps Maps , South Africa
- Language: English
- Type: cartographic , map
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10962/57808 , vital:26991 , Cory Library for Humanities Research, Rhodes University Library, Grahamstown, South Africa MP1467 , MP1467
- Description: Divided and planned by Joh. H. Fort (1864) with later transfer subdivisions by W.R. Piers (1880).
- Full Text: false
- Date Issued: 1864
- Authors: Ford, John H , Piers, W W
- Date: 1864
- Subjects: Grahamstown (South Africa) -- Maps Maps , Streets -- South Africa -- Maps Maps , South Africa
- Language: English
- Type: cartographic , map
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10962/57808 , vital:26991 , Cory Library for Humanities Research, Rhodes University Library, Grahamstown, South Africa MP1467 , MP1467
- Description: Divided and planned by Joh. H. Fort (1864) with later transfer subdivisions by W.R. Piers (1880).
- Full Text: false
- Date Issued: 1864
A survey of South African crime fiction : critical analysis and publishing history
- Authors: Naidu, Samantha
- Date: 2017
- Language: English
- Type: Book , text
- Identifier: vital:26344 , http://hdl.handle.net/10962/53878 , https://www.isbs.com/products/9781869143558 , https://orcid.org/0000-0001-9456-8657
- Description: Is crime fiction the new 'political novel' in South Africa? Why did the apartheid censors disapprove of crime fiction more than any other genre? Crime fiction continues to be a burgeoning literary category in post-apartheid South Africa, with more new authors, titles and themes emerging every year. This book is the first comprehensive survey of South African crime fiction. It provides an overview of this phenomenally successful literary category, and places it within its wider social and historical context. The authors specialise in both literary studies and print culture, and this combination informs a critical analysis and publishing history of South African crime fiction from the nineteenth century to the present day. The book provides a literary lineage while considering different genres and sub-genres, as well as specific themes such as gender and eco-criticism. The inclusion of a detailed bibliography of crime fiction since the 1890s makes A Survey of South African Crime Fiction an indispensable teaching and study aid
- Full Text: false
- Date Issued: 2017
- Authors: Naidu, Samantha
- Date: 2017
- Language: English
- Type: Book , text
- Identifier: vital:26344 , http://hdl.handle.net/10962/53878 , https://www.isbs.com/products/9781869143558 , https://orcid.org/0000-0001-9456-8657
- Description: Is crime fiction the new 'political novel' in South Africa? Why did the apartheid censors disapprove of crime fiction more than any other genre? Crime fiction continues to be a burgeoning literary category in post-apartheid South Africa, with more new authors, titles and themes emerging every year. This book is the first comprehensive survey of South African crime fiction. It provides an overview of this phenomenally successful literary category, and places it within its wider social and historical context. The authors specialise in both literary studies and print culture, and this combination informs a critical analysis and publishing history of South African crime fiction from the nineteenth century to the present day. The book provides a literary lineage while considering different genres and sub-genres, as well as specific themes such as gender and eco-criticism. The inclusion of a detailed bibliography of crime fiction since the 1890s makes A Survey of South African Crime Fiction an indispensable teaching and study aid
- Full Text: false
- Date Issued: 2017
The Luderitz Alkaline Province, South West Africa II: metasomatism and assimilation in the contact aureole of the Granitberg Foyaite Complex
- Authors: Marsh, Julian S
- Date: 1975
- Language: English
- Type: text , article
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10962/132963 , vital:36913
- Description: Reactions between the Outer Foyaite magma of the Granitberg Complex and the sedimentary country rocks are striking. At sandstone contacts the magma has assimilated quartz-rich sedimentary material and a suite of pulaskites, peralkaline nordmarkites, and peralkaline granites have been generated by a complex process involving both assimilation and crystal fractionation.
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 1975
- Authors: Marsh, Julian S
- Date: 1975
- Language: English
- Type: text , article
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10962/132963 , vital:36913
- Description: Reactions between the Outer Foyaite magma of the Granitberg Complex and the sedimentary country rocks are striking. At sandstone contacts the magma has assimilated quartz-rich sedimentary material and a suite of pulaskites, peralkaline nordmarkites, and peralkaline granites have been generated by a complex process involving both assimilation and crystal fractionation.
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 1975
A comparison of WISC-IV test performance for Afrikaans, English and Xhosa speaking South African grade 7 learners
- Authors: Van der Merwe, Adele
- Date: 2008
- Subjects: Wechsler Intelligence Scale for Children Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale Intelligence tests -- South Africa Psychological tests -- Cross-cultural studies Educational tests and measurements -- South Africa Educational psychology -- South Africa Language and languages -- Ability testing Educational evaluation -- South Africa Education, Elementary -- South Africa
- Language: English
- Type: Thesis , Masters , MA
- Identifier: vital:3076 , http://hdl.handle.net/10962/d1002585
- Description: his study builds on South African cross-cultural research which demonstrated the importance of careful stratification of multicultural/multilingual normative samples for quality of education in respect of English and African language (predominantly Xhosa) speaking adults and children tested with the WAIS-III and WISC-IV, respectively. The aim of the present study was to produce an expanded set of preliminary comparative norms on the WISC-IV for white and coloured Afrikaans, white English and black Xhosa speaking Grade 7 children, aged 12 to 13 years, stratified for advantaged versus disadvantaged education. The results of this study replicate the findings of the prior South African cross-cultural studies in respect of quality of education, as groups with advantaged private/former Model C schooling outperformed those with disadvantaged former DET or HOR township schooling. Furthermore, a downward continuum of WISC-IV IQ test performance emerged as follows: 1) white English advantaged (high average), 2) white Afrikaans advantaged and black Xhosa advantaged (average), 3) coloured Afrikaans advantaged (below average), 4) black Xhosa disadvantaged (borderline), and 5) coloured Afrikaans disadvantaged (extremely low). The present study has demonstrated that while language and ethnic variables reveal subtle effects on IQ test performance, quality of education has the most significant effect – impacting significantly on verbal performance with this effect replicated in respect of the FSIQ. Therefore caution should be exercised in interpreting test results of individuals from different language/ethnic groups, and in particular those with disadvantaged schooling, as preliminary data suggest that these individuals achieve scores which are 20 – 35 points lower than the UK standardisation.
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2008
- Authors: Van der Merwe, Adele
- Date: 2008
- Subjects: Wechsler Intelligence Scale for Children Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale Intelligence tests -- South Africa Psychological tests -- Cross-cultural studies Educational tests and measurements -- South Africa Educational psychology -- South Africa Language and languages -- Ability testing Educational evaluation -- South Africa Education, Elementary -- South Africa
- Language: English
- Type: Thesis , Masters , MA
- Identifier: vital:3076 , http://hdl.handle.net/10962/d1002585
- Description: his study builds on South African cross-cultural research which demonstrated the importance of careful stratification of multicultural/multilingual normative samples for quality of education in respect of English and African language (predominantly Xhosa) speaking adults and children tested with the WAIS-III and WISC-IV, respectively. The aim of the present study was to produce an expanded set of preliminary comparative norms on the WISC-IV for white and coloured Afrikaans, white English and black Xhosa speaking Grade 7 children, aged 12 to 13 years, stratified for advantaged versus disadvantaged education. The results of this study replicate the findings of the prior South African cross-cultural studies in respect of quality of education, as groups with advantaged private/former Model C schooling outperformed those with disadvantaged former DET or HOR township schooling. Furthermore, a downward continuum of WISC-IV IQ test performance emerged as follows: 1) white English advantaged (high average), 2) white Afrikaans advantaged and black Xhosa advantaged (average), 3) coloured Afrikaans advantaged (below average), 4) black Xhosa disadvantaged (borderline), and 5) coloured Afrikaans disadvantaged (extremely low). The present study has demonstrated that while language and ethnic variables reveal subtle effects on IQ test performance, quality of education has the most significant effect – impacting significantly on verbal performance with this effect replicated in respect of the FSIQ. Therefore caution should be exercised in interpreting test results of individuals from different language/ethnic groups, and in particular those with disadvantaged schooling, as preliminary data suggest that these individuals achieve scores which are 20 – 35 points lower than the UK standardisation.
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2008