{"title":"Learner and Parent Perceptions of Visible Rewards at two South African High Schools: An Inclusive Education Perspective","authors":"Shakira Akabor","doi":"10.25159/2663-6549/9089","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"The use of visible rewards presented at award ceremonies for academic achievement is a common practice in many South African schools. Although rewards are unique to each school, the use of badges, trophies, certificates, honour board listings and differentiated school uniforms are commonly accepted ways in which learners are rewarded for their academic achievements. Using a survey of 104 learner responses and 17 parent responses, this article reports on the quantitative data from the author’s mixed methods doctoral study. Experiences of academic rewards at two Gauteng high schools from the perspective of grade 11 learners and their parents are presented here. A framework, including Social Interdependence Theory (Johnson and Johnson 2009) and the Participation Framework (Florian, Black-Hawkins, and Rouse 2017) was used to interpret the responses, revealing layers of meaning that indicated the problematic nature of rewarding learners visibly and publicly within an inclusive education system. The survey data revealed that learners desired recognition for their efforts and hard work but found the schools’ reward systems restrictive in terms of recognising their efforts and talent. Parents felt more excluded from reward ceremonies than their children, and many did not believe in the benefits of public rewards; however, they did admit to feeling a sense of pride when their children won awards. Although South African schools are committed to inclusive education, the interrogation of visible rewards has uncovered a competitive environment unfeasible for inclusive education.","PeriodicalId":159147,"journal":{"name":"Commonwealth Youth and Development","volume":"92 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2022-05-24","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Commonwealth Youth and Development","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.25159/2663-6549/9089","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
The use of visible rewards presented at award ceremonies for academic achievement is a common practice in many South African schools. Although rewards are unique to each school, the use of badges, trophies, certificates, honour board listings and differentiated school uniforms are commonly accepted ways in which learners are rewarded for their academic achievements. Using a survey of 104 learner responses and 17 parent responses, this article reports on the quantitative data from the author’s mixed methods doctoral study. Experiences of academic rewards at two Gauteng high schools from the perspective of grade 11 learners and their parents are presented here. A framework, including Social Interdependence Theory (Johnson and Johnson 2009) and the Participation Framework (Florian, Black-Hawkins, and Rouse 2017) was used to interpret the responses, revealing layers of meaning that indicated the problematic nature of rewarding learners visibly and publicly within an inclusive education system. The survey data revealed that learners desired recognition for their efforts and hard work but found the schools’ reward systems restrictive in terms of recognising their efforts and talent. Parents felt more excluded from reward ceremonies than their children, and many did not believe in the benefits of public rewards; however, they did admit to feeling a sense of pride when their children won awards. Although South African schools are committed to inclusive education, the interrogation of visible rewards has uncovered a competitive environment unfeasible for inclusive education.
在南非的许多学校里,在颁奖典礼上对学术成就给予可见的奖励是一种常见的做法。虽然每个学校的奖励都是独一无二的,但使用徽章、奖杯、证书、荣誉榜和不同的校服是普遍接受的奖励学生学业成就的方式。本文通过对104个学习者反馈和17个家长反馈的调查,报告了作者混合方法博士研究的定量数据。本文以豪登省两所高中11年级学生及其家长为视角,介绍了他们在学业奖励方面的经验。一个框架,包括社会相互依存理论(Johnson and Johnson 2009)和参与框架(Florian, Black-Hawkins, and Rouse 2017)被用来解释这些回答,揭示了在全纳教育系统中明显和公开地奖励学习者的问题本质。调查数据显示,学生希望自己的努力和努力得到认可,但发现学校的奖励制度在认可他们的努力和才能方面存在限制。父母比他们的孩子更觉得被排除在奖励仪式之外,许多人不相信公共奖励的好处;然而,当他们的孩子获奖时,他们确实感到很自豪。尽管南非学校致力于全纳教育,但对可见奖励的质疑揭示了全纳教育不可行的竞争环境。