{"title":"Private Courses in Education or Education in Private Courses","authors":"İlker Kösterelioğlu","doi":"10.15345/IOJES.2015.01.017","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Article History: Received 28.06.2014 Received in revised form 21.09.2014 Accepted 01.10.2014 Available online 01.03.2015 The present research discusses the views of a group of teachers working at private courses which help the students get ready for the exams in Turkish education system. Participant teachers (n=58) have been doing their MA degree through distance education at Social Sciences Institution at Amasya University. The research was carried out in the Fall Semester of 2013-2014 Academic Year. Participants were asked to answer open-ended questions. The study was based on descriptive analysis. The findings yielded four domains: “the reasons why private courses exist”, “the need for private courses”, “suggestions for solving the problem in question”, and “problems caused by private courses”. Percentages of the codes (52) having appeared under the domains are presented and the views of teachers are cited as substantiated with excerpts from the participants’ answers. Majority of the participant teachers (98%) consider that private courses are a must in the current condition of Turkish education system. This view has been supported by the claim that Turkish assessment system for high school and undergraduate placement is competition-and achievementbased. Percentages of the other views standing out as “the best suggestions” are as follows: families’ belief that attending private courses is a sine qua non to enter a university and the relief of fulfilling their responsibility for enrolling their children for a university prep school (10%); belief that private courses create equality of educational opportunity for low income families (8%); teachers’ concern about mushrooming of illegal private tutoring due to private courses closedown (38%) and their views that private courses should not be closed down because they help lower unemployment by hiring teachers (24%); exemption of teachers from interinstitutional transfer exam (27%) and operationalization of orientation services in education. In addition, teachers also point to some adverse effects of private courses on students’ social and psychological development (32%) and some parents’ diminished trust in formal education (22%). © 2015 IOJES. All rights reserved","PeriodicalId":358961,"journal":{"name":"International Online Journal of Educational Sciences","volume":"81 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2015-03-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"4","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"International Online Journal of Educational Sciences","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.15345/IOJES.2015.01.017","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 4
私立教育课程或私立课程中的教育
本研究讨论了一群在私立课程工作的教师的观点,这些教师帮助学生为土耳其教育系统的考试做好准备。参与教师(n=58)一直在Amasya大学社会科学学院通过远程教育获得硕士学位。本研究在2013-2014学年秋季学期进行。参与者被要求回答开放式问题。本研究基于描述性分析。调查结果分为四个领域:“私人课程存在的原因”、“私人课程的必要性”、“解决问题的建议”和“私人课程引起的问题”。在这些领域中出现的代码(52)的百分比被呈现出来,教师的观点被引用,并从参与者的回答中摘录出来。大多数参与调查的教师(98%)认为,在目前的土耳其教育体系中,私立课程是必须的。这种观点得到了一种说法的支持,即土耳其的高中和本科安置评估体系是以竞争和成就为基础的。其他被认为是“最好的建议”的观点的百分比如下:家庭认为参加私人课程是进入大学的必要条件,并且减轻了他们为孩子报读大学预科学校的责任(10%);认为私人课程为低收入家庭创造了平等的教育机会(8%);教师对私塾关闭导致非法私教剧增的担忧(38%)和认为私塾聘用教师有助于降低失业率,不应该关闭(24%);免除教师校际转学考试(27%)和教育迎新服务的运作化。此外,教师们还指出了私人课程对学生的社会和心理发展的一些不利影响(32%),以及一些家长对正规教育的信任度下降(22%)。©2015 iojes。版权所有
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