基础阶段教育工作者对历史上处境不利学校专业发展管理的看法

Bongi Mashiane-Nkabinde, B. Nkambule, S. Ngubane
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摘要

当一批批经过他们手的学生在最初三个年级以后的学习中表现良好时,基础阶段 (Foundation Phase,FP)的教育工作者就被认为是卓有成效的。在南非,尽管有经验证据表明,历史上处于不利地位的学校中的基础阶段教育工作者要面对班级拥挤、家长参与度低以及教学资源短缺等问题,但他们仍然被视为学生成绩不佳的主要原因。另一种观点则认为,教师表现不佳和学生成绩不佳是种族隔离设计的班图教育政策的遗留问题,这些政策使得学校教育系统中的黑人教育工作者训练不足。为了扭转这些挑战,种族隔离后的教育政策要求每所学校持续开展教师专业发展(TPD)活动。在变革理论(ToC)的指导下,这项定性分析研究采用了半结构式访谈的方式,有目的地与六名 FP 教育工作者进行互动。他们分别介绍了自己的领导在姆普马兰加省 Emalahleni Circuit 2 的两所小学中管理 TPD 的情况。第二种数据收集方法是分析一系列文件,即教育工作者档案、学校绩效改进计划和国家教育政策文件,以核对专题分析的结果。研究结果表明,校领导对教育工作者有足够的同侪关系,致力于为教育工作者提供专业支持,并按照紧凑的时间安排进行班级访问,以发展和评估教育工作者,并监督他们实施全纳教育的情况。障碍在于教育工作者对校领导的班级访问,尤其是随机进行的班级访问心存疑虑。第二个障碍是学校管理团队(SMT)缺乏专业精神、对校长的支持以及对课程领导政策的理解。研究建议,围绕校领导的定期和随机班级探访,需要采取更具包容性的沟通方式,以减少由此造成的恐慌。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Foundation Phase Educators’ Views on the Management of Professional Development in Historically Disadvantaged Schools
Foundation Phase (FP) educators are deemed productive when cohorts of learners who pass through their hands cope well with learning beyond the initial three grades of schooling. In South Africa, despite empirical evidence showing that FP educators in historically disadvantaged schools contend with overcrowded classes, low parental involvement and a shortage of teaching and learning resources, are still perceived as the primary source of poor learner achievement. The other point of view is that teacher underperformance and poor learner achievement are a legacy of the apartheid-engineered Bantu education policies that left the schooling system with poorly trained Black educators. To reverse these challenges, post-apartheid educational policies mandate that every school continuously conduct teacher professional development (TPD). Situated in the theory of change (ToC), this qualitative interpretivist study used interviews of a semi-structured nature to purposefully interact with a sample of six FP educators. They each characterised their HoDs’ management of TPD in two primary schools in Emalahleni Circuit 2, Mpumalanga Province. The second method of data collection entailed the analysis of a range of documents, namely the educators’ files, school performance improvement plans, and national education policy documents,  to cross-check the findings of the thematic analysis. The findings revealed that HoDs were sufficiently collegial towards educators, showed commitment towards rendering professional support to educators, and adhered to a tight schedule of class visits to develop and appraise educators and monitor their implementation of inclusive education practices. Barriers stemmed from educators’ apprehension towards HoD’s class visits, especially the randomly conducted ones. The second barrier was the school management teams’ (SMTs’) inefficiency of professionalism, support for HoDs and understanding of curriculum leadership policy. The study recommends that communication around HODs’ scheduled and random class visits needs to take a more inclusive approach to scale down the panic caused by them, and SMTs must be equally prioritised for continuous professional development. 
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