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Messages - solarman

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16
Politics / Ulale Ngoxolo King Daniel
« on: July 29, 2010, 04:14:41 PM »
Azanian Souljahs,

When 1 revolutionary falls...Ten more rise!!!!!

Aluta Continua

17
Bibliography

Adeyinka, A. A., & Adeyemi, M. B. (2002). Some Key Issues In African Traditional Education. Mcgill Journal of Education .

Bertram, C. (2009). The History of Schooling in South Africa. EDPD 610 LECTURE (PGCE) , 21.

Boetang, F. (1983). African Traditional Education: a method of disseminating cultural values. Journal of Black Studies .

Kimberley, P. (2010). Building a critical pedagogical framework for first year undergraduate studies in a post apartheid South African University: A case study of pedagogical re-curriculation at the University of Fort Hare. School Of Post Graduate Studies, Faculty of Education University of Fort Hare .

Mahn, V. J.-S. (1996). Sociocultural Approaches to Learning and Development: a Vygotskian framework. Educational Psychologist .

Phathekile Holomisa. (2010). The Real Meaning of Ulwaluko. Daily Dispatch Article .




18
Azanian Souljahs,

Here is the Full paper as promised..Enjoy and critique....

Aluta continua....

Significance of pre -colonial education (informal) and fundamental contrast with colonial education (formalised)KEYWORDS AND TERMS:

Formal, informal, African traditional education, indigenous knowledge systems (IKS), pedagogy, curriculum renewal

Knowledge development based on culture, collective custom and rituals, otherwise known as education, is a discipline that has been in practise in all civilizations of mankind from time immemorial. Africa is no different in this regard. African education dates back to ancient times in Egypt, to the establishment of Muslim mosques in the centuries following the death of Mohammed, to the University of Timbuktu in the sixteenth century, and to the missionary schools of the nineteenth century . Basic learning patterns came from day to day activities that involved everyone in society, with each a specific role to fulfil in this communal education effort. Long before colonial conquest set in, indigenous knowledge systems on health hygiene, agriculture, maths and physics, philosophy and history, informed people in a proactive learning situation. Learning happened through participation in community life. In terms of skills, girls learnt domestic work and home care from their mothers while boys learnt to hunt. Children were socialised into a way of life, traditions and religion of the community . Many African societies placed emphasis on traditional forms of education well before the arrival of Europeans. Adults in Khoi-Khoi/ San and Bantu speaking societies, for example, had extensive responsibilities for transmitting cultural values and skills within kinship-based groups an sometimes within larger organizations, villages, or districts. Education involved oral histories of a group, tales of heroism and treachery, and practise in the skills necessary for survival in a changing environment.  The purpose of creating such knowledge bases is to equip the people with abilities to understand the earth’s environment better for the collective survival of life on earth. It’s interesting to note that tales of heroism and treachery and other folklore kind of teaching and learning methods were also an integral part of Greek mythology that informed philosophical sciences such as the study of Hermeneutics in formal academia. Yet when these folklore philosophical sciences are used in informal/traditional education/ indigenous knowledge systems, all of a sudden they are not credible in institutionalised academia because they were not recorded or in written format.
The coming to the fore of formal schooling in (South Africa in particular) led to these indigenous knowledge systems to be deemed informal and backward.  In reality, the ma** schooling of children in Southern Africa introduced by colonial British in the 19th century had a much different purpose to that of the indigenous knowledge systems of pre colonial time, or that of Dutch introduction in the 17th century. The British formal schooling method has its roots in the Industrial Revolution; therefore this means that the learning and teaching methods were intendedS to yield workers with specialised skills that were going to supplement industrial demand of the time. Here in South Africa, the discovery of gold, diamonds and other minerals meant that purpose of knowledge production leaned towards industrial skills production. Formal institutions focused on this. The Dutch on the other hand in earlier times (17th century) were interested in basic skills development (for Europeans) and social control (for Africans), clearly the Dutch were not that much interested in the formal schooling methods.
Because of the different purposes and intensions of the governing body of the day, the strategies used in the development of knowledge (curriculum development to be precise in this time of formal instruction) for a people will differ. It is important then to highlight the different purposes that informed the development of knowledge and practises thereafter within pre colonial informal education and also in the advent of formal education systems that today have institutionalised the communal duty of teaching and learning.  Only from here will we be then being able to have a starting point in the attempt to review and renew curriculum development in all levels of teaching and learning.

Pre-colonial (informal) education and its significance in the process of teaching and learning and communal knowledge development

Teaching and learning communities as stressed earlier did exist here in Africa before colonial conquest. It was holistic, life long and utilitarian in nature . These civilisations themselves were present mainly because of the teaching and learning culture that existed amongst the people of this continent .Education had an input from all members of the community and prepares each individual for a particular profession or occupational activity (Adeyinka & Adeyemi, 2002).This Adeyinka & Adeyemi argue, should be the norm inn all africa societies today..A lot has been written about the kind of teaching and learning that took place here in Africa. Recent literature on the issue raises arguments on impacts of certain influences within education and their effects on present day teaching and learning methods.
Precise comprehension of the philosophical aspect of the term education is important when attempting to realise its significance where ever it is practised. The most relevant and basic comprehension in an African and universal context is that: education is a process whereby experienced members of the community/society guide the development of the inexperienced within the culture of society (Adeyinka & Adeyemi, 2002), a method of disseminating cultural values  or the acquisition of the art of the utilisation of knowledge (Whitehead, 1962). Now from these perspectives, one now can understand the desired outcome in education practise. Also, we can argue that schooling and education are two different things. To elaborate, schooling is the practise of being instructed in an environment design for teaching and learning. Education then becomes the process of guiding the inexperienced outside of the schooling environment but at the same time complementing what curriculum in the cla**room. This is to ensure that there is correspondence between what is learnt and what in reality happens in day to day life. It is clear then that African traditional education was not only there to be acquired, but it was actually there to be lived. Children acquired education through the maintenance of and participation in socio-political and religious institutions that ensured effective means of communication between different generations (Boetang, 1983).
The actual content of this informal/indigenous knowledge system/traditional education has its roots in the situations (varied) of African societies (Adeyinka & Adeyemi, 2002), from geographical setting, to community environment and also devotional aspects like religion and custom. Out of these curriculum informants, the issue of social impacts seems to carry a lot of weight. Adeyinka and Adeyemi argue that networks of reciprocal relationships that knit the family, clan and tribe together are to a large degree the prime factor in the survival of most traditional African societies.
Many methods of teaching and learning within formal and informal education were and still are employed in Africa. In general in Pre-colonial Africa, teaching and learning methods for various disciplines in societies had various characteristics and also significances.  Initiation ceremonies were and are still common. One can argue that it took a formalised character somewhat in that it compramised (its content) of teaching and learning of pre-determined material in a specific physical setting (Adeyinka & Adeyemi, 2002).Similarly, amaXhosa of the Eastern Cape practise the tradition of Ulwaluko, a dissemination of knowledge via  an ancient sacred rite of pa**age as initiation of boys into manhood. This practise has its own ways, places, seasons, rules and regulations which when not followed can and does have disastrous consequences. It has its own objectives and purposes, such as moulding boys into men who will become protectors and defenders of the weak and vulnerable, providers of their families and leaders of their communities and nations. It is an endurance “race” whose other purpose is to instil discipline and forbearance, to withstand pain and endure hardship . Here again we see formalised character in traditional dissemination of knowledge.
In contrast to this some illiterate African societies employed an informal education system. In these systems, methods of instruction were much more informal and loosely structured or designed, sometimes if not all the time, the distinction between teacher and learner was less distinguishable. Learning was by initiation and observation (Adeyinka & Adeyemi, 2002). The major purpose, yield or outcome of this indigenous development of knowledge base was young adults who understand their history and tradition and also inculcate a culture of socially engaged human being with critical thinking capabilities. It also developed a nature of self-control, endurance and pride in oneself. This thin reproduced itself in the whole tribe, nation and thus continent, from one generation to the other. The cycle of knowledge dissemination thus gets completed, without disengaging the people from their own development.
Oral Literature is one particular method of transmitting informal education. These have been an integral part of informal education in universal cultures for centuries, an in particular in Africa. Myths, fables, folktales, legends and proverbs served as tools of presenting social situations /values or pedagogic devises. They were sometimes used to teach insistence on justice and a resistance to arbitrariness while maintaining courtesy (Boetang, 1983).

A significant contrast between informal and formal education can be distinguished. A synthesis then of the developmental understanding of the two contrasting methods of teaching and learning can be designed into a system that informs curriculum review and renewal processes. A basic example is the understanding that informal folklore story telling as educative devices taught ideal forms of behaviour and morality, rather than formal instruction such as corporal punishment  or disciplinary hearings. Another example is the issue of learning by initiation and observation (Adeyinka & Adeyemi, 2002) which develops self control and endurance with contrasting inclination to teaching and learning that is pre determined in nature, hindering freedom of exploration with ideas. Humanising curriculums thus must seek teaching and learning methods that allow developmental approaches.

CONCLUSION

Leontiev  points out that Vygotsky conceptualised development as a transformation of socially shared activities into internalised processes, and in this way cut out the dichotomy of internal and the external. Verily, with relation to the LKA/Grounding Programme at the University of Fort Hare and study of it; the conception of its theoretical inclination that a pedagogy founded on critical social learning theory can a**ist historically disadvantaged students to establish new relationships with learning in higher education , should inspire/inform the basic pedagogy with transformational zeal that grasps learners and engages them in socially shared learning process that is collective and inclusive. Also, socialization comes into play as society is a developmental institute that transforms itself through human /social interaction through time (historical element). Now with the comprehension that some learners are deprived of this socialization element, the notion of educationally disadvantaged learners manifest as they are deprived of the necessary social interaction that allows a mode co-construction of knowledge.
Whilst some African academics argue that the downfall of African traditional education and academia in contrast to western academia, is that Africans lacked the discipline to record and write their work so as to pa** it down from one generation to the next (Adeyinka & Adeyemi, 2002), others reject this view arguing that the process educating of the African youth starts from the time of the unborn child. If this is not the case, then this means that education could not happen without writing (western) civilisations. Therefore take away western civilisation, and you have no education (Adeyinka & Adeyemi, 2002). This without a doubt is an extremely dogmatic outlook. One thing that is pragmatic though is that informal education methods be recorded in writing, as the process of knowledge development, teaching and learning can be enhanced. It is thus crucial to implement a pan –African educational system that will facilitate the economic, political and cultural reconstruction and integration of the African continent. The curriculum of pan -African education will be pan-African centred and will aim at the expansion of African peoples cultural and intellectual repertoire (Marah, 2006). The University of Fort Hare has been in the past a pioneer in influencing a liberating culture in the development of Africa, let us now with the LKA/Grounding Programme pioneer a liberating culture in institutionalised education through humanising pedagogies in all institutions.

19
Politics / Re: Hani killed by Modise ?
« on: July 16, 2010, 05:01:18 PM »
azannian souljhas,

education and a little info knows no ignan't situation!!!

Izwe Lethu....


20
Politics / Re: The September National Imbizo: A Call For Change!
« on: July 16, 2010, 04:59:48 PM »
azanian Souljhas,

This is a great initiative....

Izwe Lethu!!!!

21
Politics / Re: Afrophobia attacks
« on: July 16, 2010, 04:58:52 PM »
Azanian Souljahs,

Is Xenophobia a hip way of saying: "Iza ne four beers"?

Aluta Continua :o :-*

22
Politics / Re: Hani killed by Modise ?
« on: July 16, 2010, 03:48:50 PM »

[quote\]
Azanian Souljahs,

I am no history prof or geography expert, but am sur that no indigenous people of that land could have named their country CENTRAL AFRICAN REPUBLIC, without being influenced by some form of functional transitional post colonial settlement with neo liberals....i will research this , you better make sure you do so tooo......

Aluta continua
[/quote]

Azanian Souljahs,

Please note:

"In 1900, the territory of Ubangi-Shari, part of French Kongo, corresponded most closely to the present-day Central African Republic. On 1910-01-15, the Kongo became French Equatorial Africa. In 1911, France ceded part of this area to German-owned Kamerun, but during World War I (1916), the land was restored to its previous status. For part of the colonial period, Chad was administered jointly with Ubangi-Shari. In one week in August, 1960, all of the territories of French Equatorial Africa gained complete independence. The Central African Republic's turn came on 1960-08-13, and it took its name then. During the reign of Jean-Bedel Boka**a (1976-12-04 to 1979-09-21), the country was called the Central African Empire"."Origins of names:
The prefectures are named for the major rivers of the area: Ubangui, Nana, Mambéré, Kadeï, Lobaye, M'Poko, Ombella, Sangha, Kémo, Ouaka, Kotto, and M'Bomou all flow into the Congo; Pendé, Ouham, Gribingui, Bamingui, Bangoran, and Vakaga all flow into the Chari, and thus to Lake Chad. Ba**e (Lower) means downstream, and Haut or Haute (Upper) means upstream.
Bangui: in the Bobangui language, it means "the rapids." Bangui is located at the first great rapid of the Ubangi River."  I now hope u know how names for countriesare developed!

Aluta Continua

23
azanian souljahs,

I must say.....AG has a lot of reactionaries ne???

Aluta Continua....

24
Aazanian Souljahs,

Yes I am at UFH, and Nomad did not get Academic exclusion.....Got on AG like everybody else buddy!!!!

Aluta Continua...

25
sup Solarman? are you still at UFH? is it true that Mad was academically excluded!!!

How in the world was he academically included in the first place??!!

This is the million dollar question.

Azanian Souljahs,

Who is MAD? Nomadic Amba**odar??

Aluta Continua

26
Azanian Souljahs,

Hey, this is an interesting read... Obviously the full paper will attempt to put into comprehension what the abstract and introduction that have layed the land on the issue of curriculum renewal in SA...

Aluta Continua..

27
Politics / Re: Factors and agency leading to curriculum renewal
« on: April 20, 2010, 03:47:50 PM »
Azanian Souljahs,

Will lace you guys with the full paper soon.

Aluta Continua..

28
Politics / Re: Factors and agency leading to curriculum renewal
« on: April 20, 2010, 03:17:57 PM »
Azanian Souljahs,

This article is work in progress, an academic paper being prepared for a conference to sit in August 2010 addressing an Education Commission Report on South African Higher Education..

Aluta Continua..


29

Factors and agency leading to curriculum renewal: a basic review of the history of formal schooling in South Africa
Article by:Sibusiso Mnyanda and Nqaba Mpofu

Abstract
The education system of South Africa historically is built on the backdrop of a dehumanizing curriculum and pedagogy. Today, advances in education in contemporary South Africa are aimed at responding to skills shortages and other social implications as a result of this dehumanising condition. At the same time, efforts at promoting ‘social awareness’ and a humanising pedagogy are relatively new in the South African context following the country’s oppressive history.                                                                                                                                                           It is important then to analyse the agents and factors within this backdrop (pre-colonial and colonial), that stain the current education system in post apartheid/1994  so as to aid the effort of curriculum review and renewal in formal schooling (pre-primary, primary, secondary and tertiary institutions).

Introduction
Institutionalised education in South Africa has a strong background to the forces of colonial conquest. The opening moment of formal education in South Africa coincides with the colonial experience at the Cape in 1652. Six years after the Dutch East India Company established its colony at the Cape, the first formal schooling is begun in 1658 . Prior to this, development of knowledge in this society relied on culture, collective custom and basic rituals of the inhabitant (not super- imposed capitalistic tendencies such as exploitive economic development of a few by means of another).  The main agenda in the eventual establishment of schooling institutions was to prepare colonised inhabitants of the region into cheap labourers for colonist. This physical labour (as rudimentary as it was) did require a certain skills training programme, a limited skills programme at that. This was due to the kind of work they were put under (farm work, domestic duties and so forth). Applied knowledge and skills were not necessary, as the conditions employment were a forced labour. The kind of education, curriculum and pedagogy then was then  applied had to produce a labourer who was almost inhumane in nature, lacked fundamental critique of the working conditions such that the forced labourer had no alternative but to be a perpetual  student who is detached from the process of knowledge production within his/her societal domain. When one looks at the history of education in South Africa within the scope of education as a means to provide the nation state with a labour force, it is important to look at factors that influenced the socialisation of individuals as they progressed through the education ‘system’. It is also essential to note that this education was designed to remove the labourer from the sanctity of their cultural norms, customs rituals and belief systems. These would hinder the process of desired schooling. The ‘barbaric ‘customs of the uncivilised and uneducated had to be eradicated, so that they can be well groomed servants of the colonist. Missionary work of the British and Scottish in the late 18th and early 19th century  is a primary example of the magnitude of zeal that the colonist had while complementing the ’ limited skills training programme for labourers’ that colonial masters were enforcing.  Thus the education/curriculum was also changed as skills required by labourers for mining became more specialised.  The discovery of gold in the Witwatersrand brought a rapid increase in economic activity and the need for labour, especially specialised labour.

30
Politics / Re: PACYL threatens to kill Juju
« on: March 31, 2010, 05:03:04 PM »
azanian souljahs,

He must feel true militant discipline maan...

Aluat Continua

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