The decolonisation of the curriculum project
The affordances of indigenous knowledge for self-directed learning
Author(s)
Bailey, Roxanne
Bester, Susan
de Beer, Josef
Dudu, Washington T.
Golightly, Aubrey
Havenga, Marietjie
Jagals, Divan
Laubscher, Dorothy
Le Grange, Lesley
Mdakane, Marry
Mentz, Elsa
Olivier, Jako
Petersen, Neal
Potgieter, Erika
Sebotsa, Tswakae
Speight Vaughn, Melissa
van der Walt, Marthie
van der Westhuizen, Christo
van Wyk, Ben-Erik
White, Lounell
Contributor(s)
de Beer, Josef (editor)
Language
EnglishAbstract
This book is the result of a longitudinal research project (2016–2018) funded by the National Research Foundation and the Fuchs Foundation, and it disseminates original research. The project researched the affordances of indigenous knowledge in the school science, technology and mathematics curricula. Short learning programmes (SLPs) were offered to STEM teachers, during which they engaged in creative and inquiry-based teaching and learning strategies. Research shows that strategies such as problem-based and cooperative learning have the potential to enhance self-directed learning. This design-based research was conducted in several provinces in South Africa (North-West Province, the Northern Cape, Limpopo Province, and in Gauteng). Based on the data obtained after each intervention, design principles were formulated for redesigning of SLPs. The qualitative research focussed on teachers’ lived experiences of the epistemological border-crossing between natural science and indigenous knowledge, their views on the nature of science and indigenous knowledge, and the reformed teaching and learning that took place after the intervention, in teachers’ classrooms.
Keywords
Self-directed learning; decolonisation; indigenous knowledge; Cultural-Historical Activity Theory; curriculum; education; researchDOI
10.4102/aosis.2019.BK133Publisher
AOSISPublisher website
https://books.aosis.co.za/index.php/obPublication date and place
Durbanville, 2019Series
NWU Self-Directed Learning Series, 2Classification
Education