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  • Being a Teacher: Reading 6. A Culture of Teaching

    In this brief article, Professor Morrow states strongly that teachers are central to the transformation of education and the reconstruction of society in South Africa. But in order to carry out this role, teachers themselves must rediscover their special professional responsibilities, and come to see themselves as agents, not as victims. more

  • Being a Teacher: Reading 10. Study of Effective Schools - Summary of Major Findings

    Reading 10 is a brief extract from a report in which researchers Christie and Potterton describe the key factors that they found in those South African schools that demonstrated resilience in the face of difficulties. This excerpt focuses on only one of these factors: a shared sense of responsibility on the part of the teachers on the staff – a moral responsibility that goes beyond... more

  • Being a Teacher: Reading 9c. Manual for Teacher Appraisal

    The ELRC’s Teacher Appraisal policy is another important means by which teachers’ professional accountability can be assured in South Africa. Note the important emphasis on teachers’ professional development rather than on simply judging teachers’ performance. more

  • Being a Teacher: Reading 9b. The Duties and Responsibilities of South African Educators

    This excerpt comes from an Education Labour Relations Council resolution published in 1998. It is essentially a job description for South African teachers. more

  • Being a Teacher: Reading 9a. A Code of Conduct

    One of the most important means of ensuring professional accountability among teachers in South Africa (and of ensuring that such accountability is administered by teachers themselves) is the Code of Conduct of the South African Council of Educators (SACE). Introduced in 1997, the Code establishes the basic standards by which teachers’ professional conduct may be judged. Note that the Code... more

  • Being a Teacher: Reading 7. The Teacher's Purpose

    In this brief excerpt, Fullan and Hargreaves identify what they think characterizes professionalism in teaching. They argue that it is not so much the possession of a certain level of qualifications or status, nor the possession of a set of technical teaching skills. Rather, it is the full acceptance of the moral responsibility that is attached to the role of teachers today, and the ability to... more

  • Being a Teacher: Reading 5b. Tricky Tension for Teachers

    This reading from "Being a Teacher" focuses on protecting teachers' own interests, but that it should not be at the expense of their obligations to their pupils. more

  • Being a Teacher: Reading 5a. Teachers Want What Students Need

    The following two excerpts present the views of the leaders of two major teachers’ organizations as they expressed them in 1994. They are extracts from brief articles commissioned for a publication that attempted to describe and discuss the education scene in the first year of South Africa’s new democracy. more

  • Being a Teacher: Reading 4. Teachers, Moral Agency, and the Reconstruction of Schooling in South Africa

    This is the fourth reading for Saide's Education Studies module "Being a Teacher". Fataar and Patterson’s study looks at how teachers in such schools experience teaching, how they see themselves, and how this influences their practice. more

  • Being a Teacher: Reading 3. Teachers, Identities, and Space

    This is the third reading for Saide's Education Studies module "Being a Teacher". The history of teaching in South Africa has been one in which the most significant single factor has been the enormous differences in the experiences of teachers – dependent primarily on whether they were identified as ‘black’, ‘coloured’, ‘Asiatic’, or ‘white’; male or female; rural-, township-, or suburban-... more

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