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Kgati, Noziphiwo Cleopatra; de Beer, Zacharias L. – Bulgarian Comparative Education Society, 2023
South Africa requires an educated population to sustain her economic development. Higher education institutions are under pressure to produce graduates with skills and competencies to fulfil such an aspiration. Distance education is an essential avenue through which more South Africans can have the much-needed education without necessarily…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Distance Education, Higher Education, Educational Technology
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Musengi, Martin – American Annals of the Deaf, 2023
The African worldview of Ubuntu predates Vygotskian theory, but the Ubuntu view that the community defines the person aligns uncannily with Vygotsky's biosocial proposition and contemporary conceptions of deaf ontology and epistemology. Unlike prevailing Euro-American thought, Ubuntu accentuates the view that it is not any physical or…
Descriptors: African Culture, World Views, Decolonization, Deafness
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Donna M. Mertens; Bagele Chilisa – International Journal for Transformative Research, 2024
The international development community made a commitment to transformative goals related to social, economic, and environmental justice that requires them to leave no one behind. We argue that the use of transformative and indigenous frameworks for evaluation provide guidance towards achieving those goals. We provide a rationale for inclusion of…
Descriptors: Economic Development, Global Approach, Transformative Learning, Social Justice
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Metz, Thaddeus – Education as Change, 2019
What should be the aim when teaching matters of culture to students in public high schools and universities in Africa? One approach, which is parochial, would focus exclusively on imparting local culture, leaving students unfamiliar with, or perhaps contemptuous of, other cultures around the world. A second, cosmopolitan approach would educate…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Ethics, Cultural Awareness, African Culture
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Fakudze, Cynthia – South African Journal of Education, 2021
The study is situated within a worldview theory as espoused by socio-cultural constructivists. Science classrooms in secondary schools in Swaziland are culturally largely homogeneous where learners and their teachers have a strong grounding in traditional Swazi culture. The aim of this study was to investigate whether the conceptions held by Grade…
Descriptors: World Views, Secondary School Students, Grade 11, Beliefs
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Mabingo, Alfdaniels – Research in Dance Education, 2019
What constitutes African dances as valid knowledge? Do the learning processes of African dances in local communities entail rational consciousness and epistemological interpretations of the learner? How do the processes of dance practice double as frameworks of construction of meanings? The foregoing questions provided parameters for critical…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Dance Education, African Culture, Constructivism (Learning)
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Okpalikel, Chika J. B. Gabriel – Journal of International Education and Leadership, 2015
This work is set against the backdrop of the Sub-Saharan African environment observed to be morally degenerative. It judges that the level of decadence in the continent that could even amount to depravity could be blamed upon the disconnect between the present-day African and a moral tradition that has been swept under the carpet through history;…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Moral Values, World History, World Views
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Garrard, David J. – Journal of Beliefs & Values, 2009
The diversity of African Pentecostalism, its early colonial and missionary history and its current characteristics are described and analysed. Reference is made to methods of training and forms of leadership, and suggestions are made about the reasons for its growth and persistence. (Contains 19 notes.)
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Religious Factors, Religion, African Culture
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Mutonyi, Harriet; Nashon, Samson; Nielsen, Wendy S. – Research in Science Education, 2010
In Uganda, curbing the spread of HIV/AIDS has largely depended on public and private media messages about the disease. Media campaigns based on Uganda's cultural norms of communication are metaphorical, analogical and simile-like. The topic of HIV/AIDS has been introduced into the Senior Three (Grade 11) biology curriculum in Uganda. To what…
Descriptors: Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome (AIDS), Student Attitudes, Communicable Diseases, Prior Learning