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Mandew, Martin – Liberal Education, 2000
The South African education system is engaged in a cultural struggle to bring about equality. The agenda for the country is transformation and equity despite considerable barriers inherited from its past. Examines: identity formation and deconstruction in South Africa; a diversity of inequality; the Enlightenment versus the diversity episteme; and…
Descriptors: Apartheid, Blacks, Cultural Pluralism, Diversity (Student)
Murphy, Jerome T. – Phi Delta Kappan, 1992
Segregated and unequal education, the main instrument for sorting children into their color-coded societal niches, is deeply embedded in South Africa. Despite obstacles such as inadequate funding, a tough, Eurocentric curriculum, and a bewildering school management bureaucracy nearing collapse, South Africa's general prosperity and political…
Descriptors: Apartheid, Blacks, Economic Factors, Educational Change
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Reagan, Timothy – Educational Foundations, 1990
Fundamental pedagogics, the Afrikaans philosophy of education, is an integral component of apartheid's ideological foundation, functioning both to justify and to legitimate separate educational systems. This article discusses this philosophy and the manner in which it manifests itself in teacher education and in the relationship between teacher…
Descriptors: Apartheid, Educational Philosophy, Elementary Secondary Education, Equal Education
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Lindsay, Beverly – Educational Foundations, 1992
Discusses educational conditions resulting from South African apartheid and its sociopolitical manifestations through a synopsis of case studies, emphasizing the pivotal role of the principal in relation to characteristics of effective schools. Analyzes the challenges to local schools posed by apartheid and provides suggestions for new…
Descriptors: Administrator Role, Apartheid, Case Studies, Civil Rights
Futrell, Mary Hatwood – Education International, 1995
Nations cannot survive unless they promote education for all people. The paper examines why education for females is still neglected worldwide. Problems include lack of government commitment, cultural values, poverty and child labor, and the structure of educational systems. The role of Education International in improving the situation is…
Descriptors: Access to Education, Apartheid, Developing Nations, Elementary Secondary Education