Exploring Teaching Perspectives Embraced by Teachers in Teaching Agricultural Sciences in Secondary Schools in South Africa

The South African Curriculum Assessment Policy Statement (CAPS) document stipulates that in teaching Agricultural Sciences (AGRIS), teachers should cement their pedagogical practices in three aspects: knowledge, skill, and values/attitudes. The statement contends for the interwoven prescriptive (kno...

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Main Author: Nonhlanhla Fortunate Nduku
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Noyam Journals 2024-12-01
Series:E-Journal of Humanities, Arts and Social Sciences
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Online Access:https://noyam.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/12/EHASS202451624.pdf
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author Nonhlanhla Fortunate Nduku
author_facet Nonhlanhla Fortunate Nduku
author_sort Nonhlanhla Fortunate Nduku
collection DOAJ
description The South African Curriculum Assessment Policy Statement (CAPS) document stipulates that in teaching Agricultural Sciences (AGRIS), teachers should cement their pedagogical practices in three aspects: knowledge, skill, and values/attitudes. The statement contends for the interwoven prescriptive (knowledge), communal (skills), and habitual (values/attitudes) perspectives, which are apropos of balancing three aspects of teaching AGRIS. The study, therefore, explored teachers’ perspectives when teaching AGRIS in secondary schools. The study was grounded in the Cultural Historical Activity Theory (CHAT), shaped by Vygotsky. From the critical paradigm, the study employed reflective activities, interviews, observations, and focus groups as data generation methods through action research. Six participants were purposefully selected to bring an in-depth understanding of the phenomenon. The findings exhibited that teachers embrace the prescriptive perspective when teaching AGRIS in secondary schools. On the one hand, teachers impart content knowledge during AGRIS teaching. On the other hand, the CAPS document is silent about how teachers should instill skills and values/attitudes in learners. It is recommended that the AGRIS curriculum developers amend the enactment of skills and values/attitudes driven by communal and habitual perspectives. Nonetheless, the researcher calls for aligning prescriptive, communal, and habitual perspectives for teachers to impart knowledge, skill, and values/attitudes successfully. This alignment may balance the quality of the AGRIS South African curriculum.
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spelling doaj-art-c0fed54fb8c14f499efe4333b42c52c52025-01-06T15:30:27ZengNoyam JournalsE-Journal of Humanities, Arts and Social Sciences2720-77222024-12-0151629862996https://doi.org/10.38159/ehass.202451624Exploring Teaching Perspectives Embraced by Teachers in Teaching Agricultural Sciences in Secondary Schools in South AfricaNonhlanhla Fortunate Nduku0https://orcid.org/0009-0002-6970-9571University of the Free State, Department of Curriculum Studies, Phuthaditjhaba, South AfricaThe South African Curriculum Assessment Policy Statement (CAPS) document stipulates that in teaching Agricultural Sciences (AGRIS), teachers should cement their pedagogical practices in three aspects: knowledge, skill, and values/attitudes. The statement contends for the interwoven prescriptive (knowledge), communal (skills), and habitual (values/attitudes) perspectives, which are apropos of balancing three aspects of teaching AGRIS. The study, therefore, explored teachers’ perspectives when teaching AGRIS in secondary schools. The study was grounded in the Cultural Historical Activity Theory (CHAT), shaped by Vygotsky. From the critical paradigm, the study employed reflective activities, interviews, observations, and focus groups as data generation methods through action research. Six participants were purposefully selected to bring an in-depth understanding of the phenomenon. The findings exhibited that teachers embrace the prescriptive perspective when teaching AGRIS in secondary schools. On the one hand, teachers impart content knowledge during AGRIS teaching. On the other hand, the CAPS document is silent about how teachers should instill skills and values/attitudes in learners. It is recommended that the AGRIS curriculum developers amend the enactment of skills and values/attitudes driven by communal and habitual perspectives. Nonetheless, the researcher calls for aligning prescriptive, communal, and habitual perspectives for teachers to impart knowledge, skill, and values/attitudes successfully. This alignment may balance the quality of the AGRIS South African curriculum.https://noyam.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/12/EHASS202451624.pdfperspectiveprescriptivecommunalhabitual
spellingShingle Nonhlanhla Fortunate Nduku
Exploring Teaching Perspectives Embraced by Teachers in Teaching Agricultural Sciences in Secondary Schools in South Africa
E-Journal of Humanities, Arts and Social Sciences
perspective
prescriptive
communal
habitual
title Exploring Teaching Perspectives Embraced by Teachers in Teaching Agricultural Sciences in Secondary Schools in South Africa
title_full Exploring Teaching Perspectives Embraced by Teachers in Teaching Agricultural Sciences in Secondary Schools in South Africa
title_fullStr Exploring Teaching Perspectives Embraced by Teachers in Teaching Agricultural Sciences in Secondary Schools in South Africa
title_full_unstemmed Exploring Teaching Perspectives Embraced by Teachers in Teaching Agricultural Sciences in Secondary Schools in South Africa
title_short Exploring Teaching Perspectives Embraced by Teachers in Teaching Agricultural Sciences in Secondary Schools in South Africa
title_sort exploring teaching perspectives embraced by teachers in teaching agricultural sciences in secondary schools in south africa
topic perspective
prescriptive
communal
habitual
url https://noyam.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/12/EHASS202451624.pdf
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