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What counts as literacy in Windhoek urban pre- and primary schools in Namibia?

This study aims to investigate what counts as literacy in Windhoek urban pre-and primary schools in Namibia. Using an ethnographic-style research paradigm the study examines literacy practices in social contexts to answer the question as to what counts as literacy in these schools. As teachers and l...

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Main Author: Hengari, Job Uazembua
Other Authors: Prinsloo, Mastin
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: School of Education 2019
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access_status_str Open Access
author Hengari, Job Uazembua
author2 Prinsloo, Mastin
author_browse Hengari, Job Uazembua
Prinsloo, Mastin
author_facet Prinsloo, Mastin
Hengari, Job Uazembua
author_sort Hengari, Job Uazembua
collection Thesis
description This study aims to investigate what counts as literacy in Windhoek urban pre-and primary schools in Namibia. Using an ethnographic-style research paradigm the study examines literacy practices in social contexts to answer the question as to what counts as literacy in these schools. As teachers and learners and parents/caregivers and their children occupy the classroom/home as a social space, they engage each other in literacy events, during which literacy development is scaffolded and encouraged as a culturally valued activity. The study focused on three children and studied their early literacy development in their classrooms and at home by observing them and recording them during those practices. The data was collected in two phases, each stretching over a six months’ period. The focus during phase one was on the preschool phase of early literacy learning, while phase two continued to collect the data at lower primary school phase. At pre- and primary school, the classroom is the place where teachers provide literacy practice and guidance to the learners. It is this ‘school literacy’ that defines what counts as literacy, a specific kind of literacy that is planned and offered to learners in a classroom setting. In Windhoek urban settings, the ‘traditional’ conception of literacy as a largely psychological ability – something true to do with our intellect, and thus a private possession – remains dominant. As some literacy is more dominant, visible and influential than others, the ‘school-based literacy’ in this study dominates and marginalizes the vernacular and techno-literacies that occur at home. I want to suggest that Namibia endorse the sociocultural approach to literacy learning by way of a paradigm shift in order to create room for other literacy practices outside of school, in homes and in communities, so as to become recognized and legitimized as they already are broadening what counts as literacy. I argue for a new curriculum that can account for similar variations in children’s home backgrounds.
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:40:02.033Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2019
publishDateRange 2019
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publisher School of Education
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spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/30073 What counts as literacy in Windhoek urban pre- and primary schools in Namibia? Hengari, Job Uazembua Prinsloo, Mastin This study aims to investigate what counts as literacy in Windhoek urban pre-and primary schools in Namibia. Using an ethnographic-style research paradigm the study examines literacy practices in social contexts to answer the question as to what counts as literacy in these schools. As teachers and learners and parents/caregivers and their children occupy the classroom/home as a social space, they engage each other in literacy events, during which literacy development is scaffolded and encouraged as a culturally valued activity. The study focused on three children and studied their early literacy development in their classrooms and at home by observing them and recording them during those practices. The data was collected in two phases, each stretching over a six months’ period. The focus during phase one was on the preschool phase of early literacy learning, while phase two continued to collect the data at lower primary school phase. At pre- and primary school, the classroom is the place where teachers provide literacy practice and guidance to the learners. It is this ‘school literacy’ that defines what counts as literacy, a specific kind of literacy that is planned and offered to learners in a classroom setting. In Windhoek urban settings, the ‘traditional’ conception of literacy as a largely psychological ability – something true to do with our intellect, and thus a private possession – remains dominant. As some literacy is more dominant, visible and influential than others, the ‘school-based literacy’ in this study dominates and marginalizes the vernacular and techno-literacies that occur at home. I want to suggest that Namibia endorse the sociocultural approach to literacy learning by way of a paradigm shift in order to create room for other literacy practices outside of school, in homes and in communities, so as to become recognized and legitimized as they already are broadening what counts as literacy. I argue for a new curriculum that can account for similar variations in children’s home backgrounds. 2019-05-15T07:06:31Z 2019-05-15T07:06:31Z 2019 2019-05-14T11:40:08Z Doctoral Thesis Doctoral PhD http://hdl.handle.net/11427/30073 eng application/pdf School of Education Faculty of Humanities
spellingShingle Hengari, Job Uazembua
What counts as literacy in Windhoek urban pre- and primary schools in Namibia?
thesis_degree_str Doctoral
title What counts as literacy in Windhoek urban pre- and primary schools in Namibia?
title_full What counts as literacy in Windhoek urban pre- and primary schools in Namibia?
title_fullStr What counts as literacy in Windhoek urban pre- and primary schools in Namibia?
title_full_unstemmed What counts as literacy in Windhoek urban pre- and primary schools in Namibia?
title_short What counts as literacy in Windhoek urban pre- and primary schools in Namibia?
title_sort what counts as literacy in windhoek urban pre and primary schools in namibia
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/30073
work_keys_str_mv AT hengarijobuazembua whatcountsasliteracyinwindhoekurbanpreandprimaryschoolsinnamibia