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Teachers' understanding of critical language awareness and their enactment of this understanding in the classroom

This study was prompted by my role as Afrikaans Curriculum Advisor which is inter alia to identify and address shortcomings and needs in the professional development of teachers. One of my immediate interventions was to help teachers understand critical literacy in order to implement Critical Langua...

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Main Author: Petersen, Lucia
Other Authors: McKinney, Carolyn
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: School of Education 2014
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access_status_str Open Access
author Petersen, Lucia
author2 McKinney, Carolyn
author_browse McKinney, Carolyn
Petersen, Lucia
author_facet McKinney, Carolyn
Petersen, Lucia
author_sort Petersen, Lucia
collection Thesis
description This study was prompted by my role as Afrikaans Curriculum Advisor which is inter alia to identify and address shortcomings and needs in the professional development of teachers. One of my immediate interventions was to help teachers understand critical literacy in order to implement Critical Language Awareness (CLA) as defined in the newly revised CAPS curriculum. Teachers need to master teaching CLA before its implementation in terms of the curriculum, introduced incrementally in 2012 in Grade 10. In order to determine teachers' understanding of CLA I selected three Afrikaans Lead Teachers who attended most of the sessions presented as part of the Grade 10 and 11 CAPS orientation. The research question therefore looks at selected teachers' understanding of CLA and their enactment of this understanding in the classroom. The theoretical framework for the study draws on Critical Discourse Analysis (CDA) which views language not only as a form of social practice, but as a socially conditioned and conditioning process. (Fairclough, 2001, p. 19). The data collected for the three case studies were audio taped individual interviews with each teacher to probe their personal understanding of CLA, as well as video recorded complete lessons of CLA taught by each teacher. For my data analysis I drew on Fairclough's model for CDA as interpreted by Janks (1997). Analysis revealed how two of the teachers approached texts as though meaning is singular, and the third constructed meaning as multiple. Teachers' approaches to meaning in text were found to either close down or open up opportunities for critical class discussion. Another significant finding is how teachers' identities and personal histories impacted on their selection of texts for the critical literacy lesson, and their pedagogies. I explore how these pedagogies restricted/enabled classroom interaction. An implication for teacher education is that teachers should not only be trained in content and pedagogy, but should be made aware of and assisted in dealing with their own identity issues which might emerge while teaching critical literacy.
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:33:07.122Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2014
publishDateRange 2014
publishDateSort 2014
publisher School of Education
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spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/6865 Teachers' understanding of critical language awareness and their enactment of this understanding in the classroom Petersen, Lucia McKinney, Carolyn Dornbrack, Jacqui This study was prompted by my role as Afrikaans Curriculum Advisor which is inter alia to identify and address shortcomings and needs in the professional development of teachers. One of my immediate interventions was to help teachers understand critical literacy in order to implement Critical Language Awareness (CLA) as defined in the newly revised CAPS curriculum. Teachers need to master teaching CLA before its implementation in terms of the curriculum, introduced incrementally in 2012 in Grade 10. In order to determine teachers' understanding of CLA I selected three Afrikaans Lead Teachers who attended most of the sessions presented as part of the Grade 10 and 11 CAPS orientation. The research question therefore looks at selected teachers' understanding of CLA and their enactment of this understanding in the classroom. The theoretical framework for the study draws on Critical Discourse Analysis (CDA) which views language not only as a form of social practice, but as a socially conditioned and conditioning process. (Fairclough, 2001, p. 19). The data collected for the three case studies were audio taped individual interviews with each teacher to probe their personal understanding of CLA, as well as video recorded complete lessons of CLA taught by each teacher. For my data analysis I drew on Fairclough's model for CDA as interpreted by Janks (1997). Analysis revealed how two of the teachers approached texts as though meaning is singular, and the third constructed meaning as multiple. Teachers' approaches to meaning in text were found to either close down or open up opportunities for critical class discussion. Another significant finding is how teachers' identities and personal histories impacted on their selection of texts for the critical literacy lesson, and their pedagogies. I explore how these pedagogies restricted/enabled classroom interaction. An implication for teacher education is that teachers should not only be trained in content and pedagogy, but should be made aware of and assisted in dealing with their own identity issues which might emerge while teaching critical literacy. 2014-09-02T10:04:44Z 2014-09-02T10:04:44Z 2014 Master Thesis Masters Mphil http://hdl.handle.net/11427/6865 eng application/pdf School of Education Faculty of Humanities University of Cape Town
spellingShingle Petersen, Lucia
Teachers' understanding of critical language awareness and their enactment of this understanding in the classroom
thesis_degree_str Master's
title Teachers' understanding of critical language awareness and their enactment of this understanding in the classroom
title_full Teachers' understanding of critical language awareness and their enactment of this understanding in the classroom
title_fullStr Teachers' understanding of critical language awareness and their enactment of this understanding in the classroom
title_full_unstemmed Teachers' understanding of critical language awareness and their enactment of this understanding in the classroom
title_short Teachers' understanding of critical language awareness and their enactment of this understanding in the classroom
title_sort teachers understanding of critical language awareness and their enactment of this understanding in the classroom
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/6865
work_keys_str_mv AT petersenlucia teachersunderstandingofcriticallanguageawarenessandtheirenactmentofthisunderstandingintheclassroom