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School science for six year olds: a neo-vygotskian approach to curriculum analysis

The purpose of this study is to describe the form of knowledge that is made available to six year olds as 'Science' in key South African Grade R curriculum texts. The study draws on a neo-Vygotskian conceptualisation of forms of knowledge and child development to develop a language of description in...

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Main Author: Morris, Anya Caroline
Other Authors: Jacklin, Heather
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: School of Education 2014
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access_status_str Open Access
author Morris, Anya Caroline
author2 Jacklin, Heather
author_browse Jacklin, Heather
Morris, Anya Caroline
author_facet Jacklin, Heather
Morris, Anya Caroline
author_sort Morris, Anya Caroline
collection Thesis
description The purpose of this study is to describe the form of knowledge that is made available to six year olds as 'Science' in key South African Grade R curriculum texts. The study draws on a neo-Vygotskian conceptualisation of forms of knowledge and child development to develop a language of description in terms of which the selected texts are analysed. Representations of knowledge in the curriculum texts are described in relation to the notion of a simple scientific concept, an idea that was derived from a neo-Vygotskian conceptualisation of knowledge. A simple scientific concept is consistent with scientific criteria and functions as an entry level concept in relation to scientific knowledge. Findings indicate that the Grade R science curriculum represents knowledge in terms of everyday concepts and 'potential' scientific concepts, i.e. concepts that have the potential to prompt the Grade R educator to translate an everyday concept into a simple scientific concept. However, the curriculum does not represent any concepts in ways that conform to the criteria for scientific concepts, including simple scientific concepts. The study concludes that the official recontextualisation of scientific knowledge into Grade R school science is problematic because the Grade R science curriculum represents knowledge mostly in everyday terms. The implications are that Grade R learners are not given the opportunity to acquire the form or content of scientific knowledge or to develop the cognitive skills required for formal schooling.
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:36:31.064Z
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
publisherStr School of Education
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source_str UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/6867 School science for six year olds: a neo-vygotskian approach to curriculum analysis Morris, Anya Caroline Jacklin, Heather The purpose of this study is to describe the form of knowledge that is made available to six year olds as 'Science' in key South African Grade R curriculum texts. The study draws on a neo-Vygotskian conceptualisation of forms of knowledge and child development to develop a language of description in terms of which the selected texts are analysed. Representations of knowledge in the curriculum texts are described in relation to the notion of a simple scientific concept, an idea that was derived from a neo-Vygotskian conceptualisation of knowledge. A simple scientific concept is consistent with scientific criteria and functions as an entry level concept in relation to scientific knowledge. Findings indicate that the Grade R science curriculum represents knowledge in terms of everyday concepts and 'potential' scientific concepts, i.e. concepts that have the potential to prompt the Grade R educator to translate an everyday concept into a simple scientific concept. However, the curriculum does not represent any concepts in ways that conform to the criteria for scientific concepts, including simple scientific concepts. The study concludes that the official recontextualisation of scientific knowledge into Grade R school science is problematic because the Grade R science curriculum represents knowledge mostly in everyday terms. The implications are that Grade R learners are not given the opportunity to acquire the form or content of scientific knowledge or to develop the cognitive skills required for formal schooling. 2014-09-02T10:04:49Z 2014-09-02T10:04:49Z 2014 Master Thesis Masters M.Ed http://hdl.handle.net/11427/6867 eng application/pdf School of Education Faculty of Humanities University of Cape Town
spellingShingle Morris, Anya Caroline
School science for six year olds: a neo-vygotskian approach to curriculum analysis
thesis_degree_str Master's
title School science for six year olds: a neo-vygotskian approach to curriculum analysis
title_full School science for six year olds: a neo-vygotskian approach to curriculum analysis
title_fullStr School science for six year olds: a neo-vygotskian approach to curriculum analysis
title_full_unstemmed School science for six year olds: a neo-vygotskian approach to curriculum analysis
title_short School science for six year olds: a neo-vygotskian approach to curriculum analysis
title_sort school science for six year olds a neo vygotskian approach to curriculum analysis
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/6867
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