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Medicine Magocha; Juliet Munyaradzi; Sunday Samson Babalola – Research in Social Sciences and Technology, 2025
The COVID-19 pandemic has forced a rapid shift to online teaching and learning, presenting challenges for teachers in developing countries such as Zimbabwe. This study employed a sequential mixed-methods research approach to explore how rural Zimbabwean teachers relate to digital technologies and how their digital literacy skills impacted their…
Descriptors: Digital Literacy, COVID-19, Pandemics, Teacher Attitudes
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Vincentas Lamanauskas, Editor – International Baltic Symposium on Science and Technology Education, 2025
These proceedings contain papers of the 6th International Baltic Symposium on Science and Technology Education (BalticSTE2025) held in Šiauliai, Lithuania, June 16-19, 2025. This collection of BalticSTE25 articles presents 13 scientific articles and an introductory article on the topic of natural science and technology education. The articles…
Descriptors: Science Education, Technology Education, STEM Education, Curriculum Development
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Mhishi, Misheck; Chimbwanda, Vimbai Marcia; Gwizangwe, Isaac – Pedagogical Research, 2023
Unprecedented COVID-19 lockdowns forced schools to close and to adopt online teaching and learning methodologies. In Zimbabwe, underprivileged schools were the worst affected by this directive. This qualitative study, carried out in one cluster of rural secondary schools explored the preparedness of geography teachers to adopt e-learning…
Descriptors: Geography Instruction, Electronic Learning, COVID-19, Pandemics
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Albert Chibuwe; Allen Munoriyarwa – SAGE Open, 2023
COVID-19's arrival in Zimbabwe and South Africa in early 2020 caused disruptions to all facets of life including education. It disrupted traditional notions of media studies' teaching and learning. In the contexts of these disruptions, the present study interrogates how selected universities in Zimbabwe and South Africa adjusted to the new normal…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Teaching Methods, COVID-19, Pandemics
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Chimbi, Godsend T.; Jita, Loyiso C. – Research in Social Sciences and Technology, 2021
This paper examines the interaction between class size and teachers' selection of teaching methods while implementing a new history curriculum in Zimbabwean secondary schools. Policy makers, parents, teachers, and students are worried about large class sizes because they are associated with higher dropout rates, less teacher-student interaction…
Descriptors: Class Size, Educational Change, Secondary School Teachers, History Instruction
Carroll, Matthew; Constantinou, Filio – Cambridge University Press & Assessment, 2023
The COVID-19 pandemic caused unprecedented disruption to education around the world. There is much to learn from this period, to better understand what happened, to provide support to those affected, and to inform future responses to disruption. This research aimed to contribute to this field by recording teachers' experiences of teaching in the…
Descriptors: COVID-19, Pandemics, Teaching Experience, Elementary School Teachers
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Chimbi, Godsend T.; Jita, Loyiso C. – Bulgarian Comparative Education Society, 2020
When presented with a new curriculum very few teachers teach in accordance with the prescribed pedagogies. This study reports on how teachers in Zimbabwe selected their teaching methods in response to a new curriculum reform policy. Using a qualitative multiple case study design and the theoretical lens of sense-making, the study interrogated…
Descriptors: Curriculum Development, Teaching Methods, Educational Change, Instructional Innovation
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Chimbi, Godsend Tawanda; Jita, Loyiso C. – Journal of Pedagogy, 2021
Globally, pedagogical reform policy seeks to give space to learners' voices. But teachers often struggle to engage learners in knowledge construction, deconstruction and reconstruction; as advocated by official curriculum reform policy. Aligning classroom practice to pedagogical-reform policy remains an uphill struggle for most teachers. This…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Teacher Attitudes, Educational Policy, Educational Change
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Sibanda, Lovemore; Young, Jemimah – Africa Education Review, 2020
The purpose of the study reported on was to explore the empirical literature related to the implementation and effectiveness of a postcolonial curriculum in Zimbabwe. A systematic review of the literature utilised an inductive analytical approach to characterise the results of previous empirical studies to proffer research-based conclusions and…
Descriptors: Postcolonialism, Curriculum Implementation, Instructional Effectiveness, Foreign Policy
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Madondo, Fortunate – Journal of Research in Childhood Education, 2021
This article examined perceptions on curriculum implementation regarding rural Zimbabwean early childhood development (ECD) teachers in 2017. The study aimed to locate teachers as agents of change in schools by reviewing their perceptions in implementing the recently introduced ECD framework. In this qualitative multiple case study, 30 rural…
Descriptors: Curriculum Implementation, Rural Areas, Foreign Countries, Preschool Teachers
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Sunzuma, Gladys; Maharaj, Aneshkumar – EURASIA Journal of Mathematics, Science and Technology Education, 2019
Geometry and culture are interrelated, making school geometry closely connected to the environment as well as culture in which it is taught. With regard to this connectedness, the Zimbabwean mathematics syllabus indicates that geometry should be connected to the learners' environment and culture. This article explores teacher-related challenges to…
Descriptors: Ethnography, Geometry, Mathematics Instruction, Foreign Countries
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Luneta, Kakoma, Ed. – Research in Mathematics Education, 2021
This book represents a crop of wide-ranging research conducted by renown scholars in sub-Sahara Africa revolving around mathematics teaching and professional development programs for mathematics teachers. The research-based proposals and actual how-to-conduct professional development initiatives that enhance effective mathematics instruction are…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Mathematics Education, Manipulative Materials, Visualization
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Musingarabwi, Starlin; Blignaut, Sylvan – Journal of Curriculum Studies, 2015
A growing need for utilizing school-based HIV/AIDS interventions the world over has been acknowledged as the most cost-effective means for arresting the spread of the HIV/AIDS pandemic among the vulnerable youth. However, the question on how teachers as educational change agents and cognitive sense-makers of HIV/AIDS curricula situated in a…
Descriptors: Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome (AIDS), Health Education, Curriculum Implementation, Educational Theories
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Ngwaru, Jacob Marriote – Language, Culture and Curriculum, 2011
Rural African classrooms are still practising discourses and pedagogies that contribute towards students' continued underachievement and marginalisation. The use of behaviourist-based pedagogical approaches and the exclusion of learners' socio-cultural experiences including their mother tongue (MT) still characterise most classroom practices. The…
Descriptors: Feedback (Response), Intervention, Observation, Foreign Countries
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Shizha, Edward – Alberta Journal of Educational Research, 2007
In Zimbabwe the need to incorporate indigenous knowledge in science education to reflect local cultural settings cannot be overemphasized. Current policies on science are situated in Western cultural definitions, thus marginalizing indigenous knowledge, which is misconceived as irrational and illogical. This study used qualitative research…
Descriptors: Indigenous Knowledge, Negative Attitudes, Foreign Countries, Teachers