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Charity Z. Fynn; Blanche Ndlovu – South African Journal of Childhood Education, 2024
Background: Poetry predates all other genres of literature, and it has been argued that the relationship between poetry and language is inextricable. The ability of African people to articulate their own stories was largely silenced by colonialism. Poems and lyrics have been known to create a bridge between individuals in meaningful words and…
Descriptors: Grade 3, Poetry, Play, Teaching Methods
Geldenhuys, Geruan; Morelli, Janelize – International Journal of Education & the Arts, 2022
This study explores the complexities of caring for students in a music studio lesson. In this study, we engaged four experienced string teachers in in-depth semi-structured interviews to explore their understandings of caring for their students in studio music lessons. Caring and compassion are concepts that have received greater attention in…
Descriptors: Music Education, Music Teachers, Musical Instruments, Caring
Meskin, Tamar; van der Walt, Tanya – Studying Teacher Education, 2022
As collaborative theatre-makers, university teachers, and researchers in South Africa, our symbiotic, interactive relationship has shaped the construction of our academic identities. The displacement caused by social distancing regulations and repeated government-mandated lockdowns, as well as our own shifting circumstances, have forced us to…
Descriptors: Poetry, COVID-19, Pandemics, Foreign Countries
Jenkins, Stephanie; Young-Jahangeer, Miranda – Research in Drama Education, 2022
This article proposes that participatory museum theatre can provide a platform through which learners studying history can engage a troubled past, specifically looking at South African history, to generate a more complex understanding of it. Through the use of performance, object-work, and creative arts-based responses, such as poetry and drawing,…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Museums, Poetry, Freehand Drawing
van Laren, Linda; Masinga, Lungile – Studying Teacher Education, 2022
As South African researchers facing HIV- and AIDS-related challenges in our professional lives, we continuously turn to self-study methodology to inform our learning and teaching in our teacher education practice. This article explores how we extended our professional knowledge in relation to HIV and AIDS, starting with our own self-study doctoral…
Descriptors: Poetry, Writing (Composition), Letters (Correspondence), Preservice Teachers
Müller, Marguerite; Kruger, Frans – Studying Teacher Education, 2022
This article uses poetry to articulate a collaborative object inquiry into educational spaces through which we move/d. At the time of this study, we were both teacher educators at a university in South Africa, working in social justice and ecojustice in education and how these intersect with teacher development and professional development. Given…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Poetry, Teacher Education Programs, Social Justice
Grogan, Bridget – Education as Change, 2020
This article reports on and discusses the experience of a contrapuntal approach to teaching poetry, explored during 2016 and 2017 in a series of introductory poetry lectures in the English 1 course at the University of Johannesburg. Drawing together two poems--Warsan Shire's "Home" and W. H. Auden's "Refugee Blues"--in a week…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Teaching Methods, Poetry, Introductory Courses
Pithouse-Morgan, Kathleen – Studying Teacher Education, 2021
The catalyst for this self-study research was the performance of a sequence of poems at a colloquium for South African deans of education. The poems portray my interpretation of my students' stories of physically and emotionally painful experiences at the hands of their former teachers. My intention was to show how the creative possibilities of…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Poetry, Student Experience, Teaching Methods
Manathunga, Catherine; Davidow, Shelley; Williams, Paul; Gilbey, Kathryn; Bunda, Tracey; Raciti, Maria; Stanton, Sue – Education as Change, 2020
The impetus to decolonise high schools and universities has been gaining momentum in Southern locations such as South Africa and Australia. In this article, we use a polyvocal approach, juxtaposing different creative and scholarly voices, to argue that poetry offers a range of generative possibilities for the decolonisation of high school and…
Descriptors: High School Students, College Students, Indigenous Populations, Indigenous Knowledge
Pithouse-Morgan, Kathleen; Samaras, Anastasia P. – Studying Teacher Education, 2019
We have come to conceptualize our transdisciplinary, transnational, and transcultural interaction and reciprocal learning through self-study research as "polyvocal professional learning." Our conceptualization of polyvocality has made visible how dialogic encounters with diverse ways of seeing, knowing, and doing can deepen and extend…
Descriptors: Interdisciplinary Approach, Self Evaluation (Individuals), Professional Development, Poetry
Cooper, Adam – Education as Change, 2020
This article explores the teaching of English poetry in two Gauteng high schools, one a suburban, former Model C school and another in Soweto. Both schools are attended predominantly by Black learners for whom English is not their first language. Nine in-depth, semi-structured interviews were conducted with educators at the two schools. The choice…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, High School Students, Blacks, Second Language Learning
Mirkin, Philip Joshua; Evans, Rinelle; Ferreira, Johan – South African Journal of Education, 2020
Modern science education the world over deliberately remains in the objective, rational, positivist paradigm. In South African classrooms, this paradigm is often alienating for young learners who then stop learning science at the end of Grade 9. Literature indicates that an arts-rich education improves learner engagement, attitudes and test…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Poetry, Teaching Methods, Grade 9
Govender, Arushani – Education as Change, 2020
This article uses feminist perspectives on decoloniality as a lens for analysing selected poems from Francine Simon's début collection, Thungachi (2017). Simon is a South African Indian woman poet from Durban, raised by Catholic parents of Tamil linguistic heritage. Her poetry collection, while feminist and experimental, deeply captures the…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Females, Indigenous Populations, Indigenous Knowledge
Botha, Louis; de Villiers, Phillippa Yaa; Maungedzo, Robert – Education as Change, 2020
This article presents the reflections of a research team from the ZAPP-IKS project. ZAPP (the South African Poetry Project) undertook a three-year NRF-funded research project titled "Reconceptualising Poetry Education for South African Classrooms through Infusing Indigenous Poetry Texts and Practices". The research on which we report…
Descriptors: Poetry, Foreign Countries, Indigenous Populations, Indigenous Knowledge
Bila, Vonani; Abodunrin, Olufemi J. – Education as Change, 2020
Angifi Dladla's poetry and teaching doctrines are considered tools for consciousness raising, healing and popular education for decoloniality. Through "ku femba", an age-old practice that serves as a channel to cast away evil spells in a society bedevilled by violence, Dladla displays the relationship between man, ancestors and the…
Descriptors: Poetry, Educational Philosophy, Political Attitudes, Western Civilization