Towards a culture-sensitive pedagogy of physics teacher education in Mozambique

The problem that I have found while looking for better ways of teaching physics science is that the curriculum we Mozambicans are using 30 years after independence can be hardly distinguished from the colonial curriculum. I generated my research questions based on this problem. I have adopted critic...

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Main Author: Cupane, Alberto Felisberto
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Curtin University 2007
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/60
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author Cupane, Alberto Felisberto
author_facet Cupane, Alberto Felisberto
author_sort Cupane, Alberto Felisberto
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description The problem that I have found while looking for better ways of teaching physics science is that the curriculum we Mozambicans are using 30 years after independence can be hardly distinguished from the colonial curriculum. I generated my research questions based on this problem. I have adopted critical auto/ethnography and related trustworthiness criteria to respond to my research questions. I generated my data by looking from different perspectives at myself as learner, teacher and Mozambican citizen. This research suggests that the actual situation of largely reproducing a colonial science curriculum can be overcome by the inclusion of a view of the world that I call local-indigenous knowledge. I have achieved three main outcomes from this research: The transformation that occurred to me - One of the main transformations was to my perception of my cultural identity. Using contemporary theories of culture and rationality I have explored and more fully realised my Mozambican cultural identity. The meaning of indigeneity and local indigenous knowledge.This research has allowed me to reconceptualise the meaning of indigeneity by exposing how it has been applied in a discriminatory sense and how it could be applied to promote the human dimension that exists in all human beings. A cultural model of teaching - I propose the use of both local indigenous knowledge and World Modern Science to connect students to their history, their culture and their future. My cultural model of teaching encompasses four dimensions: (a) Use of local-indigenous language, (b) Learning by doing using locally available materials, (c) Use of stories to develop students' cultural awareness (identity) and (d) Inclusion of spirituality in science education. These outcomes, which can be deepened and/or transformed by future studies, can be seen as distant from my initial research goal of learning techniques to 'deliver well' the curriculum content of my physics classroom; but, for me, these outcomes illustrate the emergent characteristic of this qualitative inquiry into the self-culture dialectic.
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-602017-02-20T06:42:04Z Towards a culture-sensitive pedagogy of physics teacher education in Mozambique Cupane, Alberto Felisberto physics science cultural identity world modern science colonial science curriculum indigeneity Mozambique curriculum local-indigenous knowledge teacher education The problem that I have found while looking for better ways of teaching physics science is that the curriculum we Mozambicans are using 30 years after independence can be hardly distinguished from the colonial curriculum. I generated my research questions based on this problem. I have adopted critical auto/ethnography and related trustworthiness criteria to respond to my research questions. I generated my data by looking from different perspectives at myself as learner, teacher and Mozambican citizen. This research suggests that the actual situation of largely reproducing a colonial science curriculum can be overcome by the inclusion of a view of the world that I call local-indigenous knowledge. I have achieved three main outcomes from this research: The transformation that occurred to me - One of the main transformations was to my perception of my cultural identity. Using contemporary theories of culture and rationality I have explored and more fully realised my Mozambican cultural identity. The meaning of indigeneity and local indigenous knowledge.This research has allowed me to reconceptualise the meaning of indigeneity by exposing how it has been applied in a discriminatory sense and how it could be applied to promote the human dimension that exists in all human beings. A cultural model of teaching - I propose the use of both local indigenous knowledge and World Modern Science to connect students to their history, their culture and their future. My cultural model of teaching encompasses four dimensions: (a) Use of local-indigenous language, (b) Learning by doing using locally available materials, (c) Use of stories to develop students' cultural awareness (identity) and (d) Inclusion of spirituality in science education. These outcomes, which can be deepened and/or transformed by future studies, can be seen as distant from my initial research goal of learning techniques to 'deliver well' the curriculum content of my physics classroom; but, for me, these outcomes illustrate the emergent characteristic of this qualitative inquiry into the self-culture dialectic. 2007 Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/60 en Curtin University fulltext
spellingShingle physics science
cultural identity
world modern science
colonial science curriculum
indigeneity
Mozambique
curriculum
local-indigenous knowledge
teacher education
Cupane, Alberto Felisberto
Towards a culture-sensitive pedagogy of physics teacher education in Mozambique
title Towards a culture-sensitive pedagogy of physics teacher education in Mozambique
title_full Towards a culture-sensitive pedagogy of physics teacher education in Mozambique
title_fullStr Towards a culture-sensitive pedagogy of physics teacher education in Mozambique
title_full_unstemmed Towards a culture-sensitive pedagogy of physics teacher education in Mozambique
title_short Towards a culture-sensitive pedagogy of physics teacher education in Mozambique
title_sort towards a culture-sensitive pedagogy of physics teacher education in mozambique
topic physics science
cultural identity
world modern science
colonial science curriculum
indigeneity
Mozambique
curriculum
local-indigenous knowledge
teacher education
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/60