Teacher beliefs about grade repetition: an exploratory South African study

Inclusive education is described as an ‘apprenticeship in democracy’ as it is concerned with the identification and dismantling of exclusionary practices in schools. One such practice is grade repetition, which is known to result in school disaffection and early school leaving. In South Africa, grad...

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Main Author: Walton, Elizabeth
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Intellect 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/52739/
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author Walton, Elizabeth
author_facet Walton, Elizabeth
author_sort Walton, Elizabeth
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description Inclusive education is described as an ‘apprenticeship in democracy’ as it is concerned with the identification and dismantling of exclusionary practices in schools. One such practice is grade repetition, which is known to result in school disaffection and early school leaving. In South Africa, grade repetition is disproportionately experienced by black and poor learners, resulting in the unequal realization of the democratic right to education. The rate of grade repetition in this country is high, but little is known about teachers’ beliefs about the practice. This article presents the results of a self-administered questionnaire in which Johannesburg teachers described what they regarded as the benefits and drawbacks of grade repetition. The data showed that teachers believe that the additional time spent in a repeated year compensates for immaturity, allows learners to ‘catch up’, and be better prepared for the subsequent grade. Teachers do acknowledge negative emotional and behavioural consequences of grade repetition, but many see no drawbacks to the practice. These beliefs are discussed with reference to the context in which they are engendered, with particular focus on the strong teacher and curriculum control over the pace at which knowledge acquisition is expected. It is argued that addressing the high levels of grade repetition will need critical examination of both the teacher beliefs that sustain the practice, and the habits of schools that make failure inevitable for some learners.
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spelling nottingham-527392019-03-01T04:30:17Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/52739/ Teacher beliefs about grade repetition: an exploratory South African study Walton, Elizabeth Inclusive education is described as an ‘apprenticeship in democracy’ as it is concerned with the identification and dismantling of exclusionary practices in schools. One such practice is grade repetition, which is known to result in school disaffection and early school leaving. In South Africa, grade repetition is disproportionately experienced by black and poor learners, resulting in the unequal realization of the democratic right to education. The rate of grade repetition in this country is high, but little is known about teachers’ beliefs about the practice. This article presents the results of a self-administered questionnaire in which Johannesburg teachers described what they regarded as the benefits and drawbacks of grade repetition. The data showed that teachers believe that the additional time spent in a repeated year compensates for immaturity, allows learners to ‘catch up’, and be better prepared for the subsequent grade. Teachers do acknowledge negative emotional and behavioural consequences of grade repetition, but many see no drawbacks to the practice. These beliefs are discussed with reference to the context in which they are engendered, with particular focus on the strong teacher and curriculum control over the pace at which knowledge acquisition is expected. It is argued that addressing the high levels of grade repetition will need critical examination of both the teacher beliefs that sustain the practice, and the habits of schools that make failure inevitable for some learners. Intellect 2018-03-01 Article PeerReviewed application/pdf en https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/52739/1/Walton%20Teacher%20beliefs%20about%20grade%20repetition%20Author%20final%20version%202%20July%202018.pdf Walton, Elizabeth (2018) Teacher beliefs about grade repetition: an exploratory South African study. Citizenship Teaching & Learning, 13 (1). pp. 45-60. ISSN 1751-1917 Grade repetition; Learner retention; Inclusive education; Framing; Teacher beliefs; Right to education http://dx.doi.org/10.1386/ctl.13.1.45_1 doi:10.1386/ctl.13.1.45_1 doi:10.1386/ctl.13.1.45_1
spellingShingle Grade repetition; Learner retention; Inclusive education; Framing; Teacher beliefs; Right to education
Walton, Elizabeth
Teacher beliefs about grade repetition: an exploratory South African study
title Teacher beliefs about grade repetition: an exploratory South African study
title_full Teacher beliefs about grade repetition: an exploratory South African study
title_fullStr Teacher beliefs about grade repetition: an exploratory South African study
title_full_unstemmed Teacher beliefs about grade repetition: an exploratory South African study
title_short Teacher beliefs about grade repetition: an exploratory South African study
title_sort teacher beliefs about grade repetition: an exploratory south african study
topic Grade repetition; Learner retention; Inclusive education; Framing; Teacher beliefs; Right to education
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/52739/
https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/52739/
https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/52739/