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Comparative Education for Africa: Perspective from Students’ Perceptions of and Motivations for Studying Comparative Education

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dc.creator Anangisye, William A. L.
dc.creator Wolhuter, C. C.
dc.creator O’Sullivan, M.
dc.date 2016-03-18T10:25:53Z
dc.date 2016-03-18T10:25:53Z
dc.date 2011
dc.date.accessioned 2018-04-18T12:16:30Z
dc.date.available 2018-04-18T12:16:30Z
dc.identifier Anangisye, W.A., Wolhuter, C.C. and O'Sullivan, M., 2011. Comparative education for Africa: perspective from students' perceptions of and motivations for studying comparative education. Papers in Education and Development, (30), pp.34-52.
dc.identifier 0856-4027
dc.identifier http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/1136
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/11141
dc.description Full text can be accessed at http://www.ped.ac.tz/index.php/dcm/issue/view/17
dc.description In view of the North-American-Western European hegemony in education and contemporary curriculum theory, which prescribes an input by students as clients, the authors from two African countries, South Africa and Tanzania, surveyed their students about what they expected to gain from a Comparative Education course, and contrasted that with the expectations of students of a European country, Ireland. The comparison revealed startling divergences. Whereas the Irish students’ main expectation was that their Comparative Education course would prepare them for a teaching job abroad, the South African students looked to their Comparative Education course to enlighten the domestic education reform project and to improve their teaching strategies, while the Tanzanian students had a purely intellectual view of the subject— wanting Comparative Education to contribute to their intellectual moulding and development. The authors relate these differences to contextual differences between Ireland, South Africa and Tanzania, and conclude that contextual factors should be taken into account, when developing Comparative Education courses for universities in Africa.
dc.language en
dc.subject Students’
dc.subject Studying Motivations
dc.subject Comparative Education
dc.title Comparative Education for Africa: Perspective from Students’ Perceptions of and Motivations for Studying Comparative Education
dc.type Journal Article


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