An activity -based approach towards developing critical thinking in the Geography classroom
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Date
1990
Authors
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Journal ISSN
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Publisher
University of the Western Cape
Abstract
This thesis deals with an attempt to employ the research methodology of action research to focus on classroom strategies involving a range
of resources, including indigenously generated ones, as a way of enhancing critical understanding and thinking. This necessarily also
involves an examination of what critical thinking might be.
Each of these areas of concern arose from an initial concern about the need for the creation and effective use of indigenous resources
to maximise Senior Secondary students ability to relate to Geography curriculum content and to interrogate it for its own assumptions. By using a systematic action research methodology of planning, action, observation and reflection, I realised that I needed to be
more focused and thorough regarding my understanding of critical thinking, and that I needed to extend my understanding of resources
that can enhance accessibility and the problematizing of material.
My readings and reflection in critical thinking made me realise not only the complex and contested nature of critical thinking, but also
that in order to move toward critical thinking my emphasis would need to be on adopting a critical pedagogy. The type of process,
rather than a particular paradigm, needed to be the emphasis. The focus needed to be on how knowledge is produced, internalised, and
disorganised. I thus attempted to highlight aspects that need to be included in an activity-based approach that may facilitate a critical
pedagogy.
with this shift of emphasis my second project acknowledged that indigenous materials are only one way of enhancing accessibility to
the students worLd and the South African socio-political context. I then explored more fully styles and strategies of problematizing
the course work to contribute toward an eventual changing of student consciousness.
Out of the many elements that had emerged in the second project, I chose to examine the strategy of conflict as a resource, to engage
students in the underlying issues rather than to accept the syllabus content at face value. A deeper and far more nuanced understanding
of the different dimensions of conflict arose and therefore the potential use of conflict in a transformative educational context.
Finally, the thesis highlights and reflects upon the value of action research approach towards deepening ones understanding
classroom processes and the issues that arise.
Description
Magister Educationis - MEd
Keywords
Activity -based approach, Critical thinking, Geography classroom, Indigenous resource, Critical pedagogy