Holtman, L.B.Raitt, Rosemary Ruth2024-08-022024-10-302024-08-022024-10-302011https://hdl.handle.net/10566/16888Philosophiae Doctor - PhDThis thesis relates the teaching of ecology in schools to the requirements of the National Curriculum Statements, Grades R-9 and Grades 10-12, for Natural and Life Sciences. It examines the conceptual understanding of the learners to determine their level of bioliteracy. The effectiveness of various teaching strategies in enhancing bioliteracy is considered. The study was a case study involving classroom observations of Grades 4 to 7 at a primary school and Grades 8 to 11 at a high school in the Western Cape of South Africa, and the administration of a misconceptions questionnaire to learners in Grades 8 to 11. The Department of Education did not allow researchers into the Grade 12 classes. To counter this, the misconceptions questionnaire was also administered to first-year Life Science students and to students in one second-year course in the Department of Biodiversity and Conservation Biology. It was administered to a small sample of the Postgraduate Certificate in Education (PGCE) students (prospective teachers) at the University of the Western Cape, in order to determine whether misconceptions would be carried into their teaching. In-depth interviews which focussed on the particular student's misconceptions were used to verify the misconceptions which the first-year students held. The results of the misconceptions questionnaire for the PGCE students revealed that a high percentage of them had very little understanding of ecology and that they held several common misconceptions, despite having completed a degree which qualified them to teach Life Science or Natural Science in high school. This study demonstrated that more attention needs to be given to the proper training of Life Science teachers, and to instruction in practical work and fieldwork in the Life Sciences.enTeaching ecologyMisconceptionsCurriculumEco-literacyScientific literacyHow do teachers and learners navigate the terrain of ecology and what are the associated conceptual understandings?University of the Western Cape