Full Text Available

Note: Clicking the button above will open the full text document at the original institutional repository in a new window.

Scripted curriculum and the quest for improving reading for meaning: Conceptions of language and literacy in Malawi's Grade 4 English scripted curriculum and amongst Grade 4 English teachers

Various scholars in education have argued that policy, practice and opinions about language and literacy teaching are consciously or subconsciously underpinned by particular conceptualisations of language and literacy (Ivanic, 2004). These conceptions about language and literacy teaching are usually...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Kapito, Patrick Mavuto Stranger Paul
Other Authors: Kell, Catherine
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: School of Education 2022
Subjects:
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1867614472676311040
access_status_str Open Access
author Kapito, Patrick Mavuto Stranger Paul
author2 Kell, Catherine
author_browse Kapito, Patrick Mavuto Stranger Paul
Kell, Catherine
author_facet Kell, Catherine
Kapito, Patrick Mavuto Stranger Paul
author_sort Kapito, Patrick Mavuto Stranger Paul
collection Thesis
description Various scholars in education have argued that policy, practice and opinions about language and literacy teaching are consciously or subconsciously underpinned by particular conceptualisations of language and literacy (Ivanic, 2004). These conceptions about language and literacy teaching are usually reflected in curriculum documents and teachers' views and practices about the teaching of language and literacy. In the quest to mitigate dwindling standards in language and literacy in education, governments and their development partners have embarked on literacy projects/programs. A key feature of these programs, in recent times, is the quest to promote reading for meaning through the use of a scripted curriculum. Malawi's Ministry of Education, Science and Technology, through its National Reading Program (NRP) has been implementing a scripted curriculum for Grades 1-4 English and Chichewa. My study aimed at exploring the conceptions of language and literacy which underlie the approach to the teaching of Malawi's Standard/Grade 4 English scripted curriculum and how the teachers conceive language and literacy, as they engage with the scripted lessons, and whether such conceptions promote the NRP's aim of ‘reading for meaning'. The analysis of conceptions of language draws on Blommaert's ‘artefactual ideology of language' (2008) and Makoe and McKinney's (2014) ideology of languages as bounded entities, while the analysis of conceptions of literacy draws on the concepts of autonomous and ideological models of literacy (Street, 1991). To explore the conceptions of language and literacy that underpin the scripted lessons and inform the teachers' views of language and literacy, the study focussed on the Standard/Grade 4 English Teachers Guide (TG) and Learners Books (LB), related documents of the Malawi's National Reading Program (NRP), and Standard 4 teachers of English's accounts of their conceptions and practices in relation to the Standard 4 English scripted curriculum. The study established that though the social nature of language and literacy is acknowledged by the NRP and teachers, both the TG and teachers' conceptions of language and literacy are strongly informed by the view of language as an abstract system that has forms independent of their social uses, and that literacy is conceived as consisting of decontextualised skills. Thus, despite the NRP's emphasis on and calls for a greater focus on reading for meaning, meaning is largely abandoned/neglected as the ideologies/conceptions of language and literacy do not allow teachers to teach reading for meaning. The implication is that if the social nature of language and literacy continues to be backgrounded, with the structural view of language and the view of literacy as decontextualised skills being foregrounded, efforts to improve education standards through promoting literacy levels might be futile and waste of resources.
format Thesis
id oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/35560
institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:52:35.539Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2022
publishDateRange 2022
publishDateSort 2022
publisher School of Education
publisherStr School of Education
record_format dspace
source_str UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/35560 Scripted curriculum and the quest for improving reading for meaning: Conceptions of language and literacy in Malawi's Grade 4 English scripted curriculum and amongst Grade 4 English teachers Kapito, Patrick Mavuto Stranger Paul Kell, Catherine Education Various scholars in education have argued that policy, practice and opinions about language and literacy teaching are consciously or subconsciously underpinned by particular conceptualisations of language and literacy (Ivanic, 2004). These conceptions about language and literacy teaching are usually reflected in curriculum documents and teachers' views and practices about the teaching of language and literacy. In the quest to mitigate dwindling standards in language and literacy in education, governments and their development partners have embarked on literacy projects/programs. A key feature of these programs, in recent times, is the quest to promote reading for meaning through the use of a scripted curriculum. Malawi's Ministry of Education, Science and Technology, through its National Reading Program (NRP) has been implementing a scripted curriculum for Grades 1-4 English and Chichewa. My study aimed at exploring the conceptions of language and literacy which underlie the approach to the teaching of Malawi's Standard/Grade 4 English scripted curriculum and how the teachers conceive language and literacy, as they engage with the scripted lessons, and whether such conceptions promote the NRP's aim of ‘reading for meaning'. The analysis of conceptions of language draws on Blommaert's ‘artefactual ideology of language' (2008) and Makoe and McKinney's (2014) ideology of languages as bounded entities, while the analysis of conceptions of literacy draws on the concepts of autonomous and ideological models of literacy (Street, 1991). To explore the conceptions of language and literacy that underpin the scripted lessons and inform the teachers' views of language and literacy, the study focussed on the Standard/Grade 4 English Teachers Guide (TG) and Learners Books (LB), related documents of the Malawi's National Reading Program (NRP), and Standard 4 teachers of English's accounts of their conceptions and practices in relation to the Standard 4 English scripted curriculum. The study established that though the social nature of language and literacy is acknowledged by the NRP and teachers, both the TG and teachers' conceptions of language and literacy are strongly informed by the view of language as an abstract system that has forms independent of their social uses, and that literacy is conceived as consisting of decontextualised skills. Thus, despite the NRP's emphasis on and calls for a greater focus on reading for meaning, meaning is largely abandoned/neglected as the ideologies/conceptions of language and literacy do not allow teachers to teach reading for meaning. The implication is that if the social nature of language and literacy continues to be backgrounded, with the structural view of language and the view of literacy as decontextualised skills being foregrounded, efforts to improve education standards through promoting literacy levels might be futile and waste of resources. 2022-01-25T09:33:53Z 2022-01-25T09:33:53Z 2021 2022-01-20T11:50:03Z Master Thesis Masters MEd http://hdl.handle.net/11427/35560 eng application/pdf School of Education Faculty of Humanities
spellingShingle Education
Kapito, Patrick Mavuto Stranger Paul
Scripted curriculum and the quest for improving reading for meaning: Conceptions of language and literacy in Malawi's Grade 4 English scripted curriculum and amongst Grade 4 English teachers
thesis_degree_str Master's
title Scripted curriculum and the quest for improving reading for meaning: Conceptions of language and literacy in Malawi's Grade 4 English scripted curriculum and amongst Grade 4 English teachers
title_full Scripted curriculum and the quest for improving reading for meaning: Conceptions of language and literacy in Malawi's Grade 4 English scripted curriculum and amongst Grade 4 English teachers
title_fullStr Scripted curriculum and the quest for improving reading for meaning: Conceptions of language and literacy in Malawi's Grade 4 English scripted curriculum and amongst Grade 4 English teachers
title_full_unstemmed Scripted curriculum and the quest for improving reading for meaning: Conceptions of language and literacy in Malawi's Grade 4 English scripted curriculum and amongst Grade 4 English teachers
title_short Scripted curriculum and the quest for improving reading for meaning: Conceptions of language and literacy in Malawi's Grade 4 English scripted curriculum and amongst Grade 4 English teachers
title_sort scripted curriculum and the quest for improving reading for meaning conceptions of language and literacy in malawi s grade 4 english scripted curriculum and amongst grade 4 english teachers
topic Education
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/35560
work_keys_str_mv AT kapitopatrickmavutostrangerpaul scriptedcurriculumandthequestforimprovingreadingformeaningconceptionsoflanguageandliteracyinmalawisgrade4englishscriptedcurriculumandamongstgrade4englishteachers