2012
DOI: 10.1111/j.1469-5812.2011.00793.x
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Cultural Foundations of the Idea and Practice of the Teaching Profession in Africa: Indigenous roots, colonial intrusion, and post‐colonial reality

Abstract: In this article I analyze some of the cultural factors that have determined and influenced the teaching profession and its evolution in African countries. Firstly, I use an historical approach to review conceptual issues on teachers, teaching and learning; secondly, I examine salient features of the idea and practices of teachers and teaching in the pre‐colonial and less Westernized contemporary African contexts and elements of Quranic schools; thirdly, I offer an account of how teachers were introduced to for… Show more

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Cited by 12 publications
(2 citation statements)
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References 18 publications
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“…It is therefore essential to draw on the richness that pre-colonial African history and epistemic modes offer towards the project of developing inclusive learning experiences for all students of higher learning in South Africa. Assie-Lumumba (2012) declares that in pre-colonial Africa, the purpose of education was to prepare young people to be responsible members of the community. She further stresses that during this dispensation, education was provided and equally received by all members of communities (Assie-Lumumba 2012:24).…”
Section: Indigenous African Institutions and Epistemic Diversitymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…It is therefore essential to draw on the richness that pre-colonial African history and epistemic modes offer towards the project of developing inclusive learning experiences for all students of higher learning in South Africa. Assie-Lumumba (2012) declares that in pre-colonial Africa, the purpose of education was to prepare young people to be responsible members of the community. She further stresses that during this dispensation, education was provided and equally received by all members of communities (Assie-Lumumba 2012:24).…”
Section: Indigenous African Institutions and Epistemic Diversitymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Rather than foster pride, strength, self-reliance, and independent, creative or critical thought, education served to marginalise, if not eradicate, local cultural knowledge and practice: language, music, dance, as well as values and beliefs. Teachers became a middle class in this process, the overseers, whose role it was to ‘transmit the values of the colonial system’ as it would have been ‘dangerous and risky to dare to exercise agency and autonomy’ (Assie-Lumumba, 2012, p. 28).…”
Section: Context: Music Education In Botswanamentioning
confidence: 99%