DEEP CONCERNS ABOUT ENGLISH CAPS
I have grave concerns about certain aspects of the final draft of the FET CAPS for English Home Language.
I have grave concerns about certain aspects of the final draft of the FET CAPS for English Home Language.
The final version of the CAPS for English Home Language in the FET Phase has done away with a separate language paper in the formal examinations.
Based mainly on participant observations, this paper argues that an abundance of English Language textbooks has ironically compromised the teaching-learning of English Language in the country.
There are a number of websites – both local and international – which provide very useful resources for English teachers.
English Alive is an annual anthology of writing from high schools and secondary colleges in southern Africa (i.e. Grades 8–12). The first edition of English Alive was published in 1967, and it has been published every year since then.
It is common knowledge that, generally speaking, South African children don’t read and write well.
It is vitally important that teachers reflect on the success or otherwise of their lessons.
This article is based on an article which was originally published in CRUX, October 1986, by André Lemmer. It illustrates effectively how to teach (in this case a short story) in an interactive manner – although the original was written many years before OBE claimed to be the originator of such a style.
Leading South African educational publisher, Maskew Miller Longman, is calling for entries for its 2012 Literature Awards, which will be for youth dramas.
In interviews on the creative writing process with four successfully publishing South African authors in 2009, I asked questions angling for advice for young aspiring writers at school and to teachers of writing. What follows is a summary of the advice given by bestselling novelist, journalist and film maker, Margie Orford, using as far as possible her own words.
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