Abstract:
In an attempt to improve students’ retention and ensure high per cohort completion
rates, a student support system of cluster meetings was introduced for the upgrading
of teachers from primary teacher certifi cate to secondary teacher diploma in Malawi.
The programme targeted teachers who were teaching in community day secondary
schools (CDSSs), despite being qualifi ed for primary school teaching. The distance
education upgrading programme was aimed at improving knowledge and skills to
enable students to improve their competency in teaching the secondary school
syllabuses. As part of the student support system, cluster meetings and study
circles were meant to enhance student-to-student support and instil a sense of
belonging to a cohort. Both cluster meetings and study circles have continued
to be well supported by subsequent cohorts many years after their introduction
in the support system. The study investigated how cluster meetings and study
circles contributed to the success of students in the programme. Data for the
study was collected through individual interviews with programme managers,
focus group discussions with cluster leaders, and questionnaires for students and
fi eld supervisors. The study found that study circles and cluster meetings united
students of same subject combinations in a cohort in the same way that classes
provided a sense of belonging in a face-to-face programme. It was, therefore,
concluded that cluster meetings provided peer support, which gave further impetus
to achievement through increased collaboration in academic assignments.
Description:
Proceedings of the 3rd biannual International Conference on
Distance Education and Teachers’ Training in Africa (DETA) held at
the University of Cape Coast,
Cape Coast, Ghana, August 2009