Linguistic challenges faced by rural Tshivenda-speaking teachers when Grade 4 learners transition to English
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Date
Authors
Evans, Rinelle
Nthulana, Ipfani
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
AOSIS Open Journals
Abstract
The general complaint of teachers in rural monolingual communities is that teaching becomes
problematic after learners are promoted to Grade 4. While the transition to a next academic
phase places new cognitive demands on the learners, they must also adjust to being taught in
English after 3 years of mother tongue education. This qualitative case study was underpinned
by Krashen’s theory of second-language acquisition which emphasises the importance of
exposure to and interaction in the target language. Six Grade 4 teachers who are mother tongue
speakers of Tshivenda and two curriculum advisors participated in the study. Data were
collected through individual interviews and classroom observations. Initially, it was assumed
that the transition was problematic, because learners’ English proficiency was inadequate, but
teachers too struggled to impart academic content to Grade 4 learners and relied heavily on
code switching. This strategy contributed to learners’ understanding of content, but militated
against any improvement in their English. The remoteness of this rural monolingual
community implies a limited exposure to the target language, but ought not to be reckoned
an excuse. Means to build teachers’ linguistic confidence and improve their oral proficiency
during initial teacher preparation as well as greater in-service support should ameliorate the
transition for learners. A revision of the mother tongue Foundation Phase curriculum and
monitored implementation is advisable.
Description
Keywords
Teachers, Learners, Grade 4, Transition, Second language
Sustainable Development Goals
Citation
Evans, R. & Nthulana, I.,
2018, ‘Linguistic challenges
faced by rural Tshivendaspeaking
teachers when
Grade 4 learners transition
to English’, The Journal for
Transdisciplinary Research in
Southern Africa 14(2), a545.
https://DOI.org/10.4102/td.v14i2.545.
