The 4IR and teacher education in South Africa:

AOSIS Scholarly Books

 
 
Field Value
 
Title The 4IR and teacher education in South Africa:
 
Creator Maringe, Felix ; University of the Witwatersrand Chiramba, Otilia F; University of Johannesburg Krishnannair, Anilkumar; University of Zululand Krishnannair, Syamala; University of Zululand Olivier, Jako; North-West University Tsakeni, Maria; University of the Free State Babane, Vusiwana C; University of the Western Cape Kadenge, Emure; University of Johannesburg Luckay, Melanie B; University of the Western Cape Mutekwe, Edmore; North-West University Naidoo, Jayaluxmi; University of KwaZulu-Natal Singh-Pillay, Asheena; University of KwaZulu-Natal Molotsi, Abueng R; University of South Africa
 
Subject Fourth Industrial Revolution 21st century skills Higher education Teacher Education Social justice Epistemic justice Transformation JN JNM JNV
Description The 4IR has become an overarching framework within which education systems, including teacher education, are operating. Contingent upon the ideology of neo-liberalism, the 4IR seeks to transform societies in ways which respond to the relentless developments in technology, the Internet and digital capacities which, by design and intent, are purposed at increasing both productivity and the associated quality while at the same time reducing human intervention in the same processes. In teacher education, how we teach and train student teachers will be substantially influenced by the imperatives of the 4IR. There are multiple unresolved questions as the 4IR takes centre stage. For example, what will it mean for teaching and learning in schools that have severe technological and digital deficits; for teachers and students who have minimal technological literacies; for delivering high-quality teaching and learning; for transforming both the content and pedagogies of teacher education and, above all, for delivering socially just educational experiences for all our learners, regardless of class, race, and privilege. The discourse of the 4IR is contemporary and requires multiple perspectives to explore what it means in different contexts and settings, the understandings it engenders in people, what it implies across a wide range of educational decision-making levels, and that its fundamental assumptions cohere with national and societal assumptions about equality, equity and social justice. Multiple methodological approaches were utilised in the interrogation of the idea of the 4IR in teacher education in South Africa, including theoretical, empirical, and small-scale case studies, amongst others. The data these approaches provide are equally valued based on the purposes for which they have been derived.
 
Publisher AOSIS Scholarly Books
 
Date 2022-10-14
 
Type Book
Format Digital (DA)
Identifier 978-1-77634-219-8
 
Source AOSIS Scholarly Books;
 
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