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Representation of Ethnic/Religious Minorities in Social Studies Curriculum: Implications for Education for Pluralism

Thesis Info

Author

Karam Ali

Department

Institute for Educational Development, Karachi

Program

MEd

Institute

Aga Khan University

Institute Type

Private

City

Karachi

Province

Sindh

Country

Pakistan

Thesis Completing Year

2012

Thesis Completion Status

Completed

Subject

Education

Language

English

Added

2021-02-17 19:49:13

Modified

2024-03-24 20:25:49

ARI ID

1676727970501

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This qualitative case study aims to explore the representation of the ethnic/religious minorities in the National Social Studies Curriculum of Pakistan. Pakistan is a multi-lingual, multi-ethnic and multi-cultural nation with the province of Sindh alone being rich in diversity, with many spoken dialects and more than a dozen different ethnic communities residing in Sindh. In order to appreciate the richness of our context, it is imperative that the true essence of differences is inculcated through our education system. Curriculum and what is included in it is of the utmost importance in this regard. Thus, to see how curriculum represents the minorities of our country, various documents including National Educational Policy 2009, Social Studies Curriculum 2002 and 2006 History Curriculum and Social Studies textbook were reviewed to generate the data. Beside this, interviews with curriculum developers and social studies subject specialist were conducted to authenticate the data that came from documents analysis. Findings illustrate that the minorities are represented in our national curriculum in an abstract way. Various tools have been used to exclude and include the discourse of minority in curriculum. School history and the constructs of Ideology of Pakistan are the main tools. Study also found a difference between 2002 social studies curriculum and 2006 curriculum. Representation of the minority in 2006 curriculum is more positive than the 2002 curriculum which is currently in use. On the basis of findings, study strongly recommends, that ‘silent’ histories pertaining to diverse cultural heritage of Pakistan need to be represented in the curriculum as well as textbooks need to be re-written to reflect the spirit and ethos of the 2006 curriculum which relatively seems to reflect the appreciation of diversity.
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حدیثِ خواب گویم

حدیثِ خواب گویم
سفر نامے کے بنیادی لوازمات میں سے ایک سفر بھی ہے ۔جب کہ اس میں برتی جانے والی پابندیوں میں سب سے اہم فسوں گری اور مبالغے سے اجتناب ہے۔ یہ لوازمات اور پابندیاں کسی اور ملک کے سفر پر نکلے سفر نامہ نگار کے لیے زیادہ مشکل نہ ہوں مگر سفر اگر مصر کا ہو تو سفر نامہ نگار کے لیے یہ دو دھاری تلوار پر چلنے سے کم نہیں۔
مصری تہذیب کی حقیقت جس قدر مسلمہ ہے اس قدر فسوں آمیز۔ یہاں کے نظارے اس حد تک تحیر آمیز ہیں کہ ان پر بات کرنی اور اس پر تحریر کرتے وقت طلسماتی ارتعاش اور فینتاسی سے خود کو الگ کرنا ممکن ہی نہیں ہوتا۔
فوق الفطری ماحول اور فضا، قصہ در قصہ بنیادی حقیقت اور واقعے کے ساتھ ضمنی کہانیاں ،غیر مرئی حقیقت ،انسانوں کے علاوہ جانوروں اور چرند پرند سے منسلک واقعات، مرکزی کرداروں کی غیر معمولی طاقت اور حیثیت ،معاون کرداروں کی فوجِ ظفر موج، مشکلات، رکاوٹوں کاذکر، مذہبی اور دینی عقاید و تجربات ،آسمانی اور انسانی قوانین کا ذکر اور نفاذ غرض وہ تمام لوازمات جو کسی افسانوی تحریر کے خاصے ہوتے ہیں ، مصر پر لکھے سفر نامے کے بنیادی شرائط و لوازم بن جاتے ہیں۔
ان ہی لوازمات کی وجہ سے سفر نامہ داستان اور فسوں گری کا لبادہ اوڑھ لیتا ہے۔ لکھاری تہذیبی، تاریخی اور ذاتی داخلیت کا شکار ہو جاتا ہے۔ مسافر کے ساتھ بھی اس سفر پر کچھ ایسا ہی ہوا۔ جہاں بھی گیا حقیقتیں، حسین تخیل اور سچائیاں فینتاسی کا روپ دھار لیتیں، چاہے یہ حقیقتیں فراعینِ مصر کی ہوں یا یہ سچائیاں وادیٔ سینا کی طلسماتی فضا کی ہوں جہاں ریب و تکذیب کی گنجائش نہ ہوتے ہوئے بھی میری فکر افسوں اور بالعکس فسوں کے ساتھ ابہام و سحر کی خواب...

The Health and Sanitary Status of Mamanwa Indigenous People in Selected Areas in Caraga Region

This study aims to determine the health and sanitary status of the Mamanwa indigenous people in selected areas in CARAGA Region. The respondents were the Mamanwa people who are residents of Cantugas, Mainit, Surigao del Norte community, and Kitcharao, Agusan del Norte community. The study used descriptive research design utilizing questionnaire and personal interview in gathering the data. The total population of the respondents is 69 and respondents from both communities were selected based on simple random design.   The study used percentage and mode/majority criterion, weighted mean, and Kendal-tau correlation. The findings showed that in the extent of health and sanitation education which was divided into three factors: Factor 1 which is the regularity of adopting health and sanitation practices shows a mean rating described as always except for item 9. Factor 2 was about exposure to health and sanitation campaign and education show a mean rating of sometimes. Factor 3 is about awareness on health and sanitation show a mean rating of sometimes. On the economic status of Mamanwa people which was the (factor 1) economic status of Mamanwa parents, 75.4% of the Mamanwa parents send their children to school and 64.9% of Mamanwa parents’ allocated budget for clothing and other personal necessities. On social status of the location (factor 2), only 35.1% of the respondents said that they have proper waste disposal and segregation.  The results showed that Mamanwa children regardless of sex and age were undernourished and there is a significant relationship between the regularity of adopting health and sanitation practices with hygiene on health care where it had an R-value of 0.47 and 0.35 respectively. Lastly, only economic factor on the social status of the location had a significant relationship on the health status of Mamanwa children in terms of BMI which had an R-value -0.20 and p-value 0.049.

Misconceptions of Students Learning in Mathematics at Primary Level

This study intended to investigate misconceptions and errors commonly made by the students at primary level, finding out the reasons for these misconceptions and designing a remedial intervention for removing these misconceptions. The following research questions were developed to accomplish the task: • What are the misconceptions of students in learning mathematics at primary level? • What are the possible causes of these misconceptions of students in learning mathematics at primary level? • How can these misconceptions be rectified / removed? • How can teachers help the students to learn mathematics in a better way and remove the targeted misconceptions? The study was conducted in 12 sample schools and concepts included in the investigation were not limited to grade IV rather, all contents of mathematics were included from grade I to IV, excluding grade V. The grade V was excluded for the reason that the pre-test was administered in the beginning of the grade V study. The content tested through the pre-test was classified into eight concept areas namely, numbers, operations on numbers, fractions, operations on fractions, decimals, measurement, information handling and geometry. It was expected that the study would focus on misconceptions in few of these eight areas, but the findings of the pre-test and interviews with the teachers compelled the researcher to include all the eight areas as a significant number of misconceptions was found in all of the concept areas. The study was a mixed design approach (quantitative and qualitative). The pre-test and the post-test provided quantitative data while the interviews with the teachers and sample students helped to collect the qualitative data.On the basis of identification of the misconceptions and errors through the pre-tests, four students from each of the 12 schools were interviewed along with their teachers. The analysis of the qualitative and quantitative data provided insight about the causes of them is conceptions of students, and to remove these misconceptions a teachers training program was developed and conducted.At this stage, the study was converted into Pre test-intervention-post-test design keeping only one school out of the 12 schools as control group and the remaining 11 as the experimental group. Key misconceptions include numbers and operations on numbers; these were considered difficult by the students due to misconceptions regarding numbers’ names (language problem) and their place value. Fractions were thought as two numbers instead of part of a whole. Decimals were considered mostly on the basis of digits without having proper understanding of the place value of the digits written in a decimal number. Understanding of units for measuring different quantities was not entrenched due to not using measuring tools practically by the students. Mostly estimation of length, mass and area were made full of mistakes. Scale for drawing a graph,both line and bar graphs was not understood; it was seemed that students were having the wrong conception as they were not trained to draw a graph. Geometry was full of misconceptions starting from measuring a line segment or drawing a line segment of given measurement.The use of simple geometrical tools like protractor, straight edge, compass or set squares was felt difficult by most of the students and their teachers. The training of the teachers of the experimental group was focused on providing an opportunity to them to have an experience of doing mathematics as well as consolidating content including knowledge they were lacking.Misconceptions of the students in different concept areas were discussed with the teachers.The difference in gain scores of the experimental group students provided evidence that the students’ achievement improved in most of the concepts after being re taught by the experimental group teachers.