A Teachers Perception on Localization of Curriculum with Emphasis on Social Studies Lesson

AuthorsMohammad Akbaribooreng,Mohsen Ayati,جعفری ثانی
Journalinternational journal of higher education
Page number84-94
Serial number8
Volume number7
Paper TypeFull Paper
Published At2019
Journal GradeISI
Journal TypeElectronic
Journal CountrySwitzerland
Journal IndexScopus

Abstract

The aim of this study understands teacher perceptions of the localization of curriculum of primary school. on the social Study Lessons. The methodological approach of this study is to investigate phenomenology as a qualitative method. The potential contributors were the native teachers of the Kalat city (Laeenno) in the 1397 which 19 participant were selected. Data were collected using face-to-face interviews and were analyzed by Glaserian seven phases. Reliability was achieved through three criteria: being acceptable, being trustful and verifiability. The findings show that the current performance of students end up in lack of incentive, leaving school, shallow learning, the inefficiency of current performance of teachers, interruptions in communication, One-way interaction, and the challenges of localization is denial of the cultural diversity of politicians, non-native content (centralized knowledge), Lack of in-service courses, the time challenge, recruiting non-native teachers, the lack of comprehensive studies of sub-cultivated areas, immigration, executive challenge, School space and lack of a template from native syllables, and the consequences of localization for teachers is contentment of teaching, Creating and improving communication and promoting native culture, and the consequences of localizing for students is: protecting from native culture, Creating a motivation to learn and absorb and stay in the classroom and school. Finally, teachers' strategies about localization of Klein’s nine elements in the curriculum of social studies were identified.

Paper URL

tags: phenomenology, lived experienced, teachers, localization of curriculum, social studies