Managing diversity in schools: The place of democratic education and ubuntuism in South Africa
Abstract
South African classrooms were highly diversified. The problem, however, was that although
democracy has been a critical characteristic of South Africa for over two decades, it is still
a very vague concept to many. A teacher who truly understood democracy knew that it was
not just about freedom of self, rather the freedom of all, treating others humanely and with
kindness. Making power a variable accessible by all was the only way to which diversities can
be ameliorated. Observation and personal experiences showed that there were discriminations
of many kinds in some high schools. Therefore, to address these maladies, the importance of
democracy in diversity must not be jettisoned because they work hand-in-hand. Ubuntu
philosophy was used as a theoretical framework, whilst transformative paradigm piloted the
study. Participatory research (PR) was adopted as a research design to enable the people
student-teachers to jointly participate in this research. Observation and reflections were used
to collect data within the high schools in the Free State province of South Africa. Thomas and
Harden’s three steps of thematic analysis was used to analyse data and the result show that
language, cultural and personal relativism, learning impairment and comprehensibility were
the dominant challenges faced in diversity management in schools. On the other hand,
inculcation of classroom relationships and a sense of belonging, training and retraining of
teachers and students were found to be perfect solutions that can nip these problems in the
bud. The present study, therefore, concluded that the value of teachers’ and students’
development towards diversity management must be addressed.
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- TD: 2021 Volume 17 [42]