Supporting transition or playing catch-up in Grade 4? Implications for standards in education and training
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.38140/pie.v32i1.1844Keywords:
literacy, decoding, comprehension, Grade 4, Foundation Phase, Intermediate Phase, high-poverty schoolsAbstract
This paper describes an intervention programme that was originally intended to support transition to English as language of learning and teaching (LoLT) in Grade 4 in a township school, using a pre- and post-test design. Because the pre-tests revealed very poor literacy levels in both Zulu home language and English, the intervention programme was modified in an attempt to fast-track the learners to literacy levels more appropriate to their grade. This paper outlines the intervention, presents the pre- and post-test results of the English literacy assessments, reflects on the effects of the intervention, and briefly considers some of the reasons for the initial poor literacy performance. Finally, a model for literacy development in high-poverty contexts is proposed to minimise the need to play catch-up in the Intermediate Phase.