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The Independent Journal of Teaching and Learning

On-line version ISSN 2519-5670

IJTL vol.15 n.2 Sandton  2020

 

DOCTORAL CORNER
RESEARCH TITLE

 

Indigenous pathways to appraisal during resilience processes

 

 

Name: Dr Sofia (S.) Mohamed
Supervisor: Professor Liesel (L.) Ebersöhn
Institution: University of Pretoria, South Africa
Year of Award: 2018
Qualification: PhD (Educational Psychology)

 

 


ABSTRACT

This comparative case study formed part of the Indigenous Pathways to Resilience (IPR) project which aims to contribute to an indigenous psychology knowledge base on resilience from an African perspective. This study focused on contributing knowledge on indigenous pathways to appraisal processes as part of resilience processes to mostly Western-orientated discourses. IPR situated its investigation in two conveniently selected rural South African communities who experience chronic circumstances of high risk and high need and had non-Western worldviews. Participants from the two research sites were stratified according to location, age and gender. Indigenous Psychology (IP) was selected as the theoretical paradigm for the study, with post-colonial research paradigm as the meta-theoretical lens. Participatory reflection and action (PRA) served as the methodological paradigm to generate data in two waves over a period of two years (eight days per site). Data sources included textual data (verbatim transcripts of audio-recorded PRA activities translated into English) and observation data (researchers' field notes and observations). Trustworthiness was enhanced by capturing the process and context visually over time. Data was analysed using thematic in-case and cross-case analysis lead to inductive themes indigenous pathways to appraisal during resilience processes. This study contributes a novel insight into (African) non-Western appraisal processes as part of resilience. It points to interconnectedness (interpersonal, spiritual and environmental) as a core worldview point of departure during appraisals. Appraisal from a non-Western (African) perspective is then followed by collaborative appraisal processes, including consultation and consensus for problem solving. The non-Western (African) appraisal converges in agency as motivation. This study was delimited to.

Keywords: Resilience; Appraisal; South African; Chronic high risk, high need environment; Indigenous Psychology (IP); Participatory refection and action (PRA); Worldview of interconnectedness; Consultation; Consensus; Agency


 

 

The full thesis can be found at http://hdl.handle.net/2263/67811

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