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 International Journal of Education and Development using ICT > Vol. 18, No. 1 (2022) open journal systems 


Beyond Boundaries of Cultural Capital in Determining the Inclusion of Information Technology in High School Curriculum

Alton Dewa, University of the Witwatersrand


Abstract
Few high schools offer Information Technology (IT)) as a subject in South Africa. This paper used Bourdieu’s conception of cultural capital to investigate the reasons why many public schools are shunning away from including IT in their curriculum. Data were collected using a questionnaire and analysed using ANOVA, to determine whether cultural capital influences choosing IT as one of the subjects in the school curriculum. The results showed that public high school principals view IT as a subject that should be done in schools where there is medium-to-high cultural capital status. It is a challenge for schools with low cultural capital to offer IT among their subjects as it is not practiced by the community or society in which the schools exist. The paper concludes by recommending that there is room for the so-called ‘low cultural capital’ schools to offer IT among their subjects despite the challenges they are facing. Cultural capital does not hinder students’ performance. Students from low cultural capital communities can achieve good grades even though they learn under difficult circumstances of inadequate educational resources.


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International Journal of Education and Development using Information and Communication Technology. ISSN: 1814-0556