posted on 2024-09-06, 06:10authored byMika, Nyoni, Tsisti, Nyoni, Tavuya Jinga
The paper is based on a collection of cellular phone text messages (also known as S.M.S (Short-text Message Service) on the teaching profession that are currently being floated around in Zimbabwe. The observation technique was the major data-gathering instrument. The three researchers all set to gather verbatim the SMSs. Over one hundred SMSs on different subjects were gathered and stored in the 'archives' of one of the researchers' phones. It notes that these messages, largely ignored in academic discourse as mere trifles of humor, should be taken seriously as social commentaries. The paper finds that the messages in question bemoan, decry and poke fun on the declining standing of the profession in the country and do so with a condor, merit of form and structure that should earn them a place in the world of literary works of art. The paper calls for the improvement of the status of the profession in Zimbabwe so that the profession is restored to its glorious past.
A study on how social media is also impacting on the teaching profession in Zimbabwe.
History
Publisher
Human Resource Research Centre (HRRC), University of Zimbabwe (UZ)
Citation
Nyoni, M., Nyoni, T. and Jinga, T. (2010) Cry, the beloved profession: a study of short-text messages service (SMSs) on the teaching profession, Zimbabwe Journal of Educational Research, vol. 22, no.3, pp. 307-325. Harare: HRRC.