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AFRICAN INDUSTRIALIZATION (2) answer(s).
 
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ID:   170543


Non-native isizulu pre-service techear's views and experences on lerning isizulu as a second largest at a South african Kwazulu- / Nkosi, Zinhle Primrose   Journal Article
Nkosi, Zinhle Primrose Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract This paper explores non-mother tongue isiZulu pre-service teachers’ views and experiences on learning isiZulu as a second language. The study uses qualitative study methods and it operates under the interpretivist paradigm. Semi-structured interviews are used with 20 students. Among findings are issues that relate to the usefulness of learning isiZulu as a compulsory module, good student attitude and academic performance. One of the recommendations is that there is a need to separate students studying isiZulu for the first time and those who are not studying it for the first time.
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2
ID:   166876


Time Perception and Industrialization: Divergence and Convergence of Work Ethics in Chinese Enterprises in Africa / Xiaoyang, Tang   Journal Article
Xiaoyang, Tang Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract As Chinese investors set up business operations in Africa, disagreements between Chinese and Africans regarding work attitudes have emerged. A prevailing view is that cultural differences cause tensions between groups with regards to the meaning of “hard work,” “discipline” and “eating bitterness.” However, we argue that conflicting perceptions of work ethics between Chinese and Africans are instead caused by evolving notions of time that accompany a transition from a pre-capitalist manner of production to that of industrial capitalism. First, we refute the assumption that culture determines work ethics. Second, we show that when a society industrializes, its notions of work ethics and time perception change; we then show how China's industrialization impacts its approaches to operations in Africa. Third, we use two case studies of Chinese investments in Tanzania and Ethiopia to illustrate how Chinese managers are changing African workers’ attitudes through time discipline. Finally, we discuss the implications of a convergence of work ethics between Chinese and Africans.
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