Abstract
M.Ed.
A large percentage of the South African population has had little or no formal education,
many of whom are black women. It is increasingly important to be literate in urban and
peri-urban areas. Although there are opportunities for literacy education, not many
people attend literacy programmes. One of the reasons for this phenomenon might be the
fact that illiteracy affects adult literacy learners' learning, their motivation to enter
literacy programmes and to persist in the learning process. Illiterate people do, however,
devise strategies that enable them to function effectively, even in highly literate
surroundings.
Against the background of the preceding statement, the following problem is addressed
in this study:
How do four female adult literacy learners in a peri-urban area
of Gauteng experience being illiterate and how do they cope with
their illiteracy in a literate society?
The aim of this study is twofold: In the first place to describe how women experience
being illiterate, and secondly to give a description of the ways in which illiterate women
adapt in a literate environment.