College of Education | |
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School of Educational Studies | |
Department: Adult Basic Education | |
Professor Extraordinarius | |
Tel: | 012 484 1118 |
E-mail: | rommnra@unisa.ac.za OR norma.romm@gmail.com |
Prof Norma Romm holds a DLitt et Phil in Sociology (1986). Her doctoral research was concerned with exploring different interpretations of Marx’s methodological position – with reference to debates around scientific Marxism and (more humanistic) critical theory. Norma has worked for various universities, including the Unisa Sociology Department (where she was Associate Professor of Sociology), Unisa Department of Adult, Community and Continuing Education (Professor), University of Swaziland (Dean of the Faculty of Social Sciences), University of Hull, UK (Deputy Director of the Centre for Systems Studies), and European University Cyprus (Professor of Sociology and Dean of the Faculty of Social Science and Humanities). She has also engaged in commissioned contracted research work for various organisations such as the International Labour Organisation, Association for the Development of Education in Africa, the United Nations Children’s Fund, and the International Organisation for Migration.
She has authored, co-authored, and co-edited several books and has published over 100 research articles, dealing with issues such as: learner-centred education; increasing the capacity of adult educators; social development; community operational research; social theorising in relation to development; the facilitation of co-learning in group processes; social and ecological justice; considerations of racism as a world problem; discursive accountability; systemic inquiry; transformative and Indigenous paradigms for social research; and innovative ways for researchers (professional and others) to exercise accountability in research processes as well as in the write-up thereof.
Over the course of her career, Norma has supervised dozens of Master’s and Doctoral students. Topics of supervisees have been very varied, including fields of Sociology, Social Theory, Management (Theory and Practice), Education, Setting up Learning Processes, Social Development, and Systemic Thinking and Practice. Research methodologies used by students have also been very varied, including library research, survey research (with attention to considering how questionnaires may themselves be influential in shaping respondents’ understandings), interviewing (combined with semi-structured questionnaires), focus groups, active intensive interviewing (individual and group interviewing), and (different types of) action research. (Innovative combinations of various approaches have also been used, with students being guided to justify choices of procedure – to themselves and to audiences.)
When conducting research projects, Norma believes in applying multi- and inter-disciplinary orientations to the exploration of social and ecological issues, so as to increase the range of perspectives and the range of our thinking about possible options for action in relation to concerns raised.