STAFF DEVELOPMENT PROGRAMMES AS DETERMINANTS OF TEACHERS JOB PERFORMANCE IN SECONDARY SCHOOLS IN SOUTH-EAST NIGERIA

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ABSTRACT

 

The study investigated the Staff Development Programmes as Determinants of Teachers’ Job Performance in Secondary Schools in South-East, Nigeria. Five research questions and five null hypotheses were formulated to guide the study. The study adopted a correlational survey research design. The population of the study is 29, 445 which comprised 28,015 teachers and 1, 430 principals. Based on Morgan’s Table of (1970) formula for determining sample size from a known/finite population, a total sample of 682 respondents consisting of principals and teachers were proportionately drawn from the 303 selected secondary schools that constitute the sample. Two instruments titled Staff Development Programmes Questionnaire (SDPQ) and Teachers’ Job Performance Questionnaire (TJPQ) were developed by the researcher and used for the study. The instruments were validated by three experts, two from Educational Management and Measurement and Evaluation, all from Michael Okpara University of Agriculture, Umudike. Reliability indices of 0.85 and 0.77 for stability and 0.84 and 0.82 for internal consistency of SDPQ and TJPQ respectively were obtained. Pearson’s r, R2 (coefficient of determination) was used to answer the research questions and Pearson’s r correlation matric with alpha was also used to test the null hypotheses at 0.05 levels of significance. The findings revealed that in-service training determined teachers’ job performance in secondary schools to a high extent, workshop determined teachers’ job performance in secondary schools to a moderate extent, mentoring programmes positively determined teachers’ job performance in secondary schools to a high extent, supervision determined teachers’ job performance in secondary schools to a high extent and Skills upgrading courses determined teachers’ job performance in secondary schools to a high extent. The conclusion was that Staff Development Programmes like In-service training, workshops, conferences, meeting of professional association as well as supervision among others determined Teachers’ Job Performance in Secondary Schools in South-East, Nigeria. It was thus recommended among others that Teachers should apply and attend Workshops or Skill upgrading courses to improve their performance in instructional delivery in secondary schools. School administrators should increase their number of supervision to classrooms to enhance teachers’ development and performance in classrooms in secondary schools. The Secondary Education Management Boards (SEMB) should regularly approve teachers study leave to enable them attend staff development programme for higher performance after the training.





TABLE OF CONTENTS

 

Cover Page                                                                                                                             

Title Page                                                                                                                                i

Certification                                                                                                                            ii

Declaration                                                                                                                              iii

Dedication                                                                                                                              iv

Acknowledgements                                                                                                                v

Table of Contents                                                                                                                   vi

List of Tables                                                                                                                          vii

List of Figures                                                                                                                         viii

Abstract                                                                                                                                  ix

 

CHAPTER 1: INTRODUCTION

1.1 Background to the Study                                                                                                 1

1.2 Statement of the Problem                                                                                                 6

1.3 Purpose of the Study                                                                                                        8

1.4 Research Questions                                                                                                           8

1.5 Research Hypotheses                                                                                                        9

1.6 Significance of the Study                                                                                                 9

1.7 Scope of the Study                                                                                                           11

 

CHAPTER 2: REVIEW OF RELATED LITERATURE-                                            

2.1     Conceptual Framework­                                                                                                 12

2.1.1   Concept of secondary education                                                                                 12

2.1.2   Concept of teaching                                                                                                     15

2.1.3   Concept of teachers’ job performance                                                                         21

2.1.4   Staff Development Programmes                                                                                  24

2.1.4.1 In-service training                                                                                                       24

2.1.4.2 Workshops for teachers’ job performance                                                                  28

2.1.4.3 Mentoring programmes for teachers                                                                           31

2.1.4.4 Supervision and teachers job performance                                                                 33

2.1.4.5 Techniques of supervision                                                                                           34

2.1.4.6 Skills upgrading courses for teachers                                                              36

2.2      Theoretical Framework                                                                                                46

2.2.1   Jacob Mincer’s Theory of Human Capital Development. (1958)                                46

2.2.2   Constructivism Learning Theory Piaget (1980)                                                           47

2.2.3   Maslow’s Hierarchy of Needs Theory                                                                         48

2.2.4   Theory of Job Performance McGregor (1960)                                                 49

2.3      Empirical Studies                                                                                                         50

2.4      Summary of Literature Review                                                                                   65

 

 

 

CHAPTER 3: METHODOLOGY                                                                                     

3.1 Design of the study                                                                                                          67

3.2 Area of the study                                                                                                              68

3.3 Population of the study                                                                                                    69

3.4 Sample and sampling techniques                                                                                      69

3.5 Instrument for data collection                                                                                          70

3.6 Validation of the instrument                                                                                             71

3.7 Reliability of the instrument                                                                                             71

3.8 Method of data collection                                                                                                72

3.9 Method of data analysis                                                                                                   73

 

CHAPTER 4:RESULTS AND DISCUSION

4.1  Results and discussions                                                                                                     74

4.2  Findings of the study                                                                                                         79

4.3  Discussion of the findings                                                                                                  80

4.4  Summary of findings of the study                                                                                      80

 

CHAPTER 5: SUMMARY, CONCLUSION AND RECOMMENDATIONS

5.1 Summary                                                                                                                           85

5.2 Conclusion                                                                                                                        87

5.3 Recommendations                                                                                                            87

5.4 Educational Implications of the Study                                                                             88

5.5 Limitations of the study                                                                                                   89

5.6 Suggestions for Further Study                                                                                          90

      References                                                                                                                        91

 

 

 


 

LIST OF TABLES                          

4.1:    Correlation Matrix of In-Service Training and Teachers’ Job

          Performance in Secondary Schools                                                                                74

 

4.2:    Correlation Matrix of Workshop and Teachers’ Job

          Performance in Secondary Schools                                                                                75

 

4.3:   Correlation Matrix of Mentoring Programme and Teachers’ Job

         Performance in Secondary Schools                                                                                 76

 

4.4:   Correlation Matrix of Supervision and Teachers’ Job Performance

          in Secondary Schools                                                                                                      77

 

4.5:   Correlation Matrix of Skills Upgrading Courses and Teachers’ Job

          Performance in Secondary Schools                                                                                78

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

CHAPTER 1

INTRODUCTION

1.1       BACKGROUND TO THE STUDY

Teachers constitute an important factor in the implementation of the school curriculum. The teacher is the human resource required for effective implementation of any educational system necessary to promote national development. The teacher makes it possible for teaching and learning to occur through manipulation of learning environment (Obunadike & Uzoechina 2015). Teaching as a complex activity demands a variety of knowledge due to its varied task in delivering quality curriculum content to learners in secondary schools. This assertion made Hammad (2001) to point out that the simple most important determinant of what students learn is what teachers know. It therefore, implies that teaching as a profession demands continuous development of knowledge and ability through staff development programmes. The teaching force in the nation’s secondary education system should remain productive if it must achieve national development goals (Okeke, 2004). Secondary school level is a crucial stage in the career choice of young adults all over the world.  It is a form of education children receive after primary education and before tertiary stage and it is aimed at preparing the youth for useful leaving within the society, for those who are able and willing for the preparation for higher education (Adeogun, 2002). 

The only way teachers can be productive in their job performance in secondary schools in South-East Nigeria, is through regular training and re-training of staff with staff development programmes. At a little space of time, the teacher’s stock of knowledge and requisite skills become obsolete following contemporary issues and hence, requires refreshing and regular updates. According to Ornstein and Levine, (2006) and Afangideh, (2010), in separate assertions maintained that teacher’s job performance can be achieved through the valuable staff development programmes which are vital instruments for ensuring the continuous growth of teachers in knowledge, skills and attitude in line with the changes in the educational system and the expectations of the society. Staff as discussed in this study explains teaching staff. That is, teachers who are vested with the onerous task of classroom instructions, who break down the curriculum content of each subject to students for the improvement of understanding and higher academic performance.  These teachers could either be teaching in urban secondary schools or rural secondary schools.

Rural areas are areas that are referred to as countryside or remote villages. These communities can be exemplified with a low ratio of inhabitants to open space. Agricultural activities may be prominent in this case whereas economic activities would relate to the primary sector, production of foodstuffs and raw materials (Tacoli, 2008). Whereas, urban areas are places or towns with a population density of at least 500 persons per square kilometer. The urban status also applies to centres with the following infrastructure: a parallel or right-angled street pattern; at least six commercial, manufacturing or similar establishments; at least three of the following: a town hall, church or chapel; a public plaza, park or cemetery; a market place or building where trading activities are carried out at least once a week; and a public building such as a school, a hospital or a library (Tacoli,).

Teachers’ development programmes are planned organizational activities aimed at improving and increasing teachers’ skills and knowledge to enable them meet the demands of the teaching job (Akpan, 2009). It focuses on improving the conceptual skills and intellectual abilities needed to do a better job. Adeogun (2006) stated that teachers’ development programmes are associated with the general improvement of teachers in terms of behaviour, attitudes, skills, knowledge, and perception and in the performance of their teaching duties. Alabi (2002) maintained that the immediate aim of staff development programmes is to improve the job performance of those with teaching responsibilities, while the ultimate aim is the improvement of teaching and learning processes.

Staff development programmes through in-service training, workshops, conferences and supervision offer one of the most promising ways for improving classroom instructions. It is an attempt to assist the classroom teachers to improve on their teaching strategies, techniques, handle new instructional materials or possess the necessary information and skills that are required for effective lesson delivery (Abdulrahaman, 2015). Staff development programmes for teachers include supervision, in-service training, seminars, workshops, conferences, study leave. (Afangideh, 2010). There are also other staff development activities that are relevant to teachers in terms of improving their job performance and classroom instructions in secondary schools. These are training sessions, mentoring and teachers’ network, (Nnabuo & Onyeike, 2007).

Teachers’ job performance can be accessed through a variety of dimensions, such as teachers’ capabilities, competencies, results and outcomes of teachers’ work usually summed up and termed job performance. In the educational system like the secondary schools, effective job performance refers to how a teacher performs his professional duties in the school or specifically, classroom setting. Shah (2007) averred that teachers’ job performance refers to observable behaviours, both verbal and non-verbal, a teacher-behaviour which sometimes appears as a result of or in the form of student’s achievement.

The relevance of staff development programmes to teachers’ job performance in secondary schools of the South-East Nigeria cannot be under estimated. This is in terms of helping teachers to effectively manage teaching and learning processes in classroom situation, enhance teacher’s use of various teaching methods that will increase job performance, enhance the use of instructional materials for teacher’s job performance  and supervision which gives teachers the opportunity to receive professional guidance from experts and professionals in the teaching profession.

Every teacher requires a specialized skill for diversifying his method of teaching in the classroom, depending on the assessment of student’s characteristic dispositions. Some students learn faster than the others, some are slow learners, yet all the students in a particular class need to grasp the lesson taught in the class for academic and personal use (Tacoli, 2008). It then depends on the teacher to use the method or a combination of methods required for a particular lesson since no method is recommended for continuous use for teaching at all times and in all lessons.  According to Aboyeji in Ngwu (2009), development programmes are ways of acquiring relevant special knowledge, information, and skills for better performance in the work environment. Through these means, teachers are exposed to new developments and modern methods of carrying out their functions in the school organization. For teachers to maintain a good level of job performance as well as improve on their methods of performance in lesson delivery for students, professional guidance is required for teachers in secondary schools. This professional guidance is given through supervision of classroom instruction to enable teachers know the best approach to use when delivering lessons in classrooms. This is so as to boost their performances and meet with contemporary methods of teachers’ performance through the professional guidance of supervisors. Supervision provides opportunities for teachers to be groomed through critical study of instructional processes and classroom interactions to carry out their teaching tasks in line with professional codes of conduct. If schools are not supervised adequately, it will have inimical effects on the students’ output and the educational objectives may not be achieved. Consequently, various instructional supervisory techniques should be employed to ensure quality and quantity service delivery by the teachers (National Open University of Nigeria (NOUN), 2006. Supervision is the process of helping, guiding, advising and stimulating growth in teachers in order to improve the quality of teaching (Okorji & Ogbo, 2013)

The enormous benefits of training and development to teachers in secondary schools for improved job performance in South-East Nigeria cannot be overemphasized. This training and development of teachers can be done through staff development programmes like in-service training, workshops, conferences, meetings of professional association as well as supervision. When these trainings are acquired adequately, teachers become equipped with adequate knowledge and information which will influence classroom instruction and enhance their job performance. This is in terms of diversification of methods of instruction, effective use of instructional materials and effective classroom management.

Despite the huge benefits staff development programmes provide to the teaching and learning processes as well increasing the job performance of teachers in secondary schools in South-East Nigeria, government is still lagging behind in the provision and funding of staff development programmes for teachers. This shows in the laxity on the part of the government to fund programmes for teachers development as well as laxity in the part of professionals (principals and experienced teachers) guiding and mentoring new teachers on the job due to low morale and poor motivation. This demoralizing situation is assumed to affect students’ academic performance as secondary schools in South East Nigeria, churn out thousands of secondary school graduates with performance in both internal and external examinations like West African Examination Council (WAEC), National Examination Council (NECO), National Board of Technical Examination Council (NABTEB), etcetera. This background in South-East Nigeria, prompted Elozieuwa (2012) to posit that poor training and development of secondary school teachers, which has over time resulted to poor teachers’ job performance, has become a menace to secondary schools in South-Eastern Nigeria, in terms of teaching and learning processes as well as improved teachers’ job performance. It is on this background that the researcher tends to determine how staff development programmes predicts teachers’ job performance in secondary schools in South-East Nigeria.                           

1.2       STATEMENT OF THE PROBLEM

Scholars around the world have continued to maintain that no nation can rise above the quality of her teachers. The case is not different in South-East Nigeria. Over the years in Nigeria, the teaching profession was held in high esteem and prestige due to training and development programmes from the British Colonial Masters. Hence, for you to be a teacher at any educational level in Nigeria, you must have attained a particular level of professional standard resulting from training acquired like teacher education and at least a national certificate in education . It is no longer so today, as the reverse is the case. This is in regards to levels of education, primary, secondary and tertiary. The reason is because teaching job is yet to be fully accorded professional status by both the government and the society as it is presently relegated to the last option for job seekers. Hence, half-baked and non-professionals are all recruited to the teaching profession to teach future generation, contributing to a fall in the standard of education.

Again, quality control through regulatory activities such as supervision and professional development are always abandoned in the hands of less experienced personnel. Also on the part of government, poor and inadequate funding of education has been the major challenge school managers grapple with each academic year in running educational institutions like the secondary schools. This appalling situation reflects in the academic performance of students, in character and learning, teachers’ job performance and morale resulting to low standard of education and overall poor national development. Teachers who are the core curriculum implementers require regular professional training to meet up with contemporary trends, without such training, teachers will make the teaching and learning processes uninteresting and then dampen their job performance as well as the academic performance of the learners. When this happens, they can hardly diversify classroom activities to suit learners and qualitatively influence learning outcomes despite their high academic qualifications and years of experience in the teaching profession. It then implies that improving teachers’ performance through diversifying teaching methods for effective teaching and instructional delivery in secondary schools in South-East Nigeria is by developing the teachers through staff development programmes. The challenge is that even when the Nigerian government and other international organizations have recognized that the educational standard of Nigeria is low as it affects the kind of graduates produced in Nigerian secondary schools, government hardly organizes regular staff development programmes for teachers in secondary schools like in-service training, workshops, mentoring, supervision and skill upgrading courses to enable them stay up to date in the teaching profession. This will help them acquire new knowledge, upgrade old knowledge to enhance their job performance. It is in the light of this background that the study intended to find out how staff development programmes like In-service training, workshop, mentoring, supervision and skills upgrading courses would serve as determinants of teachers’ job performance in secondary schools in South-East Nigeria. Put alternatively, the problem this study intends to solve is looking out for a holistic approach of staff development programmes and making the stake-holders involved be aware of the importance of the programmes for better improvement of teachers’ job performance. 

1.3       PURPOSE OF THE STUDY

   The purpose of this study was to find out how staff development programmes serve as determinants of teachers’ job performance in secondary schools in South Eastern Nigeria. Specifically, the study sought to:

1.               find out the relationship between in-service training and teachers’ job performance in secondary schools

2.               ascertain how workshop relate to teachers’ job performance in  secondary schools

3.               determine the relationship between mentoring programmes and teachers’ job performance in secondary schools

4.               ascertain the relationship between supervision and teachers’ job performance in secondary schools

5.               find out how skills upgrading courses relate to teachers’ job performance in secondary schools


1.4       RESEARCH QUESTIONS

The following research questions were formulated to guide the study.

1.      To what extent does in-service training relate to teachers’ job performance in secondary schools?

2.      To what extent does workshop relate to teachers’ job performance in secondary schools?

3.      What is the extent to which mentoring programmes relate to teachers’ job performance in secondary schools?

4.      To what extent does supervision relate to teachers’ job performance in secondary schools?

5.      What is the extent to which skills upgrading courses relate to teachers’ job performance in secondary schools?

1.5       HYPOTHESES

The following null hypotheses were tested at 0.05 level of significance.

Ho1:   In-service training does not significantly relate to teachers’ job performance in secondary schools.

Ho2:   Workshop does not significantly relate to teachers’ job performance in secondary schools.

Ho3Mentoring programme does not significantly relate to teachers’ job performance in secondary schools.

Ho4:   Supervision does not significantly relate to teachers’ job performance in secondary schools.

Ho5:   Skills upgrading courses does not significantly serves as a determinant of teachers’ job performance in secondary schools.

1.6       SIGNIFICANCE OF THE STUDY

The findings of this study will be useful to the Federal Government, Federal Ministry of Education, Curriculum Planners, Teachers, Students and the society at large.          

The findings of this study will be useful to the Federal government in terms of making the Federal Government aware of the level of adequacy of staff development programmes required for building the capacity of teachers in secondary schools in South Eastern Nigeria. These enable teachers teach their various subject matters effectively and efficiently, because the Federal Government is responsible for making available needed resources for the professional development of teachers through staff development programmes. The findings will enable the Federal Government in the implementation of educational policies and programmes.                     

From the findings of this study, the Federal Ministry of Education through the State Ministries of Education and Secondary Education Management Boards (SEMB) will be made aware of the need for a regular staff development programmes and updates. This will enable teachers in secondary schools in South-East Nigeria to be adequately equipped to meet up with the demands of their teaching jobs in secondary schools. The findings in effect will make the work easily accessible to Ministry of Education.                 

The findings of the study will be useful to Curriculum Planners, as it will help them identify the weaknesses or loopholes in the present teacher education curriculum following contemporary issues and new experiences acquired hence, strategize ways of improving the curriculum like entrenching the provision of adequate resources to enhance effective organization of staff development programmes for the implementation of the curriculum in secondary schools in South-East Nigeria. The research work as well as result of the findings will be published in local and international journals to help curriculum planners.

The result of the study will be useful to teachers, as it will become an important way for teachers to refresh and deepen their knowledge of their own subjects and learn new ways to help students learn. The development programmes are ways that teachers can take the initiative to strengthen their professional skills and help their students succeed in their academics. The students will perform better with the teachers who gained a deeper understanding of how students learn. The teachers will more likely pose complex problems, work to understand how students process those problems, and help students find different and more effective ways to answer questions. Teachers will be able to prepare their students to succeed in a changing world, they need to be able to teach students how to use emerging technologies, how to navigate evolving workplaces, how to communicate effectively, and how to think critically and solve problems.

Furthermore, the result of the findings will become a reference material for further studies to researchers and will help them gain insights about various challenges teachers face in secondary schools as pertaining to regular staff development programmes, hence, advocate through research the importance of programmes that will build the capacity of teachers in secondary schools. The researcher will in effect see the gap and the need to make further enquiries.

The result of the findings will become a strong professional development component for students because it will show to yield better student retention rate and better student performance in developmental courses than those without teachers that are trained in staff development programmes. Students also benefit when teachers get the chance to work through the same types of problems they will later pose to students, examine new parts of the curriculum, and improve their own knowledge and understanding of the subjects they teach.

1.7       SCOPE OF THE STUDY

The scope of the study was written under geographical scope and content scope. The study focused on Staff Development programmes as determinants of teachers’ job performance in secondary schools in South-East Nigeria. The geographical scope of the study was South-East Nigeria which is: Abia, Anambra, Ebonyi, Enugu and Imo States. By every standard, South-East Nigeria has education as its largest industry employing good number of teachers with varying entry qualifications. South-East Nigeria on record has a good number of secondary schools distributed across the geo-political zone. This singular characteristic made the researcher who is also a full time teacher in the zone to settle for South-East Nigeria for the study. The variables are: in-service training, workshop, mentoring, supervision and skills upgrading courses.

 

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