Abstract
This study presents the findings of
the relationship between students’ achievement in Chemistry conducted by the
West African Examination Council (WAEC) and the National Examination Council
(NECO) in four selected secondary schools in Agege Local Government Area of
Lagos State, Nigeria. The analysis showed that there is significant positive
relationship between chemistry in all the selected schools contrary to the
hypothesis that says there is no relationship in WAEC and NECO chemistry
results in the schools. It is therefore recommended that students should
develop more interest in sitting for either of the two examinations since they
produce equivalent results.
TABLE
OF CONTENT
CHAPTER ONE: INTRODUCTION
1.1 Background
of the Study
1.2 Statement
of Problem
1.3 Purpose
of Study
1.4 Significance
of Study
1.5 Research
Questions
1.6 Research
Hypothesis
1.7 Scope
of the Study
1.8 Delimitation
of the Study
1.9 Operational
Definition of Terms
CHAPTER TWO: LITERATURE REVIEW
2.1 Theoretical
Framework
2.1.1. Qualified Chemistry Teachers
in Schools
2.1.2 Students’ Variables
2.1.3 Lack of Equipment
and Instructional Materials
2.2 The
Nature and Scope of Chemistry in the School Curriculum
CHAPTER THREE: MATERIALS AND
METHODOLOGY
3.1 Research
Design
3.2 Population
of the Study
3.3 Procedure
for Data Collection
3.4 Procedure
for Data Analyses
3.5 Testing
the Significance of Correlation Coefficient
3.6 Assumptions
CHAPTER FOUR: EMPIRICAL ANALYSIS,
RESULTS AND FINDINGS
4.3 Summary
of Major Findings and Discussions
CHAPTER FIVE: DISCUSSION,
CONCLUSION
AND RECOMMENDATIONS
5.1 Conclusion
5.2 Recommendations
5.
3 Suggestions
References
Appendix
CHAPTER
ONE
INTRODUCTION
1.1 Background
of the Study
Scientists and researchers like
Oyekan (1999) saw science and technology as basic tools for industrial and
national development. These if properly harnessed could bring about economic
and social happiness by providing and improving the welfare of the citizenry.
Consequently, the teaching and learning of science has become a great concern
to scientists and researchers.
As people think about the
teaching and learning of science in our schools, the picture of the state of
Science and Technology in a country like Nigeria becomes glaring. This was
expressed in the annual conference proceedings of Science Teachers Associations
of Nigeria (STAN) in 1998 on the theme “winning more students for Science and
Technology”. This theme came as a result of poor performance by students in
science examinations. This poor performance often resulted in poor enrolment of
students in science at the secondary and tertiary institutions.
The poor performance of
students could be attributed to a number of reasons including poor
participation of students and poor level of exposure in the practical aspect of
science especially Chemistry. Agbo and Mankilik (1999) quoted the then Minister
of Education in Nigeria as saying that the performance of students in the
sciences was not encouraging in spite of the huge amount of money expended on
the purchase of science materials and equipment. Dajili (2001) also expressed
his concern about the poor performance of students in science examinations.
This concern arose from the increasing realization that the nation could not
develop as rapidly as she aspired to without adequate tools of scientific and
technological man power at all levels in her working populace. He (Dajili,
2001) maintained that the state of science at the secondary school level was
very important. This is because the performance at this level determines
the quality and quantity of intake into the tertiary institutions in the
country. This is why the performance in science examinations at this level as
observed by Agbo and Mankilik (1999) and Dajile (2001) should be investigated.
The natural sciences (Biology,
Physics and Chemistry) have two components, the theory and the practical
aspects which make the teaching and learning of science real. Over the years
report shows that candidates do not perform well in practical aspect. Ministry
of Education (2001) and WAEC Chief Examiner‟s Report (2002) attributed the poor
performance especially in practical aspect of Chemistry to their
non-familiarity with the use of simple laboratory equipment, imprecise
statement, spelling errors, inadequate exposure to laboratory techniques, lack
of observational skills, inability to determine mole ratio from stoichiometric
equations, omission of units in calculated values, inability to write symbols
properly and assign correct charges to ions, among others. In the theory paper,
poor performance of students was also attributed to a number of reasons which
include their inability to represent simple reaction by balanced equations,
violation of the convention for IUPAC nomenclature, tendency to crowd their
answers together, poor spellings, definitions and diagram, non-familiarity with
some contents of the syllabus, lack of depth and precision in the responses to
essay questions, inadequate understanding of the fundamental principles in
Chemistry, inability to distinguish between physical and chemical properties
and incompetence in basic Mathematics and other factors that affect students’
performance in Chemistry.
The West African Examination
Council (WAEC) for a number of decades has been the only examination body in
this country especially for ordinary level examinations. A lot of concerns have
been expressed by large number of concerned citizens on students’ failure
especially in mathematics and English language. In the year 2000, the Federal
Government of Nigeria came up with another examination board referred to as
“National Examination Council” (NECO). Is this new body efficient in its work?
What about students’ performance if compared with that of WAEC? Is there any
relationship between WASSC Emathematics results and NECO mathematics results?
These are some of the questions that shall beans wered during the course of
this research.
This study presents the
findings of a study of the relationship between students’ achievement in
Chemistry conducted by the West Africa Examination Council (WAEC) and the one
by the National Examination council (NECO), in selected secondary schools in Agege
Local Government Area of Lagos State. It is a fundamental statement nowadays
that we are in the age of science and technology and Nigeria has also imbibed
the idea. The school curricula thus lay emphasis on science subjects of which
chemistry takes a higher rank. (Amini, 1997)
The suggestions and
recommendations in this study will go a long way in determining which
examination body should be preferred by the schools or students based on the
results of the analysis.
1.2 Statement
of the Problems
Recently, there has been a lot of
mounting public criticism on the fallen standard of education in the media and
public places even though there has not been available or little data to back
up this statement. There has also been criticism against NECO. Some even say
their questions are tough than those of WAEC. Some universities who once
rejected NECO results now accept it. Many private owned secondary schools now
register their students for NECO. One of the reasons could be that WAEC and
NECO have the same syllabus and each of them has a regulatory body. So, their
results should be equivalent.
The
importance of chemistry in studying science has long been recognized
world-wide. Now that there are two major examination bodies, is there any
relationship between students achievement in both examinations with respect to
chemistry? If there is, how strong or weak is it?
1.3 Purpose
of the study
The general purpose of the study is
to identify the relationship between students’ achievement in Chemistry conducted
by the West Africa Examination Council (WAEC) and the one by the National
Examination council (NECO), in selected secondary schools in Agege Local
Government Area of Lagos State. Specifically this study sought to:
(i) to
find if boys performance in chemistry is not better than the girls
(ii) find
the influence of school location on students’ performance in chemistry
(iii) find if
there is a positive and high correlation between students’ performance in
chemistry and mathematics.
1.4 Significance
of the Study
The significance of the study is as
follow:
1. To
investigate the possible reasons for the poor performance of students doing
Chemistry in NECO and WAEC
2. To
make recommendation for improved performance in Chemistry in both NECO and WAEC
3. To
the teachers, not only Chemistry teachers, who for variety of reasons, are and
should be the pivot point for change since the education of future generation
is entrusted to them
4. To
help research students and teachers of this subjects who probably are writing
on the subject matter.
1.5 Research
Questions
The following research question were
raised in the study
(i) Does
gender influence students’ performance in chemistry?
(ii) Will
school nature influence students’ performance in chemistry?
(iii) Will
school location influence students’ performance in chemistry?
1.6 Research
Hypotheses
The following null hypotheses were
formulated in this study:
H0: There
is no significant relationship between WAEC and NECO Chemistry results.
H1: There
is significant relationship between WAEC and NECO Chemistry results.
1.7 Scope
of the Study
The present study is to cover four
randomly selected senior secondary schools in Agege Local Government Area of
Lagos State.The Scope of data spans through the period 2009 – 2013.
1.8 Delimitation
of the Study
The time for this study was short
and therefore just a few schools were used for this research.
1.9 Operational
Definition of Terms
WAEC: The West
African Senior School Certificate Examination (WASSCE) is a
type of standardized test in West Africa. It is
administered by the West
African Examinations Council . It is only offered to
candidates residing in Anglophone West African countries.
NECO: National
Examinations Council which was the promulgation of a decree, in April 1999 by
Abdulsalami Abubakar military administration.
Comparative Study: Cross-cultural
studies, sometimes called holocultural studies or comparative studies, is a
specialization in anthropology and sister sciences that uses field data from
many societies to examine the scope of human behavior and test hypotheses about
human behavior and culture
Chemistry: the
branch of science concerned with the substances of which matter is composed,
the investigation of their properties and reactions, and the use of such
reactions to form new substances.
Results: a
thing that is caused or produced by something else; a consequence or outcome.
An item of information obtained by experiment or some other scientific method;
a quantity or formula obtained by calculation.
Performance: The
accomplishment of a given task measured against present known standards of
accuracy, completeness, cost and speed. In. a contrast, performance is deemed
to be the fulfillment of an obligation, in a manner that releases the performer
from all liabilities under the contrast.
Student: A student is
a learner, or someone who attends an educational institution. In some nations,
the English term (or its cognate in another language) is reserved for those who
attend university, while a
schoolchild under the age of eighteen is called a pupil in
English (or an equivalent in other languages)
TOPIC: A COMPARATIVE STUDY OF STUDENTS’ PERFORMANCE IN WAEC AND NECO CHEMISTRY
Format: MS Word
Chapters: 1 - 5
Delivery: Email
Delivery: Email
Number of Pages: 65
Price: 3000 NGN
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