AN
ASSESSMENT OF MASS MEDIA AVAILABILITY AND LEVEL OF USAGE IN THE TEACHING AND
LEARNING
ABSTRACT
This research was carried out to
assess mass media availability and level of usage in the teaching and learning
of Government in Lagos State schools. The research design for this study was
descriptive survey and it employed the used of two questionnaires: Teachers
Questionnaire on Availability and Level of Usage of Mass Media (TQALMM) and
Students’ Questionnaire on Availability and Level of Usage of Mass Media
(SQALMM) to collect data from a population sample of five teachers
and seventy-five students, making a total of eighty respondents.
Ten research questions were raised for the purpose of this study while
four hypotheses were stated and tested in the study using t-test. The following
findings emerged from the study: there was a significant relationship between
the availability and level of usage of mass media in teaching and learning
Government as a subject. However, there was a significant difference among
teachers in their perception of the challenges faced in using mass media to
teach Government as a subject. There was also a significant difference in the
perception of students about challenges faced in learning Government. It was
also discovered that there was an over reliance on the print media especially
the use of the textbook in teaching and learning Government to the
detriment of other types of mass media especially the electronic media in which
the radio was unavailable for teaching and learning Government. Some Government
textbooks were outdated and did not reflect current trends like the digital
media. The following recommendations were made to improve the use of mass media
in teaching and learning Government: school authorities should take advantage
of the radio and work closely with radio stations to develop programmes for
teaching and learning government in schools. School authorities should also
ensure that their teachers and students are computer literate and can assess
the internet and social networks for fruitful academic endeavours. A monitoring
check up system can also be set up e.g blocking non academic sites on the
internet, selecting social networks that can suit academic pursuits etc. There
should also be an ICT department in every school to help teachers and students
alike to make the best use of ICT equipment. The government should subsidize
internet subscriptions to schools and even provide hardware equipment to
schools that cannot afford it. More corporate organizations should be
encouraged to establish ICT labs in schools as a social responsibility.
TABLE OF CONTENT
Title
page i
Certification ii
Dedication iii
Acknowledgement iv
Abstract v
Table of
content vi
CHAPTER ONE:
INTRODUCTION
1.1Background of study 1
1.2Statement of
problem 3
1.3Purpose of
study 5
1.4Research
questions 6
1.5Research
hypotheses 7
1.6Significance of
study 7
1.7Scope of
study 7
CHAPTER TWO
LITERATURE REVIEW
2.1 Definition of
concept 8
2.2 Appraisal of related
literature 29
CHAPTER THREE
RESEARCH METHODOLOGY
3.1 Research
design 31
3.2 Population
of study 31
3.3 Sample and sampling
technique 31
3.4 Research
instrument 32
3.5 Validity of research
instrument 32
3.6 Method of data
collection 33
3.7 Method of data
analysis 33
CHAPTER
FOUR
DATA ANALYSIS AND PRESENTATION
4.1 presentation and
analysis of data 34
4.2 Test of
hypotheses 58
4.3 Discussion of
findings 60
CHAPTER
FIVE
SUMMARY OF FINDINGS, CONCLUSION AND
RECOMMENDATION
5.1Introduction 62
5.2Summary of
findings 62
5.3Conclusion 64
5.4Recommendation 64
5.5 Recommendation for further
research 65
References 66
Appendix
I 69
Appendix
II 74
CHAPTER ONE
INTRODUCTION
1.1 Background of study
According to Wikipedia, education is
the process of facilitating learning or the acquisition of knowledge, skills,
values, beliefs and habits. According to John Dewey (1916), it is a social
process –a process of living and not a preparation for future living. Education
is from three Latin words:
1. educatum
meaning the act of teaching or training
2. educare
meaning to bring up or to raise.
3. educere
meaning to lead forth or to come out
Education is the nourishing of the
good qualities in man and the drawing out of the best in every individual
.Education is often confused with schooling famously called banking by Paulo
Freire (1973) i.e to make deposits of knowledge on learners like objects acted
on rather than individuals to be related to. Individuals should be given time
to discover truth and possibility. Education means to develop a person morally
(affective), physically (psychomotor) and mentally (cognitive). It is the
foundation of the society and the best investment for the people. The main
purpose of education is to prepare and qualify people for work in the society
and to socialize them, preparing the young for adulthood. Education enables a
person to understand his/her cultural identity. Education provides a forum to
evaluate and find solutions to problems in a society. Education teaches
learners to maintain social order. Education and mass media have overtime
enjoyed a sweet-sour relationship. On the one hand, TV and newspapers have
provided extensive useful education content, and acted as watchdog of public
activities; however, its role has been compromised these days by the
battl e for survival in the media industry. Education experts look up to the
media to do more than act as a watchdog, and help to build an efficient
education system by bridging the communication gap between the government and
educational policy makers. The media plays a significant role in the design ,
manipulation and sustenance of international diplomacy and body politics. For
the adolescent, the media has become a socializing agent. Adolescence is a time
of self identification. Therefore, family influences decreases while peer
influence increases. Media is the means and channel through which information
and news reach individuals that constitute the local national, regional,
Continental and or international, audience. In recent times, media has become a
political tool of the dominant paradigm in the national, continental and
international politics. In Africa, and nearly most other third world countries,
national governments use the potential of media information and language to manipulate
the masses and influence public opinion. The media is used to maintain and
retain the status quo. But with media power, all those who have vested
interests in its control make the ordinary citizen a mere puppet. Subjective
reporting is the selection of content and media coverage for some diplomatic
and political motive. Through subjective reporting, global media initiates,
instigates, fuel and aggravates crises and conflicts that later degenerates
into terrorism (trans-national and international). According to social
responsibility media theory, duties of the media include:
1. To serve the political
system by making information, discussion, consideration of public affairs
generally accessible.
2. To inform the public
to enable it to take self determined actions.
3. To protect the rights
of the individual by acting as a watchdog over government.
However, there are harmful effects
of mass media. Firstly, teachers only use media to get attention to the subject
matter, to reward good behavior, and to keep kids quiet and under control.
Media content can sensationalise violent behavior, exposure to subtle or
explicit sexual content, promotion of poor health habits and exposure to
advertising targeting children. Moreover, majority of programmes for children
and youth in developing countries are imported. Unfortunately, most of the
content contain character messages that are not relevant to local culture.
Youth programming has reduced in face of funding cuts and growing competition
from private channels. As rich in content as the television is in
instructional, education programming and news reportage, students and teachers
are not abreast of socio-political issues. This is because TV news reportage
and programming are beyond students’ comprehension on how to extract and
analyse information. TV programming and news reportage are politically inclined
and biased. Major TV networks in Nigeria chase for airtime. Money dictates what
is shown on Nigerian TV screens. This ultimately means that people who have the
funds e.g the government, rich politicians, private investors,
multicorporations etc determine what is broadcast on TV. Corporations and
private investors are profit oriented and will push any media content that will
reach their target audience to make enough profit while the government and
politicians are after promoting good image through propaganda especially during
the electoral process. Therefore teachers and students are left with media
content devoid of socio-political significance or tainted with cheap
propaganda. Media content have generally been commercialized.
1.2
STATEMENT OF PROBLEM
The challenges of availability of
media are enormous: propaganda and brown envelope journalism, foreign nature of
media conten, the bombardment of advertisement, reluctance to encourage youth
programmes, regional and sectional interests, power outage, accessibility of
the internet and inadequate ICT equipment. The cost of airing T.V programmes is
very high so producers sacrifice educational programmes for entertainment which
is readily sponsored by corporate bodies because it is profitable. The radio
appeals to different audiences and ethnic, religious differences
(segmentation). This makes its usage very selective as students might find it
difficult to tune to a station for information. Internet penetration in Nigeria
is very high now and its subscription too. Students might not be able to afford
subscription fee and might not have access to ICT equipment e.g laptops,
personal computers, phones, hand-held devices etc to download E-books. The
digital divide between teachers and students is quite alarming. Most teachers
do not possess the knowledge of handling ICT equipment and find it difficult to
keep abreast with current trends. This affects their level of usage and they
retort back to old media for information instead of complementing both sources
of information.
The shelf life of newspapers is very
low and this causes both students and teachers to assess magazines because of
its attractiveness and shelf life. The challenges of using the media include
poor reading skills.Due to technological development, reading habits are
changing. Students now lack the skill of reading. Instead they spend more hours
on electronic media. The acquisition of reading skills have a beneficial effect
on all school subjects including social science, math and so on. Unfortunately,
reading is not taught or included in school curriculum. Only a few schools have
good libraries while majority have limited dog-eared books locked up in few cupboards.
There is unprecedented rise in the price of books while DVDS are becoming more
affordable. The vast information of the world’s information is not digitized.
Rather, it is in print form mostly in books. Aina (2011).Children with poor
reading habits have a higher chance of anti social behaviour. Today’s populace
between the age bracket 18-34 are increasingly using the web as their medium of
choice for news consumption. Local TV remains the most accessed source of the
news and the internet is quickly becoming the most favourite of young
consumers. About 44% of these age bracket use the internet for news and about
19% use the printed newspapers. Moral degeneration and decadence, gross
obsession and abuse of social networking, inadequate knowledge by teachers are
other challenges of using the media.Unfortunately, the endemic power outages in
the country pose a limiting factor to the extent to which the radio
can be used to effectively broadcast educational programmes. The problem associated
with the television is whether a separate channel will be assigned educational
programmes or to establish separate TV houses for the purposes of education.
There is also the problem of incessant power outages. The influence of
electronic media in educating students is not socially progressive. It has
resulted to frustration on the part of many teachers who do not have inadequate
knowledge of electronic media technologies like computer internet, education
software etc. Also it is time consuming and skill demanding for teachers .
Users of electronic media, for example, students can be vunerable to unintended
misuses of electronic media e.g social media. Social networks grab the total
attention and concentration of the students and diverts them towards non
educational, unethical, and inappropriate actions such as useless chatting,
time killing by random searching and not doing their jobs. Inadequate
infrastructure, including computer hardware, software, bandwidth, are major
challenges in using the digital media. Agbamuche, (2015).
1.3 PURPOSE OF STUDY
The purpose of this study is to:
1. find
out the availability of mass media to Government
teachers in secondary schools.
2. determine
the availability of mass media to Government students in
secondary schools.
3. assess
the challenges in the availability of mass media to Government
teachers in secondary schools.
4. assess
the challenges in the availability of mass media to Government
students in secondary schools.
5. evaluate the level
of usage of mass media by Government teachers in
secondary schools.
6. assess
the level of usage of mass media by Government
students in secondary schools.
7. analyse
the challenges of using mass media by Government
teachers in secondary schools.
8. assess
the challenges of using mass media by Government students in
secondary schools.
9. appraise
the availability of mass media in teaching and learning Government in secondary
schools.
10. appraise the level of
usage of mass media in teaching and learning Government in secondary
schools.
1.4
RESEARCH QUESTIONS
1. To what
extent is mass media available to Government teachers in secondary
schools?
2. To what
extent is mass media available to Government teachers in secondary schools?
3. What
are the factors that affect the availability of mass media to Government
teachers in secondary schools?
4. What
are the factors that affect the availability of mass media to Government
students in secondary schools?
5. How
often do Government teachers use the mass media?
6. How
often do Government students use the mass media?
7. What
are the challenges encountered by Government teachers in using the mass media?
8. What
are the challenges encountered by Government students in using the mass media?
9. What
is the most preferred mass medium used by Government teachers in secondary
schools?
10. What is the most
preferred mass medium used by government students in secondary schools
1.5 NULL HYPOTHESIS
1. There
is no significant relationship between the availability and level of usage of
mass media in teaching Government as a subject.
2. There
is no significant relationship between the availability and level of usage of
mass media in learning Government as a subject.
3. There
is no significant difference in the perception of teachers about challenges
using the media
4. There
is no significant difference in the perception of students about
challenges using the media
1.6
SIGNIFICANCE OF STUDY
This study will help Government
teachers and students to avail themselves to the best practices
and the most effective usage of mass media in order to reduce the
negative influences of the media that hinders fruitful academic
learning. This study will also help to create awareness on the best form
of mass media effective for teaching and learning the subject.
1.7 SCOPE OF STUDY
This study is an assessment of mass
media availability and level of usage in the teaching and learning of
Government in Lagos state schools. However, the scope of this study will be
limited to Government teachers and students in Pedro, Shomolu Local Government,
Lagos State.
TOPIC: AN
ASSESSMENT OF MASS MEDIA AVAILABILITY AND LEVEL OF USAGE IN THE TEACHING AND
LEARNING
Format: MS Word
Chapters: 1 - 5
Delivery: Email
Delivery: Email
Number of Pages: 74
Price: 3000 NGN
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