ABSTRACT
The major
purpose of this study is to determine the influence of curriculum
implementation on the employability of the Education Graduates of the
University of Lagos. Three research question was raised to guide the study and
one research hypothesis was formulated. The descriptive survey research design
was adopted for this study. The population of the study comprised of students
from the Department of Educational Administration of the University of Lagos,
the National Youth Service Corps (NYSC) members from Surulere, Lagos and
teachers drawn from various private schools in Ikeja Local Government Area of
Lagos State. The systematic random sampling technique was used in selecting 150
respondents from the population. The method of data collection was the questionnaire,
the researcher administered the instrument, data was analyzed using the Mean,
Standard Deviation, and t-test analysis. One of the major findings was that
employability skills as part of the curriculum makes the difference in graduate
unemployment. A major recommendation include that curriculum must be reviewed
periodically and drawn in tandem with the requirements of employers of labour
in order to match current realities.
TABLE
OF CONTENTS
Title
Page i
Attestation ii
Certification iii
Dedication iv
Acknowledgements v
Abstract vi
Table of
Contents vii
List of
Tables ix
CHAPTER
ONE INTRODUCTION
Background to the
study 1
Statement of the
Problem 3
Purpose/Objectives of the
Study 5
Research
Questions 6
Research
Hypothesis 6
Scope of the
Study 6
Significance of the
Study 7
Limitations 8
Operational Definition of Important
Terms 8
CHAPTER
TWO REVIEW OF RELEVANT/RELATED
LITERATURE
Curriculum
Implementation 10
Factors Affecting Curriculum
Implementation 29
Employability 31
Graduate
Unemployment 37
The Relevance of Technical and
Vocational
Education 39
The Curriculum and
Employability 44
Employability, Higher Education and
Assessment 52
Employment and
Employability 54
Employability Development in
Teaching and
Learning 56
Summary of Related Literature
Review 59
CHAPTER THREE RESEARCH
METHODOLOGY AND PROCEDURES
Research Design 61
Population 61
Sample and Sampling
Population 61
Research
Instruments 62
Validity and Reliability of the
Research
Instruments 62
Method of Data
Collection 62
Method of Data
Analyses 63
CHAPTER
FOUR DATA PRESENTATION, ANALYSIS AND
DISCUSSION
Demographic Characteristics of
Participants 64
Answers to Research
Questions 64
Testing of Research Hypothesis 68
Summary of
Findings 69
CHAPTER
FIVE SUMMARY, IMPLICATIONS AND
CONCLUSION
Summary of the
Study 70
Implications of the Findings for
Policy and for
Practice 71
Conclusion 73
Contribution to
Knowledge 74
Generalizability of Research
Findings 74
Suggestions for Further
Research 75
REFERENCES 77
APPENDICES 80
CHAPTER ONE
INTRODUCTION
Background
to the Study
Higher
education institutions must recognise that for many students, the transition
from education into employment is not a straightforward matter and in the past
many students have been ill-equipped for this transition. During the 1990s,
this issue has been exacerbated because of the considerable expansion in
graduate numbers which has taken place within a relatively short period of
time. Furthermore, the nature of graduate employment is changing, today it is
only a minority of students who can hold any realistic expectation of
employment in a position directly related to the discipline studied; this is
particularly the case for those students whose focus remains within traditional
academic disciplines. Whilst it is essential that the academic standards of
particular disciplines or broader fields of study are not undermined, it is
also important to be realistic and to note that the academic knowledge gained
will (for most students) never be utilised directly in any employment context.
More and more, the academic qualification of the degree is merely a statement
that the graduate has demonstrated the ability to perform to a particular level
of academic competence and, perhaps more importantly, possesses the ability to
learn (Steven and Fallows, 1998).
Employers,
universities and professional bodies agree that Nigeria needs to develop
professionals who are highly skilled and ready to face the challenges of
increased competition. More than ever, we need professionals who are responsive
to economic, social, cultural, technical and environmental change and can work
flexibly and intelligently across business contexts. The country requires
education graduates who understand the part they play in the impartation of
knowledge to pupils and have the practical skills to work effectively in their
roles.
However, contributing in the school
environment means more than having the necessary teaching skills. It means
engaging with the school and its goals, understanding the dynamics of the
school environment and taking up a job role with an informed knowledge of all
of its requirements. It also means applying a broad range of employability
skills learned in many contexts and through a range of experiences. Emerging
institutions aspire to be more competitive, more effective and more innovative.
The education graduate workforce is a key part of the talent pool the school
environment draws from to further these objectives. Universities clearly want
to produce graduates with the skills that are highly regarded by employers and
are seen to contribute to the acquisition of lifelong skills by the students,
country’s prosperity and social capital. Emerging teaching professionals want
to attain interesting employment, and build their professional careers.
National development is inextricably
linked to human development. All education graduates of institutions of
higher learning play a major role in the development of their countries and in
the advancement of their respective disciplines. While technical
discipline-specific knowledge is a prerequisite for all graduates, effective
management skills are also needed by those entering the private sector and
government. However, the challenge is that curriculum design and
implementation require a major overhaul for graduates to acquire these
competencies and skills. Our curriculum in most higher institutes of learning
does not have an extensive curriculum reform to include mentoring and
internships as part of the regular training in all educational programmes.
Educational providers globally are increasingly expected to focus
on improving the employability of their learners. This has led
to greater attention on a range of institutional policies and practices that
focus on the individual's learning and which seek to address their deficits of
knowledge, skills and attitudes.
Statement of
the Problem
Nigeria has
a serious challenge. Many education graduates of its universities cannot find
work. Despite an average economic growth rate of about seven percent per annum
over the last seven years, a good performance by global standards, wage
employment is estimated to have declined by about thirty percent according to a
recent World Bank Publication titled “Putting Nigeria to Work”. Nigeria has a
serious jobless growth problem. Its strong economic performance over the last
decade has not translated to jobs and real life opportunities for its many of
its youths. (Olu Akanmu, 2011).
Three out of
ten graduates of higher institutions cannot find work. Being highly educated
does not increase the chance of finding a job. Many graduates of higher
institution who find work are not usually gainfully employed. They are forced
to accept marginal jobs that do not use their qualifications in sales,
agriculture and manual labour according to the British Council sponsored
Nigeria-Next Generation Report. For those who are lucky to find jobs, employers
are concerned about their skills and fit with their job requirements. Standards
have fallen in higher education due to years of poor implementation of the
curriculum, leading to a growing preference for overseas university education. Nigeria
is one of the biggest markets for British Higher Education because many upper-
middle class families see it as a way to give their children a head-start in
life. This however has serious social equity implications as not more than ten
percent of Nigerian families can afford to send their children abroad. There is
an increasing correlation between employability of graduates and their social
class. If education is the bridge to liberating the potentials of young people
and bridging the social divide by offering everyone a chance to climb the
social ladder, higher education in Nigeria may be failing.
Employers
want their graduate recruits to be competent in their chosen fields. They also
want them to come out of school well equipped with complementary life skills
such as problem solving, reflective and critical thinking, interpersonal and
teaming skills, effective communication, character, integrity and high level of
personal ethics, self-esteem, self-discipline, organizing skills and abilities
to translate ideas to action. The problem, typical of higher education in many
countries is that these life skills are rarely taught as part of higher
education curriculum. Yet, as soft as they are, they are no less important in
making a success out of school as the specific technical skills in a graduate’s
chosen field.
According to
Olu Akanmu (2011), there are two critical policy issues to address in putting
the Nigerian graduate to work. The first is how to increase the employment
generation capacity of the economy, create jobs that will absorb thousands of
higher education graduates and reverse the current pattern of Nigeria’s jobless
economic growth. It is estimated that Nigeria needs to create twenty-four
million jobs over the next ten years to half current unemployment level of
thirty percent. The second policy issue to address is how higher education
institutions will produce graduates that are employable for the jobs created.
How would Nigerian universities improve standards to produce graduates with the
minimum sufficient technical skills in their chosen fields? Her national
spending priorities will need to be re-ordered to allocate more resources to
human capacity development which has a high leverage on its social and economic
development. In addition, Nigeria’s education policy must also address how its
universities will develop the complementary curriculum that addresses the life
skill requirements its graduates and prepare them better for their
post-graduate life journey? The disparity between postgraduate employment
reality and higher education curriculum in specific field and general terms
will need to be addressed.
The historical underfunding of curriculum implementation has led to a crisis of standards in higher education. Putting the education graduate to gainful work also implies that its higher education institutions should partner with schools to develop employability content in higher education curriculum and provide formal life skills training for students. The curriculum does not include life case analysis in teaching that brings the real work problems to life.
The historical underfunding of curriculum implementation has led to a crisis of standards in higher education. Putting the education graduate to gainful work also implies that its higher education institutions should partner with schools to develop employability content in higher education curriculum and provide formal life skills training for students. The curriculum does not include life case analysis in teaching that brings the real work problems to life.
Purpose/Objectives
of the Study
The purpose
of the study is to:
1. analyse
the impact of curriculum implementation on life learning skills acquired by
Faculty of Education graduates in the University of Lagos.
2. identify
how the Faculty of Education currently integrates, develops and teaches
employability skills to undergraduates through its curriculum.
3. identifying
practical, cost-effective options that enable employability to be identified as
part of the Faculty of Education curriculum.
The study will also shed more light
on the employability skills needed by education graduates to fully succeed in
the teaching environment.
Research Questions
To guide the study, the following
research questions were posed,
1. Does
curriculum implementation directly affect the employability of education
graduates in the University of Lagos?
2. Is
the University of Lagos currently teaching life learning skills and
competencies in their Education Faculty?
3. How
effective are the vocational and technical training for new education graduates
towards being employable?
Research Hypothesis
There is significant difference
between the teaching abilities of education graduates that have been exposed to
teaching practice as part of the curriculum and Non-education graduates who
have not been part of any teaching practice scheme as part of their curriculum.
Scope of the Study
The scope of the study will involve
1. defining
curriculum implementation in the Faculty of Education of the University of
Lagos, the methods and effectiveness.
2. reviewing
and identifying the best practice for integrating, developing, teaching,
assessing on employability skills.
3. identifying
practical, cost-effective options that enable employability skills that are
embedded in university education qualifications to be explicitly identified as
part of the higher education assessment and reporting process.
4. examining
the factors that affect qualitative implementation of curriculum in the Faculty
of Education of the University of Lagos.
It should be noted that the study
focuses only on curriculum implementation in the Faculty of Education, UNILAG
and the employability of its new graduates.
Significance of the Study
The findings of this research will
be of great importance to all the stakeholders among which are:
1. Curriculum
Designers – The findings will better inform the curriculum designers and
implementers on why the curriculum should be reviewed frequently. It will also
guide them on how to plan for the education graduates and equally put in motion
processes geared towards repositioning the curriculum to more responsive to the
needs of the society.
2. Researchers
– The study will provide a framework for subsequent studies in this area and it
will serve as reference work for researchers who intend to carry out similar
studies.
3. Students
– The study will serve as an eye opener to the education graduates who are not
informed about the skills they are supposed to possess.
4. Employers
– The findings of this work will be of immense help to employers of labour as
it will afford them the opportunity to know the areas of weaknesses of our
graduates and how to possibly organise on the job training for new recruits to address
this challenge.
Limitations of the Study
The study will not be concerned with
the employability of existing Education graduates in the labour market but will
be focussing on new graduates. The study will only concern itself with the
design and implementation of curriculum at the Faculty of Education, Department
of Educational Foundation; it will not be examining curriculum implementation
in other Faculties in the University.
Operational Definitions of Important
Terms
Curriculum: is a plan or programme of all experiences which
the learner encounters under the direction of a school (Tanner and Tanner,
1995: 158). Curriculum in this study refers to the programme of activities run
by the school to prepare their product for the labour market. According to
Gatawa (1990), it is “the totality of the experiences of children for which
schools are responsible”. All this is in agreement with Sergiovanni and Starrat
(1983), who argue that curriculum is “that which a student is supposed to
encounter, study, practice and master… what the student learns. A curriculum
outlines a prescribed series of courses to take.
Employability: A set of achievements –
skills, understandings and personal attributes that make graduates more likely
to gain employment and be successful in their chosen occupations. Booth,
(2003). It is that quality that enables a worker fit into the world of work.
Curriculum Implementation: Curriculum implementation entails putting into
practice the officially prescribed courses of study, syllabuses and subjects.
The process involves helping the learner acquire knowledge or experience. It is
important to note that curriculum implementation cannot take place without the
learner. The learner is therefore the central figure in the curriculum
implementation process. Implementation takes place as the learner acquires the
planned or intended experiences, knowledge, skills, ideas and attitudes that
are aimed at enabling the same learner to function effectively in a society
(University of Zimbabwe, 1995).
Curriculum implementation is how the school is able to meet the
requirements on the policy of education at the higher level.
TOPIC: CURRICULUM IMPLEMENTATION AND THE EMPLOYBILITY OF EDUCATION GRADUATES
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Chapters: 1 - 5
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