EVALUATION
OF THE EFFECTIVENESS OF TRAINING AND DEVELOPMENT OF EDUCATIONAL MANPOWER IN
LAGOS STATE
ABSTRACT
The
study examined evaluation of the effectiveness of training and development of
educational manpower in Lagos State. The descriptive research survey was used
in order to assess the opinions of the selected respondents using the
questionnaire and the sampling techniques. A total of 200 (two hundred)
respondents were selected comprising of fifty (50) teachers made up of 25 males
and 25 females; one hundred and fifty (150) students made up of 75 males and 75
females and used in the study to represent the entire population of the study.
Three null hypotheses were formulated and tested using the independent t-test
and the Pearson Product Moment Correlational Coefficient statistical tools at
0.05 level of significance. At the end of the analyses, the following results
emerged:
1. Hypothesis one
found that there is a significant effect of training on teachers’ productivity
in the school sector.
2. Hypothesis two
revealed that there is a significant relationship between training of teachers
and students’ academic performance in schools.
3. Finally,
hypothesis three indicated that there is a significant relationship between the
training of teachers and teachers’ productivity levels in the school sector.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Title Page i
Certification ii
Dedication iii
Acknowledgements iv
Abstract v
Table of
Contents vi
CHAPTER ONE: INTRODUCTION 1
1.1 Background
to the
Study 1
1.2 Statement
of the Problem 3
1.3 Purpose
of the
Study 4
1.4 Research
Questions 5
1.5 Research
Hypotheses 6
1.6 Significance
of the
Study 6
1.7 Scope
of the
Study 8
CHAPTER
TWO: LITERATURE
REVIEW 9
2.1 Concept
of Training and
Professionalism 9
2.2 Strategies
Involved in Effective Classroom
Management 13
2.3 The
Concept of Human Resources
Management 25
2.4 Importance
of Human Resources
Management 28
2.5 Staff
Development and Job Effectiveness 30
2.6 Staff
and Student Personnel
Administration 34
CHAPTER
THREE: RESEARCH
METHODOLOGY 38
3.0 Introduction 38
3.1 Research
Design 38
3.2 Population
of the
Study 38
3.3 Sample
and Sampling
Technique 39
3.4 Research
Instrument 39
3.5 Procedure
for Data
Collection 39
3.6 Procedure
for Data Analysis 40
CHAPTER FOUR: DATA
ANALYSIS AND PRESENTATION OF
RESULTS 41
4.1 Introduction 41
4.2 Descriptive
Analyses of Teachers’ Biographic Data Based on Age, Sex,
Marital
Status and Duration of
Service 41
4.3 Descriptive
Analyses of Teachers’ Responses to Questionnaire
Using
the Research
Questions 44
4.4 Descriptive
Analyses of Students’ Bio-Data According to Sex and
Age Range 49
4.5 Descriptive
Analyses of Students’ Responses to Questionnaire
Using
the Research
Questions 51
4.6 Hypothesis
Testing 57
4.7 Summary
of
Findings 60
CHAPTER FIVE: SUMMARY, DISUSSIONS,
IMPLICATION OF THE STUDY, CONCLUSION, RECOMMENDATIONS AND SUGGESTION FOR
FURTHER STUDIES 61
1.1 Summary
of the Study 61
1.2 Discussion
of
Findings 62
1.3 Implication
of the Study 64
1.4 Conclusions 65
1.5 Recommendations 65
1.6 Suggestion
for Further
Studies 68
Bibliography 69
Appendices 75
CHAPTER ONE
INTRODUCTION
1.1 Background
to the Study
Onuoha
and Uzodinma (2000), state that once an organization has employed those it
considered qualified, suitable and competent to perform those jobs for which
they were hired, it must embark on an effective training and development
programme that is necessary to enhance the productive capabilities of the newly
hired employees, while it also embarks on training and retratining the old
workers or employees in order to maximize their productivity.
Gardner (1993),
defines training as an organized procedure by which people learn knowledge and
or skills for a definite purpose. It is a process for equipping employees,
particularly the non-managerial employees. Training would enable employees to
improve on their performances and when they improve on their performances, it
will bring about high and increased productivity in an organisation or an
institution.
According
to Uzorue (1994), the objective of training and retraining teachers in the
school sector is majorly to enable them to perform their work well in the
school and bring about high work performance of the teachers and high academic
achievement of the students. Uzorue opines that the teacher’s job is a tedious
one, which requires skills and proficiency to carry out effectively. Therefore,
training of teachers is a sine qua non in the teaching profession. Ayodele
(2001) lent credence to the opinion of Uzorue (1994), by stating that there is
a great difference between the work performance of teachers who are well
trained and those who are not. He further claimed that there is a difference in
the work performance of teachers who are experienced as a result of training
and long service and non-experienced ones who may not have probably underwent
training as professional teachers.
As
Uzomah and Amaonye (1991) put it, because of the fact that ours is a world that
is currently undergoing rapid changes, particularly in the area of skill
acquisition and technological capability, training is therefore, not
exclusively reserved for newly employed staff, but also for the old ones as
well. It is therefore, important for the purpose of enhancing individual
performance that training and developing should be made a continuous process
that should last through an employee’s working life. This is because low and
middle level teachers need to adapt to new skills and technologies while
managers of the school (principal’s) and other top management personnels in the
school need deeper knowledge and understanding of their jobs, the jobs of
others, and a good understanding of where and how their jobs fit into the wider
school pattern an understanding of government activities and societal
constraints and a sensitive social awareness of the environment within which
the school as an organization operates.
According
to Gerald (1998), training of staff is important in the following ways: to
remove performance deficiency; to match the employees’ abilities with the job
requirements and organizational needs; to enhance organizational viability and
the transformation process, to cope with the new technological advancement; to
improve quality and quantity of work; to improve productivity and efficiency;
to help staff cope with increased organizational complexity resulting from
increased mechanization automation. Training, sometimes, may be undertaken to
enhance employees’ self-esteem; to boost staff morale and thereby improve
organisational climate, especially, in the school.
1.2 Statement
of the Problem
Training
is very essential in the creation of high productivity of staff, especially
teachers in the school system. When teachers are not trained, it brings about
emptiness in teaching and learning process. According to Adekunle (1995),
non-trained teachers in the school are not only cheats, they are not helping
the school system to grow and develop. People who teach in the school without
having the required qualities and passing through the rigorous of training, are
the causes of low standard of education and low students’ academic performance.
The
school system in Nigeria, has the problem of untrained teachers who have
greatly infiltrated into the teaching profession, because they think that
teaching is all-comers’ job. They think that everyone knows how to teach, but
they forget that not everyone is trained to teach. Untrained and inexperience
teachers lack the mastery of content (what to teach), the methodology (how to
teach). Any teachers who do not possess the mastery of both what to teach and
how to teach cannot be said to be a teacher in the first place. Untrained and
teachers therefore, lack the skills and the capabilities to achieve the goods
in teaching and learning process.
1.3 Purpose
of the Study
The
main purpose of the study is to examine the teachers’ training and work
performance in selected secondary schools in Mainland Local Government Area of
Lagos State.
Other
objectives of the study include:
(1) To
find out whether training affects teachers’ productivity in the school.
(2) To
evaluate the training needs of teachers in the school.
(3) To
investigate whether there is difference between the productivity of trained
teachers and untrained ones.
(4) To
differentiate the productivity of male and female teachers in the school.
(5) To
find out whether there is a relationship between training of teachers and
academic performance of students in the school.
1.4 Research
Questions
The
following research questions will be raised in this study:
2. Will
training affects teachers’ productivity in the school sector?
3. How
can we evaluate the training needs of teachers in the school?
4. Is
there any difference between the productivity of teachers who are trained and
those who are not?
5. How
can the productivity of male and female teachers be differentiated?
6. Is
there any relationship between training of teachers and students’ academic
achievement in the school?
1.5 Research
Hypotheses
The
following hypotheses will be formulated and tested in this study:
1. There
will be no significant effect of training on teachers’ productivity in the
school sector.
2. There
will be no significant difference between the productivity of teachers who are
trained and those who are not.
3. There
will be no significant relationship between training of teachers and academic
performance of students in the school.
1.6 Significance
of the Study
This
study will be beneficial to the following individuals in many ways:
1. Principals: This
study will help managers of the school system, benefit from the findings and
recommendations made by the researcher. This is because, the principals would
be able to understand the essence of maintaining a conducive atmosphere in the
school. It is important that principals maintain good relationship with their
teachers and students so that they will be able to have good school climate
running in the school for the overall maximization of high productivity.
2. Teachers: They
will benefit from this study because it will enable them to be able to know
more about the essence of having good principal – teacher relationships in the
school, and how bad principal – teacher relationship can affect the school
atmosphere badly. This is because nothing works in an organization or school
where there is rancour and bad blood amongst principals, teachers and school
community or even students and parents. For the school to achieve its goals and
objectives, it must operate on good climate or cordial culture which promote
high productivity.
3. Parents: Parents
being one of the important stakeholders in the school system, ought to be in
good relationship with the principals, the teachers and all that are in the
school. Therefore, assisting parents to be able to be well informed on the
importance of having their children in schools where there is good relationship
among the school personnel and schools where is provision of infrastructures
and other amenities in the school.
4. Society: The
society will be able to appreciate this study because, it will enable them to
have the insight on the essence of school climate which promotes high
productivity of both teachers and the students. Not only the society, the young
researchers and others in the society will find this study a good reference
material in their studies.
1.7 Scope
of the Study
This
study covered the examination of the staff training and teachers’ productivity
in selected secondary schools in Mainland Local Government Area of Lagos State.
TOPIC: EVALUATION OF THE EFFECTIVENESS OF TRAINING AND DEVELOPMENT OF EDUCATIONAL MANPOWER
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Chapters: 1 - 5
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