Abstract
This study assessed and
investigated staff training and teachers’ productivity in five selected Junior
and Senior Secondary school in Bariga Local Local Government Areas of Lagos
State. The study employed a descriptive survey research design. An instrument
titled: Staff Training and Teachers’ Productivity (STTP) was used to collect
relevant data for the study. The five secondary schools involved were selected
based on simple random sampling technique and the statistical tools employed to
analyse the data collected were percentages, means scores while t-test
statistical tool was used for hypothesis one and Pearson Product Moment
Correlational Coefficient was used for hypothesis two and three respectively at
0.05 level of significance.
200 sample sizes were used for the
study. Three research questions and three research hypotheses were
designed and formulated for the purpose of the study. The survey results
revealed that there was a significant effect of training on teachers’
productivity in the school sector. Recommendations were made at the end of the
study
CHAPTER ONE
INTRODUCTION
1.1
Background of Study
The
need for improved productivity has become universally accepted and that it
depends on efficient and effective training is not less apparent. It further
becomes necessary in view of advancement in modern world to invest in training.
Thus the role played by staff training and development can no longer be
over-emphasized (Ojo, 2009).
With
the rapid global workforce changes, staff development programs have been fully
recognized as a dream in enhancing job performance. It is imperative therefore,
that to achieve institutional performance and enhance credibility, institutions
should emphasize the effective acquisition and utilization of their human
resources by investing in them through training on their jobs. (Sebuwufu, 2004).
Training
is a systematic development of knowledge, skills and attitudes required by
employees to perform adequately on a given tasks or job. New entrants into
organizations have various skills, though not all are relevant to
organizational needs. Training and development are required for its staff to
enable them work towards taking the organization to its expected destination.
Staff training and development are based on the premise that staff skills need
to be improved for organizations to grow.
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
Asobie (2002), states that the
objective of training is to enable employees to perform his/her job in such a
way as to meet the standards of output, quality, waste control, safety and
other operational requirements.
Ayodele
(2003) states that, for the fact that ours is a world that is currently
undergoing rapid changes particularly in the area of skill obsolescence and
technological capability, training is not exclusively reserved for newly
employed staff but also for the old employees as well. It is therefore, for the
purpose of enhancing individual performance that training and development
should be made a continuous process that should last through an employee’s
entire working life.
Anyanwu (2004) affirms that because
low and middle level employees need to adapt to new skills and technologies,
while managers and top management personnel need deeper knowledge and
understanding of their jobs, the jobs of others, a good understanding of where
and how their jobs fit into the wider organisation pattern, an understanding of
government and societal constraints, and a sensitive social awareness of the
environment within which organisation or school operates.
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.
According
to Nkemakolam (2005), he stated that constant training or organisation of
seminars, workshops and other courses for teachers would improve to a great extent,
the effectiveness and efficiency of teachers’ productivity in the school
environment. Teachers occupy a central position in harnessing the
administrative and material resources necessary to blend with learners
(students).
For jobs like teaching that requires
complex and diverse range of skills and knowledge, a period of apprenticeship
training is usually required. For example, in technical jobs such as carpentry,
plumbing, printing, welding, engraving, tool making, and other jobs that
require long period of practice and experience, apprenticeship programmes are
necessary if the trainee is to fully grasp or understand the intricacies and
complexities of the job. Besides, since training takes place over an extended
period of time, the distributed learning necessary to master such skills is
able to take place. In addition, when apprenticeship programmes or training is
well planned and operated, it permits the integration of the best features of
on-the-job training and off-the-job training. It gives the apprentice an
opportunity to earn something while learning (Banjoko, 2001).
The
Teachers’ Establishment and pension Office (TEPO) was created from the defunct
Post-Primary Teaching Service Commission (PP-TESCOM) by the education sector
Reforms laws of year 2005 which also established the six Education District in
Lagos State, it was headed by a Tutor General/Permanent Secretary under the
Administration of the former Governor, Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu.
The
Reform Law was to provide the enhancement of career of teachers in Post Primary
Teaching service, decentralization for effective management of Post Primary
school system in the state.
Recently,
The Teachers’ Establishment and pension Office (TEPO) organized an 8-days
seminar on “Effective use of ICT across the School Curriculun” facilitated by
Corona Schools’ Trust Council. The seminar was aimed at improving teachers’ on
adequate and effective use of modern ICT technology in the classroom.
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 (Munonye, 2006).
For
teachers to maximize their potentials or exhibit maximum effectiveness in their
duties in the school system, constant staff training and development programmes
must be put in place and these programmes must be geared towards the
enhancement and improvement of teachers work performance which will also
enhance the academic performance of students in the school environment.
1.9 Statement of
the Problem
Management
of schools has, over time been a contentious issue but more contentious
however, has been the performance of teachers at
work. Unfortunately, some teachers do not perform to the expected
standards and neither do they seem to address the needs of students. Their performance
is still less satisfactory than the expected standards and consequences have
been predictable as there are rising concerns over poor coverage of term
curriculum and course content, delayed examination results and missing marks,
poor assessment of examinations, poor teacher-student interaction,
deteriorating academic performance and reduced levels of research (Ayo, 2003).
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 an 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 inexperienced teachers therefore, lack the skills and the
capabilities to achieve the goods in teaching and learning process. This
unsatisfactory performance of inexperienced teachers has in turn posed a threat
on the quality of education offered by the schools and service delivery. It is
this belief that the researcher is motivated to find out the influence of staff
development and training on teacher’s productivity in secondary schools.
1.3 Purpose
of the Study
The
main purpose of the study is to examine the influence of staff development and
training on teachers’ productivity in secondary schools in Bariga Local
Government Area of Lagos State.
Other
objectives of the study include:
i. To
find out what types of training and developmental programmes are available for
teachers in secondary schools.
ii. To
find out whether training affects teachers’ productivity in the school.
iii. To
investigate whether there is difference between the productivity of trained
teachers and untrained ones.
iv. To
differentiate the productivity of male and female teachers in the school.
v. To
find out whether there is a relationship between training and development of
teachers and academic performance of students in the school.
1.4 Research
Questions
The following research questions are raised in this study:
1. What
types of training and developmental programmes are available for secondary
school teachers in Lagos State?
2. Will
training affects teachers’ productivity in the school sector?
3. Is
there any difference between the productivity of teachers who are trained and
those who are not?
4. How
can the productivity of male and female teachers be differentiated?
5. Will
there be any relationship between training and development of teachers and
academic performance of students 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 and development 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:
This
study will help Principals of schools 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.
The
study will be beneficial to the teachers 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
promotes high productivity. Also, 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.
1.7 Scope
of the Study
This
study covers all secondary schools in Bariga Local Government Area of Lagos
State. But it is limited to five (5) schools within the Local Government
because it is assumed that the number is enough to explain the whole Local
Government.
1.8 Definition
of Terms
The
following terms were operationally defined thus:
Employee
Behaviour: Refers to manners, moral conduct and treatment shown
to or towards management
Workers’
Productivity: This has to do with the total output
or result of work obtainable from the input of employees in any organisation.
In other words, it is the total production level of all the workers in a
company, industries, schools and other parastatals within the private and
public sectors.
Job
fulfillment: This is the final result an
organization intends to see from the employees after being motivated.
Training: This
means training somebody for something in order to be somebody or something; the
act of giving teaching and practice to an individual or a worker in order to
bring to a directed standard of behaviour, efficiency or physical condition.
Staff
Training and Development: Training and development are
processes for equipping the employees particularly the non-managerial employees
with specific skills e.g. technical skills such as plumbing, electrical,
wiring, repairing, artistic skills, clerical and typing skills that could
enable them to improve on their performances and overall efficiency. Adamson
and Adamson (2000) state that the objective of training and development on the
job is to enable an employee to perform his job in such a way as to meet the
standards of output, quality, waste control, safety and other operational
requirements.
TOPIC: INFLUENCE OF STAFF DEVELOPMENT AND TRAINING ON TEACHER’S PRODUCTIVITY IN SECONDARY SCHOOLS
Format: MS Word
Chapters: 1 - 5
Delivery: Email
Delivery: Email
Number of Pages: 65
Price: 3000 NGN
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