MENTORING
AND CAREER PROGRESSION OF TEACHERS IN PRIVATE PRIMARY SCHOOLS
ABSTRACT
The study investigated the
relationship between mentoring and career progression of teachers in Lagos
State Education District V1. Four research questions and four hypotheses were
formulated and tested in the study. The study adopted the descriptive survey
research design. The sample was made up of 250 teachers in Education District
V1 of Lagos State randomly selected from Government approved private primary
schools in the 5 Local Government Areas in the District. A researcher
constructed questionnaire titled “Mentoring and Career Progression of
Teachers”(MCPT) Descriptive questionnaire was used for data
collection. The demographic information of the participants was
presented using simple percentages while independent T-test, Pearson Product
Moment Correlation Co-efficient were used to test the hypotheses at 0.05 level
of significance. The study found a significant relationship between mentoring
and teachers’ job commitment; teachers’ job satisfaction; teachers’ job
performance and teachers’ preparation for administrative duties. The study
recommended, among other things, that school proprietors, principals, heads of
schools and teachers also should be exposed to the rudiments of mentoring so
that they become familiar with the concept and also mentoring of newly-
recruited teachers is necessary for enhancement of teacher’s performance and
productivity.
CHAPTER ONE
INTRODUCTION
Background to the Study
Education is a form of learning in which
the knowledge, skills,
and habits of
a group of people are transferred from one generation to the next through
teaching, training, or research. Education frequently takes place under the
guidance of others, but may also be autodidactic. Any experience that has
a formative effect on the way one thinks, feels, or acts may be considered
educational. Education is commonly divided into stages such as preschool, primary
school, secondary school and
then college, university or apprenticeship.
It is also the wealth of knowledge acquired
by an individual after
studying particular subject matters or
experiencing life lessons that provide an
understanding of something. Education requires instruction of some sort from an
individual or composed literature. The most common forms of education result from
years of schooling that incorporates studies of a
variety of subjects. (Wikipedia online encyclopedia (2012).
Education began in the earliest
prehistory, as adults trained the young of their society in the knowledge and
skills they would need to master and eventually pass on. In pre-literate
societies this was achieved orally and through imitation. Story-telling
continued from one generation to the next. As cultures began to extend
their knowledge beyond
skills that could be readily learned through imitation, formal education
developed.
Long before the Europeans
arrived, education had been part of Nigerians. Children were taught about their
culture, social activities, survival skills and work. Most of these education
processes were impacted into the children informally; a few of these societies
gave a more formal teaching of the society and culture. In these Societies,
there are formal instructions that governed the rites of passage from youth
into adulthood. The youth is expected to have attained the necessary social and
survival skills as well as having a grounded knowledge in the culture. These
are the foundations of education in Nigeria, and upon them were the western
education implemented upon.
There were three fundamentally
distinct education systems in Nigeria in 1990: the indigenous system, Quranic
schools, and formal European-style education institutions. In the rural areas
where the majority lived, children learned the skills of farming and other
work, as well as the duties of adulthood, from participation in the community.
This process was often supplemented by age-based schools in which groups of
young boys were instructed in community responsibilities by mature men.
Apprentice systems were widespread throughout all occupations; the trainee
provided service to the teacher over a period of years and eventually struck
out on his own. Truck driving, building trades, and all indigenous crafts and
services from leather work to medicine were passed down in families and
acquired through apprenticeship training as well.
Over the centuries, in the practice
of education there have been those responsible for passing information, skills
and cultures to the next generation. These were custodians of knowledge charged
with the job of educating next generation. They are and have always been
referred to as teachers. Teachers are indispensable within the teaching –
learning process. Hence, they constitute a major input in the accomplishment of
educational goals and objectives in all nations.
Teaching involves the use of wide
body of knowledge about the subject being taught. Teachers at all levels of the
educational system are very important in the overall development of any nation.
Teachers’ education is the process which nurtures prospective teachers and
updates qualified teachers’ knowledge and skills in the form of continuous
professional development.
Mentoring teachers is a practice
that is viewed as a favorable strategy for preparing novice teachers for their
new roles in education. Pairing a veteran teacher with one just beginning a
teaching career will reap benefits for the new teacher (Marge 1999).
Additionally, mentoring represents a career opportunity for teachers with years
of professional experience behind them.
For the new teacher, having a mentor
means removing fear of the unknown from the teaching equation. It can be an
abrupt and frightening event to go fresh into the classroom as a brand new
teacher, just certified, without the benefit of compassionate assistance from a
more experienced fellow teacher. In addition to helping new teachers get over
the hump of their early days in the profession, mentoring has the potential of
being a vehicle for best-teaching practices.
Different scholars have made
attempts to develop various definitions of the term “Mentoring”. This could be
as a result of the prevalence of mentoring in various settings and the wide
range of issues which mentors address. Mentoring is an old concept but its
value has only been acknowledged in the last 20 years.
The use of the word mentoring dates
back to the days of the Homeric legend of the Trojan war. When
Odysses, King of Ithaca left to go and make war on the Trojans. He left his son
Telemachus and his wife Penelope in the hands of mentor, friend and retainer.
To a major degree, the mentor was responsible not only for the boys education
but for shaping his character, the wisdom of his decisions and the clarity and
steadfastness of his purpose.
Some scholars have described
mentoring as a concept of process(Roberts, 2000). Others describe it as a
specific set of activities(Bowman and Bowman 1990). Mentoring is a term
generally used to describe a relationship between a less experienced individual
called mentee or protégé and a more experienced individual known as a mentor.
Traditionally, mentoring is viewed as a dyadic, face to face long term
relationship between a supervising adult and a novice student that fosters the
mentee’s professional academic or personal development( Donaldson, Ensher&
Grant- Vallone 2000).
All of these definitions show that
mentoring is more than just answering occasional questions or providing ad-hoc
help. It is an ongoing relationship of learning, dialogue and challenge. It
involves informal transmission of knowledge, social capital and psychological
support perceived by the recipient as relevant to work, career or professional
development. It usually should be face to face and during a sustained period of
time between a person who is perceived to have greater relevant knowledge
wisdom or experience (the mentor) and a person who is perceived to have less.
A mentor is usually an experienced,
knowledgeable, respected, competent and professionally mature person who guides
and provides opportunities for the professional growth of protégés by
identifying situations and events which contribute knowledge, experience and
values to the life of the protégée. Mentors should possess good interpersonal
skills, be conversant with relevant principles, be able to empathize with the
circumstances of the mentee and capable of initiating and fostering learning
beyond transmission to incorporate transactional and transformational process
(Carter& Francis, 2000).
Career progression is seen to be a
lifelong process of managing learning, work, leisure and transition in order to
move towards a personally determined and evolving preferred future
(Wikipedia,2014). It has also been defined as the upward movement or
advancement made by people in a particular job.
There is a link or relationship
between a teacher’s ability to progress in the teaching career and rise to the
top and the availability of a mentor. Bandra (1976) is of the opinion that
learning would be laborious if not hazardous , if people had to rely solely on
the effect of their own actions to inform them on what to do.
A lot of researches have been done
to examine the benefits of mentoring for protégés. It has been discovered that
mentoring is related to important careers outcomes such as career progress,
promotion rate and job satisfaction. It is against this background that this
study examines the role of mentoring in career progression of teachers in Lagos
State.
Statement of the problem
It has been observed that there seem
to be little or no mentoring activity happening in schools especially in
private schools, inspite of the important role ascribed to mentoring
relationships as regards individual career development in many organizations.
In the education sector, guiding younger teachers, toward skills has become
more important than ever before. It is therefore pertinent to delve into the
educational sector especially the private schools to discover if any mentoring
takes place, if there is any system in place to enable a teacher rise in the
course of the years and how the availability or unavailability of a mentoring
process has affected the teacher’s career life. It is as a result of these that
the researcher has embarked on the study.
Objectives of the Study
This study examines the relationship
between mentoring and career progression among teachers in private primary
schools in Education district V1 of Lagos State, in a bid to ascertain if any
mentoring occurs in private primary schools in lagos and how this affects a
teacher to progress in career. Specifically it:
1. examines
the relationship between mentoring and job commitment of teachers
2. analyses
the influence of mentoring on teacher’s job satisfaction.
3. examines
the relationship between mentoring and teacher’s job performance.
4. finds
out if mentoring has any relationship with teachers preparation for
responsibilities.
Research Questions
The study provides answers to the
following questions:
1. What
is the relationship between mentoring and job commitment of teachers?
2. How
does mentoring influence teacher’s job satisfaction?
3. To
what extent does mentoring relate to job performance of teachers?
4. How
does mentoring relate to teachers preparation for administrative
responsibilities?
Research Hypotheses
The study is guided by the following
hypotheses:
1. There
is no significant relationship between the practice of mentoring relationship
and the job commitment of teachers.
2. There
is no significant relationship between teachers job satisfaction and the
process of mentoring they pass through.
3. There
is no significant relationship between mentoring and teacher’s job performance.
4. Mentoring
does not have significant relationship with teachers preparation for
administrative responsibilities.
Significance of the Study
The study is significant because its
results would provide insight to various stakeholders of the fact that:
There is no planned system of career
progression in most private schools in Lagos and it is not uncommon to find
teachers stay at the same level in their career lifes in private schools for a
good number of years. Career progress is usually determined by a teacher’s
ability to attend seminars, take courses, attain degrees paid for from personal
funds and this ought not be.
The problem of lack of mentoring can
be directly traced to the fact that most school heads and leaders were never
mentored and therefore do not have what it takes to mentor another. Its also
important to note that a teacher’s ability to rise in career has direct bearing
on attitude to work, job performance, job satisfaction and commitment.
Mentoring is important and heads and leaders of schools
ought to create a system of mentoring for teachers to improve job performance,
satisfaction, commitment and overall help them progress in the course of career
life.
TOPIC: MENTORING AND CAREER PROGRESSION OF TEACHERS IN PRIVATE PRIMARY SCHOOLS
Format: MS Word
Chapters: 1 - 5
Delivery: Email
Delivery: Email
Number of Pages: 65
Price: 3000 NGN
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