ABSTRACT
The study attempted to examine the
influence of organizational climate and teachers' job productivity in selected
senior secondary schools in Mainland Local Government Area of Lagos State,
Nigeria. In this study, relevant and extensive literatures were reviewed under
sub-headings. The descriptive research survey was used in the assessment of the
opinions of the selected respondents with the adoption of the questionnaire and
the sampling technique. A total of 100 (One Hundred) respondents were selected
and used as participants for this study the respondents were made up of (50
males and 50 females). A total of four null hypotheses were generated and used
in this study using both the percentage frequency counts and the t-test
statistical tools at 0.05 level of significance. After the data analyses, the
following results were generated: There is a significant relationship between
one school climate and the others in Lagos State, there is a significant
difference between the productivity of teachers who work in open school climate
and those who work in close school climate, there is a significant gender
difference in the productivity of teachers due to school climate in Lagos
State, Nigeria and finally, there is a significant difference between factors
that determine open and closed school climate in Lagos State, Nigeria. The
following recommendations were made by the researcher: It has been found that a
significant relationship exists between organizational culture and teachers'
productivity at the secondary schools in Lagos State, Nigeria. Based on this
finding, it is imperative that teachers in the school should be provided with
incentives that would help them to work in an environment that is conducive, in
which their jobs are enhanced and promoted too. Teachers should be satisfied
with their jobs for them to carry on well in the work assigned to them in the
schools. Not only that, teachers at the secondary schools in Lagos State should
understand the school culture so that they would 'be able to work well and produce
maximally.
CHAPTER ONE
INTRODUCTION
Background to the Study
The term "Organizational
Culture" is currently in vogue, the concept of organisational climate has generated
much more research and until recently was used by most organizational theorists
such as Daal (1995), Firestone and colleagues (l997) and Corbett (1991) to
capture the general feeling or atmosphere of the schools, unlike culture from
the beginning.
Organisational
climate has been tied to the process of developing measuring instrument (Pace
and Pace, 1988).
Climate
was initially conceived as a general concept to express the enduring quality of
organizational life. It was noted by Reno (1999) that a particular
configuration of enduring characteristic of the ecology, Milieu, social system,
and culture would constitute a climate, as much as particular configuration of
personal characteristic constitute a personality. According to George and
George (2000) organisational climate include those characteristics that
distinguish the organisation from other organizations and that influence the
behaviour of people in the organisations. They introduced into their definition
of climate a set of measurable properties of the work environment based on the
collective perception of the people who live and work on the environment and
demonstrated to influence their behaviour. Over the years, there has been some
consensus on the basic properties of organisational climate. Poole
and Marshall (1995) summarized
the properties as follow:
(a) Organisational
climate is concerned with large units, it characterizes properties of an entire
organisation or major sub units.
(b) Organisational
climate describes a unit of organisation rather than evaluates it or
indicate emotional reactions to it.
(c) Organisational
climate arises from routine organisational practices that are important to the
organisation and its members.
(d) Organisational
climate influences members’ behaviours and attitudes.
School
climate is a broad term that refers to teachers' perceptions of general work
environment of the school, it is influenced by the formal organisation,
informal organisation, personalities of the participants and organisational
leaderships.
Bertes
(1998) suggests that organisational or school climate is a set of internal
characteristics that distinguish one school from another, and influences the
behaviour of its members, Bertes further stated that school climate is a
relatively enduring quality of the school environment that is experienced by
participants, affect their behaviour and is based on their collective
perceptions of behaviour in schools. According to Kunz (1994), the definition
of Organisational climate is set of internal characteristics, is similar in
some respects to the description of personality. Indeed, the climate of a
school may roughly be conceived as the personality of a school that is, what
personality is to an individual, is what climate is to the school or
organisation.
The distinctive feature of the
school climate is the open, closed and climate continuum. The open school
climate is characterized by high degree of trust and esprit and low
disengagement. This combination suggests a climate in which both the principal
and faculty are genuine in their behaviour. The principal sees through example
by providing the proper blend of structure and direction as well as support and
consideration - the mix dependent upon the situation.
Arnold
(2001) explains that in an open school climate, teachers work well together and
are committed to the task at hand. Given the reality - centred leadership
of-the principal and a committed faculty, there is no need for burden of some
paper work (hindrance), close supervision production (emphasis) or
impersonality or a plethora of rules and regulations (aloofness). In this type
of school, acts of leadership emerge easily and appropriately as they are
needed. The open school is not pre-occupied exclusively with either task
achievement or social needs satisfaction, both emerge freely.
Frankly
speaking, the behaviour of both the principal and the entire faculty is cordial
and authentic. In this situation, there is teacher-principal relationship,
principal-students relationship and principal - community relationship in the
school.
This
situation of good climate in the school, no doubt, brings about high teachers'
morale and motivation which in any case brings about an increased-, teacher
productivity in the school organisation (Uzomah, 2003).
The principal’s vision is logically
and intimately tied to two other premier and frequently cited characteristics
of effective schools - an academic
school climate (or culture)
and high expectations for students achievement (Ajunwa, 1991).
Generally,
an organisational climate or culture consists of shared values, rules, ideology
goals, and conceptions regarding the organisation. Walter and Stanfield (1988)
said of the importance of school culture that ''Culture is the 'normative glue'
the consistency in values, that holds the organisation together".
In
an academic climate, staff and students are aware of and they value goals of
high achievement. Researchers agree that principals, influenced by school
boards and district superintendents, play a vital role in creating such an
atmosphere through their beliefs, attitudes, expectations, and activities,
Cohen (1993), for example, reported that effective principals emphasize high
achievement and express optimism about the ability of all students to meet
instructional goals.
Blum
(1994), similarly found that effective principals believe and emphasize, to
start, that learning is the most important reason for students to be in school;
that all children can learn, and that school makes the difference
between success and failure. Good and Brophy (1985) also stressed that
effective principals are able to create a strong sense of community that
includes shared values and culture, common goals, and high expectation for both
students’ achievement and the staff’s performance that creates it. One teacher
in a school, with a strong academic orientation, said "I have taught in
other states and other schools, but until I came here, I never realized how
enjoyable teaching could be. It is not that the students are better, it is just
that everyone here seems to value learning". And another teacher
commented, "we're all pulling together" (Rutherfond 1985).
In less effective schools, teachers
are not to share a common understanding of school - wide goals and
expectations. If goals are mentioned at all, it usually in regard to personal
goals or else department goals in secondary schools.
There is also an affective side to a
favourable school climate or culture. Cohen (1993), for example, pointed out
that a good sense of school community requires not only shared goals but the
creation of a moral order that includes respect for authority, mutual trust,
and a genuine caring about individuals and their feelings and attitude. Odden
(1988) similarly mentioned staff collegiality, staff - student collegiality,
and again, caring attitudes about kids" as important parts of the school
climate.
According-to
Ayo (2000), principals can take many concrete steps to aid the development of
an academic orientation and high achievement expectations, virtually all of
which reflect their instructional leadership role. The following eight
categories of suggestions stem from research on the observation of effective
schools and effective principals.
(1) Principals can take an active
and personal role in raising awareness of the need for school improvement and
higher achievement expectations and gaining consensus for the changes. For
example, they can communicate the expectation that instructional programs can
and will improve over time. Especially, principals can empower teachers to work
together to plan and incorporate improvements. They can ensure that
instructional improvement strategies are given high priority and high
visibility. Principals also can create procedures from eliciting parents’and
community’s support for improvement plans by speaking at PTA meeting (Patty,
2001).
(2) Principals can help build
consensus on school rules and patterns of acceptable behaviour among staff,
students and administration that are consistent with and promote an academic
orientation (Mundi, 1994).
(3) Principals can be active in
creating the concrete improvement themselves. For example, they can plan,
secure, and monitor in-service staff development opportunities, obtaining staff
input on the content of the training, be active and supportive in helping
teachers learn to use new instructional approaches, and establish expectations
for good curriculum quality through the use of standards and guidelines. They
can help staff establish priorities and plan instructional improvements
supervise and coordinate implementation of plan components, and monitor the
results (Cobbler, 1999).
(4) Principals also can actively elicit
parents’ involvement in the schools' instructional efforts, for example, by
enlisting parents’ time as office and classroom aides, parents' energy in
organising school - wide festivities and parents' money for expansion of school
program (Hallinger and Murphy, 1987).
(5) Principals can create reward
systems for students and teachers that support an academic orientation and
stimulate excellence in students’ and teachers’ performance. For
example, they can help create motivational devices such as school slogans,
buttons, T-shirts or songs emphasizing school identity and academic
achievement. Walter and Stanfieid (1988) described how school slogans help
create proper values for teachers and students: "A child's right to an
education is non - negotiable, "Move out of the comfort zone", and
win with class, lose with dignity.
One
popular strategy is the use of posters that proclaim to anyone entering the
building (i.e. students, teachers, parents, community members and others) the
vision, expectations, mission, direction, and goals of a school.
(6) Principals can make certain
reward that student, staff and school accomplishments and awards are visible in
the building and to parents and the public. Good public relations work through
newspapers, radio and television and strengthen school pride and school
identity by praising good work and individual strengths, and by taking an
interest in their personal well-being, principals can develop and maintain
positive staff relations.
(7) A central and well-documented behaviour
of effective principals is monitoring students’ progress, especially as
reflected in test scores for each grade, each class, and each student such
behaviour intrinsically reflects an academic focus and academic values.
Principals can share results with teachers and elicit agreement on standards.
Discrepancies from standards are used to guide corrective action.
(8) Principals can acquire
materials and personal resources needed for effective instruction and use them
creatively in accordance with academic priorities.
(9) Principals are responsible for the
creation of a safe and orderly school environment. There are many interrelated
suggestions regarding the actions principals can take. They can protect
teaching and learning time from interruption, for example, by limiting public
time from interruption, for example, by limiting public address system
announcements (or classroom phone calls) to specified times, preventing class
interruptions by message etc.
Statement of the Problem
The close school climate is the
antithesis of the open school climate. In the dosed climate trust
and esprit are low, and disengagement is high in the school. In this situation
the principal and teachers appear simply to go through the motions, with the
principal stressing routine trivial and unnecessary busy work (hindrance) and
the teachers responding at minimal levels and exhibiting little job
satisfaction. The principle
of ineffective leadership in this situation is seen in close
supervision (production emphasis).
Formal
declaration and impersonality (aloofness) as well as a lack of consideration
for the facility and an inability and unwillingness to provide a dynamic person
examples, this misguided tactics, which are not taken seriously, produce
teacher frustration and apathy. The behaviour of both principal and teachers in
the closed school climate is least genuine and their relationship least
cordial. In fact in-authenticity pervades the atmosphere of the school; thus
there is teachers’ low morale, poor motivation, low interest and the resultant
effect is poor work performance and low productivity in the school,
This research therefore aim/at
examining the organisational climate and teachers' job productivity Lagos State
schools.
Purpose of the Study
The main purpose of this is to
attempt and investigate into the organisational climate and teachers' job
productivity in selected secondary schools in mainland Local Education District
of Lagos State.
Other specific objectives of the
study include to:
(1) Examine whether there is
relationship between principal-teacher relationship and teachers' productivity
in the school.
(2) Investigate whether there is
relationship between teacher-teacher relationship and teachers' productivity in
the school.
(3) Evaluate whether there is
relationship between teacher-parents relationship and teachers' productivity in
the school.
(4) Assess whether there is relationship
between teacher-student and teachers' productivity in the school.
(5) Find out whether there is relationship
between school-community and teachers' productivity in the school.
Research Questions
These research questions helped to
guide the conduct of this study:
(1) How will positive principal-teacher relationship impact
on teachers' productivity in the school?
(2) How will positive teacher-teacher relationship impact on
teachers' productivity in the school?
(3) How will effective
teacher-parents' relationships promote teachers' productivity in the school?
(4) How positively will effective teacher-students'
relationships promote teachers' productivity in the school?
(5) In what way will
school-community relationship promote teachers' productivity in the school?
Research
Hypotheses
These research hypotheses were
formulated and tested in this study:
(1) There was no significant
relationship between principal-teacher relationship and teachers' productivity
in the school.
(2) There was no significant relationship between
teacher-teacher relationship and teachers' productivity in the school.
(3) There was no significant relationship between
teacher-parents relationship and teachers' productivity in the school.
(4) There was no significant relationship between
teacher-students relationship and teachers' productivity in the school.
Significance of the Study
This study will be beneficial to the
following individuals:
(1) School Principals: The
study and recommendation of this study will be a great benefit to school
principals, who will get more insights and more information on the essence of
school climate in the school as it affects teachers’ overall productivity with
this study many principals who adopt close leadership styles in the school as
it affects teachers overall productivity would have a rethink and turn a new
leap as that style of leadership does not augur well for high productivity of
teachers and even students.
(2) Teachers: Teachers
will indeed, gain a lot in this study because, it will enable them to know the
impact of school climate on their productivity in the school system. The
findings and recommendations of this study will enable teachers have good
rapport with their principals if they want a conducive atmosphere that will be
beneficial to the students. The study will help teachers to know
that the kind of relationship they have with the principals will no doubt
affect the students who are part of the stakeholders in the school system.
(3) Students:- The findings
and recommendation of this study will give students the impetus to know that
without good school climate where there should be principal-teacher
relationship or student-teacher relationship, there cannot be conducive school
atmosphere where meaningful teaching/learning process is carried out.
(4) Society:- The society
will see this study as a veritable resource materials and a reference materials
as well. With the findings and recommendations in this study, people in the
larger society will be able to differentiate between open climate and the close
one in the school. Also upcoming researcher will find this study a reference
maternal too.
Scope of the Study
This study will investigate the
effect of organisational climate on the teachers’ productivity in selected
secondary schools in Mainland Local Government Area (LGEA) of Lagos State.
TOPIC: ORGANISATIONAL CLIMATE AND TEACHER’S JOB PRODUCTIVITY IN SELECTED SECONDARY SCHOOLS
Format: MS Word
Chapters: 1 - 5
Delivery: Email
Delivery: Email
Number of Pages: 65
Price: 3000 NGN
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