ABSTRACT
The study critically investigates
poor provision and utilization of school facilities in Secondary School in
Mushin Local Government Area as it relates to students academic performance.
The study population comprises of all public Senior Secondary School Students
and the teachers in Mushin Local Government Area of Lagos
State. Validated instrument was a self developed questionnaire
(IQPUSFSAP) for teachers & students on the provision and utilization of
school facilities. The data collected was analyzed using frequency counts
and percentage, the formulated hypotheses were tested using the t-test
statistical tools at 0.05 level of significance. It has been established
that a significant relationship exist between the provision and utilization of
school facilities and student’s academic performance.
CHAPTER
ONE
INTRODUCTION
1.1 Background
to the Study
School facilities have been observed as a potent factor to
quantitative education. The importance to teaching and learning on the
provision and utilization of adequate instructional facilities for education
cannot be over-emphasized. The dictum that “teaching is inseparable from
learning but learning is not separable from teaching” is that teachers do the
teaching to make the students learn, but students can learn without the
teachers. According Farant(1991 and Farombi 1998) learning can occur through
one’s interaction with one’s environment. Environment here refers to facilities
that are available to facilitate students learning outcome. It includes books,
audio-visual, software and hardware of educational technology; size of
classroom, sitting position and arrangement, availability of tables, chairs,
chalkboards, shelves on which instruments for practical are arranged
According to Oni (1992), facilities
constitute a strategic factor in organizational functioning. This is so because
they determine to a very large extent the smooth functioning of any social
organization or system including education. He further stated that their
availability, adequacy and relevance influence efficiency and high
productivity. In his words, Farombi (1998) opines that the wealth of a nation
or society could determine the quality of education in that land; emphasizing
that a society that is wealthy will establish good schools with quality
teachers, learning infrastructures, students learn with ease thus bringing
about good academic achievement. Writing on the role of facilities in teaching,
Anameze (2001) submitted that no effective science education programme can
exist without equipment for teaching. This is because facilities enable the
learner to develop problem-solving skills and scientific attitudes. In their
contribution, Alliyu(1993) reiterated that when facilities are provided to meet
relative needs of a school system, students will not only have access to the
reference materials mentioned by the teacher, but individual students will also
learn at their own paces. The net effect of this is increased overall academic
performance of the entire students.
In his study on resource
concentration, utilization and management as correlates of students’ learning
outcomes, Farombi (1998) found that the classroom learning environment in
some schools was poor. He cited examples of schools without chalkboard, absence
of ceiling, some roofing sheets not in place, windows and doors removed among
others, a situation which the researcher regarded as hazardous to healthy
living of the learners. According to Nigerian Tribune on Thursday 25 November,
1999, in a caption; “Mass Failure will Continue until…” the chairman of the
National Committee of WAEC, Dr. U.B. Ahmed opined that the classroom is the
origin of failure… a close look at the public schools and what goes on there
shows that nothing good can come out of most schools as they do not have
facilities, adequate and appropriate human resources to prepare candidates for
WASCE.
The above statement indicates that
the problem of candidates’ mass failure in WAEC’s organized examination will
continue until the situation of the nation’s public schools change for the
better. Writing on how to improve primary education in developing
countries, World Bank publication (1990). Aliyu,K.(1993) linked performance of
students to the provision of adequate facilities while referring to a survey of
51 primary schools in Botswana that students performed significantly better on
academic tests when they had adequate classrooms, desks and books. Earlier,
Fagbamiye (1999) attesting to why students’ performance standard fall observed
559 cases from 13 secondary schools in Lagos State using age, type of school
(day or boarding, mixed or single sex), teachers’ qualifications and teaching
experience as well as intake quality using students’ entrance examination
achievement. His findings revealed that schools which are equipped had good
records of achievement and attracted more students. He concluded that good
quality schools in terms
of facilities and younger students’
intake perform better in WASCE.
Commenting on why high academic
attainment is not in vogue in Nigeria. Madumere (2007) identified poor and
inadequate physical facilities, obsolete teaching techniques… overcrowded
classrooms among others, as factors.
Throwing more light on school
facilities and moral guiding provision, Fabunmi (1997) asserted that school
facilities when provided will aid teaching learning programme and consequently
improve academic achievement of students while the models guiding their
provision to schools could take any form as rational bureaucratic and or
political model. Whichever model is adopted, according to him, there is always
a common feature of differing allocation of facilities to schools. In his
words, Ojoawo (1990), however, noted that certain schools are favored in the
allocation of facilities at the expense of others. Writing on poor performance
of students in public examinations, London (1990) states that in many
developing nations, certain physical facilities are none existent, and that
those instances where amenities are available many are of sub standard quality.
What is even more alarming is the correlation, which these observers claim to
exist between quality of facilities and academic performance. Lamenting on the
glowing inadequacies of school facilities in our education industry. Adegboye
(2000) opines that everywhere you look, primary, secondary, special, technical,
tertiary, there is abundant evidence of crippling inertia, criminal neglect and
a pervasive decay in values and standard.
Other scholars (Wilcockson, 1994;
Lawal 1995; Ajayi –Dopemu, (2008) have variously identified the significance of
facilities in teaching and learning spheres. We can say that absence or poor
(and or deteriorating) quality of educational facilities can influence academic
performance. Gamoran (1992), however, holding a contrary view noted that
facilities… teachers’ salaries, books in the library and the presence of
science laboratory, had little impact on variation in student’s achievement
once students background variables had been taken into account.
This statement connotes that before
such student could perform well in higher educational level, he must have been
groomed or cushioned by availability of resources in his elementary days upon
which he now uses as spring board. According to Hallak (1990), facilities form
one of the potent
factors that contribute to academic
achievement in the school system. They include the school buildings, classroom,
accommodation, libraries, laboratories, furniture, recreational equipment,
apparatus and other instructional materials. He went further to say that their
availability, relevance and adequacy contribute to academic achievement. He
however, quickly added that unattractive school buildings and overcrowded
classrooms among others contribute to poor academic attainment. Describing
where these facilities should be located, he ascribed that educational
facilities should be located in appropriate places, while the needs of the
users should be put into consideration. In another development. Aliyu (1993)
found that there was no significant difference between students in secondary
schools with and without adequate instructional facilities. However, he
submitted that instructional facilities were indispensible to academic
achievement of students in English Language, Mathematics, Biology and Geography
while students could perform well in other subjects without adequacy of
sophisticated instructional materials. He concluded that the effect of
instructional facilities on students’ academic achievement is more felt in pure
and social sciences.
Therefore, it is the responsibility
of the educational system to facilitate learning by creating the ideal
situation for the child to discover things for himself especially through
adequate provision of school facilities. This indicates that the school
facilities would surely have a great impact on the students. The school
facilities may indicate a great deal of cooperation among the groups in the
school setting while some might not even want to learn at all. This implies
that the school facilities will affect the performance of both the teachers and
the students either positively or negatively.
This study therefore aims at
encouraging school administrators to apply modern techniques in the management
of school facilities. It also suggests that school administrators and managers
should be constantly trained and retrained on the modern tools of management.
Thus, the standard of education will
improve greatly if the resources allocated to education and the available
school facilities are optimally utilized.
1.2 Statement of
the Problem
Cursory observation reveals that
majority of students in public secondary schools in Mushin Local Government
area of Lagos State perform below desired outcomes in the Senior School
Certificate Examination especially when results of previous years are compared.
(Ossai, 2004). This observed poor performance motivated this research.
A student’s academic performance is
measured by his or her scholastics achievement. This scholastic achievement is
known through the use of instructional evaluation and other associated
invisible but real influences that influence performance such as school
facilities among others.
The causes of poor performance in
our public secondary schools have been blamed on several factors. Critics have
apportioned blames on teachers, society, parents, school inspectorate and the
government about learners’ inability to perform outstandingly well, (Ojoawo,
1990). However, issues that bother on inadequate and most times insufficient
school facilities have the major blame in students’ academic performance as the
sociologists are quick to observe that the environment makes the man.
Akinkugbe( 1994).
School facilities optimization is
therefore so important and contribute significantly to students achievement so
much that it cannot be neglected in the development of the education sector. As
rightly observed by Oni (1992), the availability and adequacy in quantity and
quality of the physical/material facilities make possible a school’s smooth
operation and enhance effective teaching-learning activity thereby resulting in
achieving higher educational attainments by the students.
Therefore this research is to investigate
the extent to which the provision utilization of school Facility such as school
building, laboratory library, ICT has influenced student academic performance
in Senior Secondary in Mushin Local government Area.
Area of Lagos State which could be
attributed to poor provision and utilization of school facilities.
TOPIC: PROVISION AND UTILIZATION OF STUDENTS’ ACADEMIC PERFORMANCE IN SECONDARY SCHOOL
Format: MS Word
Chapters: 1 - 5
Delivery: Email
Delivery: Email
Number of Pages: 70
Price: 3000 NGN
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