Teachers’ Attitudinal Variables In The Implementation Of The Further-Mathematics Curriculum As Correlates Of Students’ Learning Outcomes
Abstract
The study was designed to obtain empirical evidence on the teachers’
perception of the contents o f the Further-Mathematics curriculum and their
attitudes toward instructional and assessment practices in its
implementation. The extent to which these teacher variables influence the
students’ perception of their Further-Mathematics lessons and their
achievement in the subject was also examined.
The study adopted an ex-post facto design involving 32 teachers and 349
students selected from 32 out o f % schools offering the subject in Ogun State,
Nigeria. Each teacher responded to a questionnaire while each student
responded to a questionnaire and an achievement test. Data analysis
included descriptive statistics, multiple regression, and path analysis.
The study revealed that the influence of the teachers’ perception of the
curriculum on the student variables is positive and significant but mostly
indirect via the teachers’ attitudes toward instructional practices. The
teachers’ attitudes toward instructional practices exert both direct and
indirect influence on the student variables, whereas the teachers’ attitudes
toward assessment practices appeared to have no significant influence either
directly or indirectly on the students’ learning outcomes. Of all the variables
in the study, the students’ perception of their lessons have the highest direct
influence on the students’ achievement in Further-Mathematics.
Full Text Links
Adeleke,Alausa Yesir (1998) Teachers’ Attitudinal Variables In The Implementation Of The Further-Mathematics Curriculum As Correlates Of Students’ Learning Outcomes, ZJER Vol. 10, No.1. Harare,,Mt. Pleasant: HRRC.1013-3445
http://opendocs.ids.ac.uk/opendocs/handle/123456789/4935
Publisher
Human Resources Research Centre (HRRC); University of Zimbabwe.
Subject
Educationxmlui.dri2xhtml.METS-1.0.item-rights
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/University of Zimbabwe