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<title>TEACHER SOCIO-LINGUISTIC FACTORS AND LEARNING OUTCOMES IN ENGLISH LANGUAGE AMONG PUBLIC SENIOR SECONDARY STUDENTS IN THE IBADAN METROPOLIS, NIGERIA</title>
<link>http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/1988</link>
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<dc:date>2026-04-03T21:38:37Z</dc:date>
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<title>TEACHER SOCIO-LINGUISTIC FACTORS AND LEARNING OUTCOMES IN ENGLISH LANGUAGE AMONG PUBLIC SENIOR SECONDARY STUDENTS IN THE IBADAN METROPOLIS, NIGERIA</title>
<link>http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/1989</link>
<description>TEACHER SOCIO-LINGUISTIC FACTORS AND LEARNING OUTCOMES IN ENGLISH LANGUAGE AMONG PUBLIC SENIOR SECONDARY STUDENTS IN THE IBADAN METROPOLIS, NIGERIA
ADIGUN, Christie Oluyemisi
English Language (EL) is a core subject in schools, and success in it is a part of the&#13;
requirements for certification and educational advancement. However, evidence has&#13;
shown that learning outcomes of many public Senior Secondary School (SSS)&#13;
students in EL are not satisfactory in the Ibadan metropolis. Previous studies focused&#13;
more on interventions, students and home factors to improve learning outcomes in EL&#13;
than on teacher socio-linguistic factors. This study, therefore, was carried out to&#13;
investigate teacher socio-linguistic factors (Access to Native Speakers-ANS, Prior&#13;
Language Competence-PLC, Epistemic Beliefs-EB, and Intercultural Practice-IP) as&#13;
predictors of learning outcomes (achievement and attitude) in EL among public senior&#13;
secondary school students in the Ibadan metropolis, Nigeria.&#13;
The study was underpinned by the Attribution, Contrastive Analysis and Personal&#13;
Epistemology theories, while the sequential mixed methods (QUAN+qual) design was&#13;
adopted. The multi-stage sampling procedure was adopted. The five metropolitan&#13;
Local Government Areas (LGAs) in the Ibadan were enumerated. The simple random&#13;
sampling technique was used to select 50 public SSSs (10 per LGA). Fifty teachers&#13;
(one per SSS) teaching SSII EL were purposively selected. The instruments used were&#13;
English Language Achievement (r=0.87), Prior Language Competence (r=0.77) tests;&#13;
Attitude to English Language (r= 0.92), Access to Native Speakers (r=0.82),&#13;
Epistemic Beliefs (r =0.90) questionnaires; and Intercultural Practice Scale (r =0.86).&#13;
In-depth interviews were held with 10 teachers who were heads of departments. The&#13;
quantitative data were analysed using descriptive statistics, Pearson product moment&#13;
correlation and Multiple regression at 0.05 level of significance, while the qualitative&#13;
data were content-analysed.&#13;
The age of the respondents were: teachers (30.80 ±2.40) years, and students (16.90 +&#13;
2.06) years, while 54.0 % and 51.6%, respectively were females. The majority of the&#13;
teachers (90.0%) possessed teaching qualifications. The ANS ,&#13;
EB and IC were high, at a threshold of 2.50, but IC&#13;
(x=2.40) was low, at a threshold of 2.50. Teacher IP (r = .39), EB (r =.23)&#13;
and ANS (r =.01) had positive relationships, while PLC (r= -.16) had a negative&#13;
relationship with achievement. Teacher ANS (r =.20), IP (r =.09) and EB (r = .07)&#13;
correlated positively, while PLC (r = -.08) correlated negatively with attitude to&#13;
EL.The composite contributions of the independent variables to achievement (F(4;45) =&#13;
3.347; Adj. R2 = .16) was significant, accounting for 16.0 % of the variance, but it was&#13;
not significant on attitude. Teachers’ IP(β= .44;-.19), ANS (β =.14;.03), PLC (β =-.20;&#13;
-.04) and EB (β =-.10; -.04) contributed relatively to achievement and attitude,&#13;
respectively. Teachers of EL accessed native speakers through native English&#13;
newspapers, literature books, movies, radio and television news, conferences and&#13;
academic discussions, while listening to music, eating foods and wearing attires from&#13;
different cultures were their IPs.&#13;
Teacher intercultural practice and access to native speakers influenced achievement in&#13;
EL, while access to native speakers influenced attitude to EL among public senior&#13;
secondary school students in Ibadan metropolis, Nigeria. Teachers of EL should&#13;
focus on these factors to improve learning outcomes in EL.
</description>
<dc:date>2023-05-01T00:00:00Z</dc:date>
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