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<title>TEACHER EFFECTIVENESS FACTORS AND LEARNING OUTCOMES IN ENGLISH STUDIES AMONG PUBLIC PRIMARY SCHOOL PUPILS IN THE IBADAN METROPOLIS, NIGERIA</title>
<link>http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/2000</link>
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<dc:date>2026-04-03T20:03:35Z</dc:date>
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<title>TEACHER EFFECTIVENESS FACTORS AND LEARNING OUTCOMES IN ENGLISH STUDIES AMONG PUBLIC PRIMARY SCHOOL PUPILS IN THE IBADAN METROPOLIS, NIGERIA</title>
<link>http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/2001</link>
<description>TEACHER EFFECTIVENESS FACTORS AND LEARNING OUTCOMES IN ENGLISH STUDIES AMONG PUBLIC PRIMARY SCHOOL PUPILS IN THE IBADAN METROPOLIS, NIGERIA
JIRE-ALAO, Esther Oluwatoyin
English Studies (ES) is taught in primary schools partly to inculcate in pupils ability to&#13;
communicate effectively.. However, reports have shown that the learning outcomes of&#13;
many public primary school pupils in ES are not encouraging in the Ibadan metropolis,&#13;
which partly accounts for their inability to communicate effectively. Previous studies&#13;
focused more on interventions to improve learning outcomes in ES than teacher classroom&#13;
practice factors. This study, therefore, was carried out to investigate teacher classroom&#13;
factors (professional development, instructional pacing, use of questions, use of&#13;
instructional materials and feedback techniques) as predictors of learning in ES among&#13;
public primary school pupils in the Ibadan metropolis, Nigeria.&#13;
Human Capital Development and Instruction theories provided the framework, while the&#13;
study adopted the mixed methods design. The multi-stage sampling procedure was adopted.&#13;
Five local government areas (LGA) in the Ibadan metropolis were enumerated. The random&#13;
sampling technique was used to select 50 public primary schools (10 per LGA). Fifty&#13;
teachers (one per school) teaching primary five ES were purposively selected. Instruments&#13;
used were English Studies Achievement Test (r=0.83), Interest in English Studies (r= 0.91),&#13;
Professional Development (r =0.90) questionnaires, Instructional Pacing (r =0.92), Use of&#13;
Instructional Materials (r=0.89), Use of Questions (r=0.86), Feedback Techniques(r=0.83)&#13;
observation scales. In-Depth Interviews were held with 10 selected teachers (two per LGA).&#13;
Quantitative data were analysed using Pearson’s product moment correlation and Multiple&#13;
regression at 0.05 level of significance, while qualitative data were content-analysed.&#13;
The participants’ ages were teachers- 30.80 ± 2.40; pupils-11.16 ± 2.70 years and 62.0 %&#13;
and 53.0%, respectively were females. Instructional pacing(x=2.01), use of questions (x=&#13;
1.96), professional development (x=1.87) and feedback strategies (x=1.84) were low, but&#13;
the use of instructional materials (x=2.72) was high, all against the threshold of 2.50.&#13;
Professional development (r = .03), instructional pacing (r = .02), use of questions (r = .22),&#13;
use of instructional materials (r = .13) and teachers’ feedback techniques (r = 0.20) had&#13;
positive relationships with achievement. Professional development (r = .11), use of&#13;
questions (r = .11), use of instructional materials (r = .15) and feedback techniques (r = .34)&#13;
correlated positively, while instructional pacing correlated negatively with interest. The&#13;
composite contributions of the independent variables to achievement (F (5; 44) = 2.688; Adj.&#13;
R2 = .23) was significant, accounting for 23% of the variance, but it was not to interest.&#13;
Professional development (Beta = .01; .06), instructional pacing (Beta = .12; .23), use of&#13;
questions (Beta = .23; .04), use of instructional materials (Beta = .12; .22) and feedback&#13;
techniques (Beta = .05, .33) contributed relatively to achievement and interest, respectively.&#13;
Professional development activities engaged in by teachers of ES were seminars,&#13;
workshops, conferences and participating in academic discussions, while teachers’&#13;
inability to access ES curriculum, pupils’ non-possession of prescribed textbooks and&#13;
literary texts as well as non-availability of instructional materials hindered effective&#13;
implementation of ES curriculum in primary schools.&#13;
Professional development, use of questions, use of instructional materials, feedback&#13;
techniques and instructional pacing influenced achievement and interest in ES among&#13;
public primary school pupils in the Ibadan metropolis, Nigeria. Teachers of ES should&#13;
focus on these classroom practice factors for improved learning outcomes in ES..
</description>
<dc:date>2023-02-01T00:00:00Z</dc:date>
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