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<title>EVALUATION OF THE MANDATORY CONTINUING PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT PROGRAMME OF THE TEACHERS’ REGISTRATION COUNCIL OF NIGERIA IN EKITI STATE, 2011-2021</title>
<link>http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/2088</link>
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<dc:date>2026-04-04T08:42:03Z</dc:date>
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<title>EVALUATION OF THE MANDATORY CONTINUING PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT PROGRAMME OF THE TEACHERS’ REGISTRATION COUNCIL OF NIGERIA IN EKITI STATE, 2011-2021</title>
<link>http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/2089</link>
<description>EVALUATION OF THE MANDATORY CONTINUING PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT PROGRAMME OF THE TEACHERS’ REGISTRATION COUNCIL OF NIGERIA IN EKITI STATE, 2011-2021
OSIESI, Mensah Prince
Anecdotal evidence shows that despite the various trainings provided by organisations such as&#13;
the Universal Basic Education Commission and National Teachers' Institute for Primary&#13;
School Classroom Teachers (PSCTs) in Ekiti State, they still exhibit skills deficiency and poor&#13;
classroom competencies. In remediation of this trend, the Teachers' Registration Council of&#13;
Nigeria (TRCN), therefore, started providing the Mandatory Continuing Professional&#13;
Development Programme (MCPDP) for the PSCTs. However, since the beginning of the&#13;
MCPDP in 2006, there has not been an independent empirical assessment of the MCPDP; most&#13;
reports on it have been self-reporting. Thus, the goal of this study was to evaluate the TRCN&#13;
MCPDP for PSCTs with respect to some teacher characteristics in Ekiti State between 2011&#13;
and 2021.&#13;
This study was anchored to the Antecedent, Transaction and Outcome Evaluation Model,&#13;
while the mixed- methods approach of the convergent parallel design was used. Seventy public&#13;
primary schools were purposively selected with teachers who attended MCPDP in Ekiti State,&#13;
while 166 teachers (all the 90 attendees and randomly selected 76 non-attendees of PSCTs&#13;
MCPDP) between 2011 and 2021 participated in the study. The instruments used were&#13;
MCPDP Teacher Attitude (r=0.77), MCPDP Implementation Constraints (r=0.80), MCPDP&#13;
Implementation Solutions (r=0.94), Teaching Profession Attitude (r=0.75), Ideas/Experiences&#13;
Cross-fertilisation (r=0.94) questionnaires, Teachers’ Engagement (r=0.88) and Teachers’&#13;
Classroom Action Observation (r=0.92) scales. Key informant interviews were conducted with&#13;
eight school head teachers and two senior TRCN officials. The quantitative data were analysed&#13;
using descriptive statistics, t-test and multiple regression at α=0.05, while the qualitative data&#13;
were thematically analysed.&#13;
There were 102 females and 64 males with qualifications such as NCE (54.0%), B.Ed/B.Sc&#13;
(40.0%), M.Ed (5.0%) and Ph.D (1.0%), and teaching experience 5-10 (27.0%), 11-15&#13;
(61.8%), 16-20 (38.2%) and above 21 (7.0%) years. While 120 PSCTs had TRCN practicing&#13;
license, 46 do not. Most of the facilitators were male (91.0%), all with Ph.D and mostly&#13;
professors (79.0%). The majority of the PSCTs (80.0%) agreed that the MCPDP fostered&#13;
PSCTs' cross-fertilisation of ideas and experiences, social engagements, teaching skills and&#13;
communication. Item weighted mean (x̄ =1.83) for PSCTs' attitude towards MCPDP, and&#13;
teaching profession (x̄ =1.67) were positive. No significant difference existed in the teaching&#13;
competencies between MCPDP attendees and non-attendees. Cross-fertilisation of&#13;
ideas/experiences significantly contributed to PSCTs teaching competencies (β=0.18). Social&#13;
(β=0.34), intellectual engagements (β=0.33) and MCPD training (β=0.23) significantly&#13;
contributed to PSCTs attitude towards the teaching profession and MCPDP. Interviews of the&#13;
MCPDP were reported to have improved PSCTs' teaching competencies, commitment and&#13;
continuous relevance to the teaching profession, while inadequate funding, large class size and&#13;
inability to register with TRCN were the challenges facing the MCPDP implementation.&#13;
Solutions suggested were increased government funding, public enlightenment and PSCTs'&#13;
TRCN registration.&#13;
The Mandatory Continuing Professional Development Programme of the Teachers'&#13;
Registration Council of Nigeria enhanced primary school teachers' cross-fertilisation of&#13;
ideas/experiences, social engagements, commitment to the profession, continued relevance,&#13;
skills in teaching and communication, and attitude toward the teaching profession in Ekiti&#13;
State. The TRCN should intensify the funding of MCPD Programme and create more public&#13;
awareness.
</description>
<dc:date>2023-06-01T00:00:00Z</dc:date>
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