UI Postgraduate College

TEACHER SOCIO-LINGUISTIC FACTORS AND LEARNING OUTCOMES IN ENGLISH LANGUAGE AMONG PUBLIC SENIOR SECONDARY STUDENTS IN THE IBADAN METROPOLIS, NIGERIA

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dc.contributor.author ADIGUN, Christie Oluyemisi
dc.date.accessioned 2024-04-25T06:41:12Z
dc.date.available 2024-04-25T06:41:12Z
dc.date.issued 2023-05
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/1989
dc.description.abstract English Language (EL) is a core subject in schools, and success in it is a part of the requirements for certification and educational advancement. However, evidence has shown that learning outcomes of many public Senior Secondary School (SSS) students in EL are not satisfactory in the Ibadan metropolis. Previous studies focused more on interventions, students and home factors to improve learning outcomes in EL than on teacher socio-linguistic factors. This study, therefore, was carried out to investigate teacher socio-linguistic factors (Access to Native Speakers-ANS, Prior Language Competence-PLC, Epistemic Beliefs-EB, and Intercultural Practice-IP) as predictors of learning outcomes (achievement and attitude) in EL among public senior secondary school students in the Ibadan metropolis, Nigeria. The study was underpinned by the Attribution, Contrastive Analysis and Personal Epistemology theories, while the sequential mixed methods (QUAN+qual) design was adopted. The multi-stage sampling procedure was adopted. The five metropolitan Local Government Areas (LGAs) in the Ibadan were enumerated. The simple random sampling technique was used to select 50 public SSSs (10 per LGA). Fifty teachers (one per SSS) teaching SSII EL were purposively selected. The instruments used were English Language Achievement (r=0.87), Prior Language Competence (r=0.77) tests; Attitude to English Language (r= 0.92), Access to Native Speakers (r=0.82), Epistemic Beliefs (r =0.90) questionnaires; and Intercultural Practice Scale (r =0.86). In-depth interviews were held with 10 teachers who were heads of departments. The quantitative data were analysed using descriptive statistics, Pearson product moment correlation and Multiple regression at 0.05 level of significance, while the qualitative data were content-analysed. The age of the respondents were: teachers (30.80 ±2.40) years, and students (16.90 + 2.06) years, while 54.0 % and 51.6%, respectively were females. The majority of the teachers (90.0%) possessed teaching qualifications. The ANS , EB and IC were high, at a threshold of 2.50, but IC (x=2.40) was low, at a threshold of 2.50. Teacher IP (r = .39), EB (r =.23) and ANS (r =.01) had positive relationships, while PLC (r= -.16) had a negative relationship with achievement. Teacher ANS (r =.20), IP (r =.09) and EB (r = .07) correlated positively, while PLC (r = -.08) correlated negatively with attitude to EL.The composite contributions of the independent variables to achievement (F(4;45) = 3.347; Adj. R2 = .16) was significant, accounting for 16.0 % of the variance, but it was not significant on attitude. Teachers’ IP(β= .44;-.19), ANS (β =.14;.03), PLC (β =-.20; -.04) and EB (β =-.10; -.04) contributed relatively to achievement and attitude, respectively. Teachers of EL accessed native speakers through native English newspapers, literature books, movies, radio and television news, conferences and academic discussions, while listening to music, eating foods and wearing attires from different cultures were their IPs. Teacher intercultural practice and access to native speakers influenced achievement in EL, while access to native speakers influenced attitude to EL among public senior secondary school students in Ibadan metropolis, Nigeria. Teachers of EL should focus on these factors to improve learning outcomes in EL. en_US
dc.language.iso en en_US
dc.subject Intercultural practice, Access to native speakers, Prior language competence, Achievement in English Language, Public senior secondary schools in Ibadan en_US
dc.title TEACHER SOCIO-LINGUISTIC FACTORS AND LEARNING OUTCOMES IN ENGLISH LANGUAGE AMONG PUBLIC SENIOR SECONDARY STUDENTS IN THE IBADAN METROPOLIS, NIGERIA en_US
dc.type Thesis en_US


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