Teachers’ perceptions of staff development programmes as it relates to teachers’ effectiveness: A study of rural primary schools in Kenya
Abstract
Results-based management has gained currency in Kenya. After pre-service training, teachers take
various staff development progrmames to enhance their role effectiveness. Many studies which have
associated staff development with employee productivity have not delved into the actual mechanisms
in which staff development impact on teachers’ effectiveness. This study was a survey of 100 primary
schools which brought on board 100 teachers as research subjects. Using the outlier approach schools
in Rift Valley and Nyanza Provinces were bifurcated into high performing and average performing
categories. A modified Likert Scale type of questionnaire was administered after validation. The study
revealed that the most popular staff development programmes are taking higher education and training,
in-service courses and participating in workshops, seminars and conferences among others. During
such programmes, teachers learn school management skills, evaluation techniques, academic
achievement correlates and master wider content areas of their subjects. Teachers in the high
performing schools were found to take more interest in staff development programmes compared to
their colleagues in the average performing schools. Key recommendations include granting paid study
leave and allocating more funds and time to serving teachers to enable them participate in staff
development programmes. Equally imperative is retraining of teachers aimed at radical attitudinal
change towards staff development activities related to their respective teachers.
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