
Relationship between School Location and Secondary Technical Students’ Acquisition of Knowledge-Based Skills in Cross River and Imo States of Nigeria
Author(s) -
Monica Peter Lebo,
Dyke. A.R. Okonkwo,
Stella I. Ejiogu,
David U. Osakpa
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
frontiers in education technology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2576-1854
pISSN - 2576-1846
DOI - 10.22158/fet.v2n2p63
Subject(s) - mathematics education , data collection , sample (material) , population , psychology , mathematics , agricultural science , statistics , demography , physics , sociology , biology , thermodynamics
This paper investigated the influence of school location on students’ acquisition of knowledge-based skills in selected secondary technical schools in Cross River and Imo States of Nigeria. The objective of the study was to ascertain the influence of location (urban and rural) of secondary technical schools on students’ acquisition of knowledge-based skills (creative thinking, innovation, ICT and entrepreneurship skills) in the two states. A correlation design was adopted for the study. The population constituted 1328 SS II students drawn from 11 secondary technical schools across the two states out of which a stratified random sample of 330 was identified. Two research questions and two corresponding hypotheses were formulated to guide the study. A twelve-item multiple choice S tudents’ A ptitude T est on S kills A cquisition (SATSA), validated by five experts in instruments construction, and was administered on the sample for data collection. Data were analyzed with One Sample Test and ANOVA to ascertain the relationship between school locations and students’ acquisition of knowledge-based skills in the identified knowledge-based skill subjects. The paper recommended that principals and teachers of secondary technical schools should sustain and improve the performance of students in the two states. It further recommended that further investigations be conducted to ascertain students’ acquisition of knowledge-based skills irrespective of school location.