Environmental factors as determinants of workers' readiness to lifelong learning in Lagos state private schools

No Thumbnail Available
Date
2015-03-01
Authors
Afonja, A.F.
Ojeomogha, T.O.
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
The Faculty of Education University of Port Harcourt, Port Harcourt, Nigeria
Abstract
The world of works is dynamic, it is therefore imperative that workers must at all times, update, upgrade, retrain and learn new skills in order to cope with the new challenges of the world of work. Thus, this work is conceived to examine factors as determinants of workers' readiness for lifelong learning in the world of work. The study adopted a survey research design. The population of the study covered all teaching staff in Lagos state. Five research questions and hypotheses were developed to guide the study. A structured questionnaire titled: Teachers Readiness to Lifelong Learning Questionnaire (TRLLQ) developed by the researchers was the major instrument for data collection. Both descriptive and inferential (Pearson Moment Correlation) statistics were used for data analysis. The result of the findings shows that there is a significant relationship between environmental factors, management policy, organization training policy, job description/workload, remuneration, promotion policy of the organization, and teachers' readiness for lifelong learning. Based on the findings, it was recommended among other things that teachers should be exempted from activities outside the classroom to reduce their workload, continuous training programmes with the established standard should be carried out for teachers and training must form part of the policy framework for all private schools in Lagos State, Nigeria.
Description
Keywords
Workers readiness, environmental factors, private school, Lifelong learning
Citation
Afonja, A.F. & Ojeomogha, T.O. (2015). Environmental factors as determinants of workers' readiness to lifelong learning in Lagos state private schools. Journal of Education in Developing Areas, 23(1), 51-61.