Title: Teacher Efficacy in Zimbabwe:
1Teacher Efficacy in Zimbabwe Stamina
Sacrifice Judy K. Dunham, Ph.D. Daniel Songony,
Ph.D. 51st Annual Conference Comparative
International Education Society Baltimore,
MD March 1, 2007
2Overview
- Type of Research
- Background of Zimbabwe
- Self-efficacy
- Teacher Efficacy
- Methods
- Results
- Limitations
- Implications
- Conclusion
3Fast FactsZimbabwe
- Independence in 1980
- GDP per capita was 600
- Most well-developed economies in Africa
- During the 1990s
- Became one of 19 WEI countries
- Politically motivated crisis
- White farms confiscated by government
- Weakening of economic political institutions
- World Education Indicators Middle Income
Countries
4Current situation
- GDP 200
- Economy fallen by 2/3 since independence
- Food shortages
- Near collapse of tourism
- 700 (2003) to 70 million (2006)
- Inflation is nearly 1000 (2006)
- HIV/AIDS rate is 24.6
- Life expectancy is 39 years
- Child mortality is 29/1,000
5Education
- Primary enrollment 65-90
- Primary to secondary transition 70
- Secondary enrollment 24-30 (est.)
- Literacy in adult population 62.5
UNESCO UIS 2004
6- These political, economic, and societal crises
have led to the near collapse of all
institutions. - Thousands of professionals have left Zimbabwe,
yet there are those who remain.
Buckle, 2004 CIA Fact Book 2007 Hill, 2006
International Crisis Group, 2006Lindow (2006)
UNESCO 2007 World Bank, 2006 Zimbabwe An
Opposition Strategy, 2006 Zimbabwe Situation,
2004
7Self-Efficacy
- Two Theories
- Rotters (1966) Social Learning Theory
- Internal vs. External Locus of Control
- Banduras (1986) Social Cognitive Theory
- Reciprocal Determinism
8Beliefs in ones capabilities to organize and
execute the courses of action required to produce
given attainments (Bandura, 1986, p.3).
9Efficacy is Enabling
Conviction
Estimate
Bandura (1977)
10Expend Persist - Rebound
Woolfolk Hoy (1990), Tschannen-Moran Hoy
(2001)
11Teacher Efficacy
12Benefits of Teacher Efficacy
- Linked to student achievement
- Open to new ideas
- Allow for student autonomy
- Attention to high needs students
- Build student self-confidence
- Set goals
- Persist when students fail
-
- (Hoy Spero, 2005)
13Research in countries where teachers experience
difficult environmental conditions could reveal
additional insights about the construct of
teacher efficacy.
14Tschannen-Moran Woolfolk Hoy (2001)
15OSTES Items
- How much can you do to get through to the
- most difficult students?
- To what extent can you craft good questions
- for your students?
- How well can you calm a student who is disruptive
or noisy?
16Subjects
23 educators from 9 rural schools Sanyati West
Schools Catchment
17Results
- RQ1 What are the levels of teacher efficacy of
educators who work in a catchment of rural
schools in Sanyati, Zimbabwe? - 87.3 of responses in highest 3 levels
- of 9-point Likert scale (7-9)
- 10.2 of responses in the mid-levels
- (6-8)
- Only 2.5 in lowest 3 levels
18- Means
- 23/24 items had mean score of 7.0 or above
19Only 1 item resulted in 1/3 of the responses in
low-mid levels
20- RQ2 Are the three primary factors in the OSTES -
- instructional strategies, classroom management,
- and student engagement generally found in the
responses of American teachers also present in
the responses of the Zimbabwean teachers? - It was not possible to conduct a factor analysis
- due to the small sample size. For a factor
- analysis to be reliable, 300 subjects is
- recommended.
- (Tabschnick Fidell, 2006, cited in Mertler
Vannatta, 2005)
21- RQ3 In this sample of teachers, are there
significant differences between the 3 underlying
structures generally found in previous research
using the OSTES?
Means and Standard Deviations for Three
Factors Factors Mean SD Factor
1 Instructional Strategies 8.065 1.227875 Factor
2 Classroom Management 7.98375 1.500875 Factor
3 Student Engagement 7.8925 1.388875
22RQ4 Are there significant differences in the
level of teacher efficacy for years of
experience? Low 0-5 yrs. Med 6-12 yrs. High
13-35 yrs.
Analysis of Variance for Years of Experience
_________________________________________________
___ Source SS df MS F ? Between Groups 228.323
2 114.161 Years of Exp 228.320
2 114.161 .594 .562 Total
844665.000 23 _________________________________
_________________________
23Discussion
- Possibility of cultural bias
- OSTES measures personal rather than general
teaching efficacy - OSTES does not include adequate items related
to environment
24Personal Teaching Efficacy
25Limitations
26Implications
- Conduct confirmatory analysis of the
- OSTES in Zimbabwe with larger sample of teachers
- Collect comparative data from another country
- in sub-Saharan Africa
- Redesign OSTES to include external, general
factors - Use qualitative methods to study contextual
variables - Resources facilities (Hoy Spero, 2005)
- Socio-cultural dimensions
- (Sorrells, Schaller, Yang, 200)
- Culturally-specific teaching responsibilities
- Ho Hau (2004)
27In the world of human thoughtthe most fruitful
concepts are those to which it is impossible to
attach a well-defined meaning. Lewis (1991)
A Question of Values
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