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<title>TWO COLLABORATIVE TRAINING METHODS AND PRE-PRIMARY SCHOOL TEACHERS’ ATTITUDE TO AND PRACTICE OF CHILD RIGHTS IN ONDO STATE, NIGERIA</title>
<link>http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/2281</link>
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<dc:date>2026-04-11T04:53:05Z</dc:date>
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<title>TWO COLLABORATIVE TRAINING METHODS AND PRE-PRIMARY SCHOOL TEACHERS’ ATTITUDE TO AND PRACTICE OF CHILD RIGHTS IN ONDO STATE, NIGERIA</title>
<link>http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/2282</link>
<description>TWO COLLABORATIVE TRAINING METHODS AND PRE-PRIMARY SCHOOL TEACHERS’ ATTITUDE TO AND PRACTICE OF CHILD RIGHTS IN ONDO STATE, NIGERIA
AYOOLA, Nathaniel Olujoba
Child Rights are crucial to the general well-being of children because they help guarantee&#13;
their adequate protection and development. Reports have shown that attitude to and&#13;
practice of child rights are poor among pre-primary school teachers in Ondo State,&#13;
Nigeria. Previous works on child rights focused more on survey of factors influencing&#13;
than on interventions. This study, therefore, was carried out to determine the effects of two&#13;
Collaborative Training Methods (CTMs) - Think-Pair-Share (TPS) and Small Group&#13;
Discussion (SGD) - on pre-primary school teachers‟ attitude to and practice of child rights&#13;
in Ondo State. The moderating effects of gender and child rights awareness were also&#13;
examined.&#13;
The Kolb Experiential and Vygotsky‟s Socio-cultural theories provided the framework,&#13;
while the study adopted the mixed methods (pretest-posttest control group quasiexperimental design, with a 3x2x2 factorial matrix and phenomenological approach). One&#13;
(Ondo Central) out of the three Senatorial Districts was randomly selected. Three (Akure&#13;
South, Ondo West and Idanre) out of the six Local Government Areas (LGAs) were&#13;
randomly selected. Ten public primary schools, with pre-primary section, were&#13;
purposively selected from each of the LGAs. Sixty pre-primary school teachers (20 per&#13;
LGA) with more than five years teaching experience, were purposively selected. The&#13;
schools were randomly assigned to TPS (20), SGD (20) and control (20) groups. The&#13;
instruments used were Attitude to Child Rights (r = 0.82), Child Rights Awareness&#13;
Questionnaires (r = 0.73), Child Rights Practice Observation Scale (r = 0.71), training&#13;
guides, field notes and audio-visual materials. Training lasted nine weeks. A session of&#13;
focus group discussions was held with 10 pre-primary school teachers. Quantitative data&#13;
were analysed using descriptive statistics, Analysis of covariance and Sidak post-hoc test&#13;
at 0.05 level of significance, while the qualitative data were analysed thematically.&#13;
Majority (83.3%) of the participants were female and 77.0% had high level of child rights&#13;
awareness.There was a significant main effect of treatment on pre-primary school&#13;
teachers‟ attitude (F(2;47) = 11.52, partial ῆ2 = 0.33). The participants in TPS had the&#13;
highest post-attitude mean score (68.74), followed by those in SGD (64.16) and the&#13;
control (48.74) groups. There was a significant main effect of treatment on practice of the&#13;
teachers (F(2;47) = 28.14, partial ῆ2 = 0.55). The pre-primary school teachers in SGD had&#13;
the highest post-practice mean score (43.63), followed by those in TPS (42.25) and the&#13;
control (28.07) groups. There were no significant main effects of gender and child rights&#13;
awareness on pre-primary school teachers‟ attitude and practice of child rights. The twoway and three-way interactions effects of treatment, gender and child rights awareness&#13;
were not significant. Teachers were neither aware of nor practised child right acts.&#13;
Think-pair-share and small group discussion enhanced pre-primary school teachers‟&#13;
attitude to and practice of child rights in Ondo State, Nigeria, regardless of gender and&#13;
child rights awareness. These methods should be adopted in training pre-primary school&#13;
teachers on child rights.
</description>
<dc:date>2023-08-01T00:00:00Z</dc:date>
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