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<title>PROPRIETORS' POLICY COMPLIANCE AND ACADEMIC  PERFORMANCE OF PRIVATE PRIMARY SCHOOL PUPILS IN  OYO STATE, NIGERIA</title>
<link>http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/763</link>
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<dc:date>2026-04-06T09:58:55Z</dc:date>
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<title>PROPRIETORS' POLICY COMPLIANCE AND ACADEMIC  PERFORMANCE OF PRIVATE PRIMARY SCHOOL PUPILS IN  OYO STATE, NIGERIA</title>
<link>http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/764</link>
<description>PROPRIETORS' POLICY COMPLIANCE AND ACADEMIC  PERFORMANCE OF PRIVATE PRIMARY SCHOOL PUPILS IN  OYO STATE, NIGERIA
POPOOLA, Bolaji Gabriel
The low Academic Performance (AP) of primary school pupils in Nigeria in external &#13;
examinations persists, especially in Oyo State despite the inclusion of Facility (FN), &#13;
Instructional Resources (IRN) and Personnel (PN) Norms in the Primary School &#13;
Benchmark Minimum Academic Standard (PSBMAS) in the state. Previous studies on &#13;
AP considered mostly home and teacher-related factors in public primary schools with &#13;
little attention given to private primary school Proprietors Policy Compliance (PPC) &#13;
with the PSBMAS in the state. This study, therefore, was designed to investigate the &#13;
contributions of PPC with FN, IRN and PN to AP of private primary school pupils in &#13;
Oyo State, Nigeria, and examine the influence of Policy Comprehension (PC), &#13;
Willingness and ability of proprietors to PPC with FN, IRN and PN.&#13;
Stufflebeam's CIPP Evaluation Model provided the framework, while survey design &#13;
was used. Multi-stage sampling procedure was adopted. Cluster sampling technique &#13;
was used to select 17 out of 33 Local Government Areas (LGAs) in the state. Simple &#13;
random technique was adopted to select 296 registered private primary schools from &#13;
the LGAs. Proprietors' Compliance with PSBMAS Checklist (r = 0.88) and &#13;
Compliance Factor Questionnaire (r = 0.74) were used to collect data, while the: very &#13;
low (1.0-1.4), low (1.5-2.4), high (2.5-3.4) and very high (3.5-4.0) norm was adopted. &#13;
The average score of pupils per school in the 2017 Common Entrance Examination was &#13;
calculated using data obtained from school records. These were complemented with 12 &#13;
sessions of Key Informant Interviews with six each of chairmen of Association of &#13;
Proprietors of Private Primary Schools at the LGA level and secretaries of Local &#13;
Government Universal Basic Education Authority (LGUBEA). Quantitative data were &#13;
analysed using descriptive statistics, Pearson product moment correlation and Multiple &#13;
regression at 0.05 level of significance, while qualitative data were analysed &#13;
thematically.&#13;
The average AP of private primary school pupils (78.0%) was good. Proprietors' PC &#13;
 =2.15) was low, while willingness =2.88) and ability =2.95) were high. The &#13;
PPC with FN =3.09) and IRN =3.30) were high, while PN =3.61) was very &#13;
high. The PPC with FN, IRN and PN (adj. R2&#13;
=0.55; F(3, 292) =120.71) made significant &#13;
contribution to AP and contributed 55.4% of variations in the dependent variable. &#13;
Proprietors' compliance with FN (r=0.45) and IRN (r=0.39) had significant &#13;
relationships with AP, while PN did not. Proprietors' compliance with FN ( =0.36), &#13;
IRN ( =0.25) and PN ( =0.28) contributed to AP, while policy comprehension, &#13;
willingness and ability did not contribute to compliance with FN, IRN and PN. &#13;
Financial constraint was the major challenge for PPC. Enforcement of FN, IRN and PN &#13;
by the officers of the LGUBEA was the major event by which high PPC was achieved.&#13;
Proprietors' compliance with Primary Schools Benchmark Minimum Academic &#13;
Standard influenced academic performance of private school pupils in Oyo State, &#13;
Nigeria. There should be enforcement of total compliance with facilities, instructional &#13;
resources and personnel norms to enhance pupils’ academic performance.
</description>
<dc:date>2019-01-01T00:00:00Z</dc:date>
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