Abstract:
In line with international best practices, countries across the globe are intensifying
their teacher education institutions in order to train world class teachers to feed their
schools. It is against this background that this research work tried to find out how
robust the admission process at the Presbyterian College of Education, Akropong is.
This is because admitting students into the College of Education is the first step in
ensuring a sound teacher training program. The correlational design was used for the
study and the purposive sampling technique was employed to select the standardized
tests scores of 2,097 students’ WASSCE entry results against their Final GPA at the
College of Education for the data analysis using SPSS 22.0 version. The results of the
analysis proved that those who entered into the College of Education with good
grades from the Senior High School exited with good GPAs and the inverse was true.
Also on the issue of gender difference in terms of performance, it was revealed that
males entered with slightly better results than their female counterparts and the final
GPA were in the same manner. Again the average entry grades and the graduating
CGPA for the four years were significantly different. However where the gender
parity ratio was low, the differences in the male and female CGPA was minimal The
researcher therefore recommends that the college must move beyond the normal
training and put in measures to ensure that most of the students are able to improve on
their performance to be at par with the current demands of a world class teacher. More
importantly there should be enough gender sensitive and female- friendly measures to
ensure that the gender parity ratio is reduced further so that the females can catch up
with the males in terms of academic achievement.
Description:
A thesis in the Department of Mathematics Education,
Faculty of Science Education, submitted to the School of
Graduate Studies, in partial fulfilment
of the requirements for the award of the degree of
Master of Philosophy
(Mathematics Education)
in the University of Education, Winneba