Abstract:
This study examined the effects of deprivation on the quality of basic education delivery
in the Wassa Amenfi East Municipality. The research was anchored on the Input-
Process-Output (IPO) Theory and Human Capital Theory. Employing a quantitative
approach and a descriptive survey design, the study targeted a population of 381
teachers across 37 schools in four selected circuits. A sample size of 196 respondents
was determined using the Yamane (1967) formula, with participants selected through
proportionate stratified and simple random sampling techniques. Data were collected
using a close-ended questionnaire on a 4-point Likert scale and analyzed with IBM
SPSS (v.27) and Microsoft Excel (2021) using frequencies, means, standard deviations,
and Pearson Correlation. The findings revealed that public basic schools in the
municipality are significantly deprived in terms of infrastructure, teacher availability,
and teaching-learning materials. While these deprivation levels had a marginal impact
on individual teacher delivery, the study found a strong negative correlation between
deprivation and student outcomes; specifically, as deprivation increases, both academic
performance and pupil attendance rates significantly decrease. It was concluded that
while teachers remain resilient, the physical and material deprivation of schools creates
a barrier to student success that requires urgent policy intervention to ensure equitable
education delivery, Consequently, it is recommended that the Ghana Education Service
(GES) should provide targeted grants for infrastructure in deprived areas and implement
continuous professional development to sustain teacher motivation.
Description:
A thesis submitted to the School of Graduate Studies in
partial fulfillment of the requirements for the award of
the degree of Master of Philosophy
(Educational Administration and Management)
Department of Educational Administration and Managemen
School of Education and Life-Long Learning
UNIVERSITY OF EDUCATION, WINNEBA
DECEMBER, 2024