Factors that influence a performance culture in a selected school in Johannesburg East district

A country’s competitive advantage is linked to its educational outcomes. South Africa, as a developing country wants to shift from being a resource based economy to being a knowledge based economy. To enable such a shift, schools must be able to graduate learners who are adequately prepared for the...

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Main Author: Gumbo, Edwell
Format: Others
Language:English
Published: Nelson Mandela Metropolitan University 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10948/4900
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spelling ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-nmmu-vital-207482017-12-21T04:22:32ZFactors that influence a performance culture in a selected school in Johannesburg East districtGumbo, EdwellEducational change -- South Africa -- JohannesburgAcademic achievement -- South Africa -- JohannesburgSchool improvement programsA country’s competitive advantage is linked to its educational outcomes. South Africa, as a developing country wants to shift from being a resource based economy to being a knowledge based economy. To enable such a shift, schools must be able to graduate learners who are adequately prepared for the demands of institutions of higher learning. Schools, therefore, must become centres of excellence and a culture of performance must be prevalent in schools. The National Development Plan as outlined by the National Planning Commission (2011) identified education as one of the pillars from which South Africa’s economy will be driven. However, recent studies have rated South Africa’s education system as one of the worst among middle income economies and sometimes even worse than many low-income African economies. To bridge that gap, there is a need to drive schools to be centres of excellence. This study sought to identify factors that influence a performance culture in schools. In order to achieve this objective, literature was scanned and five factors that influence a performance culture were identified (organisational school climate, teacher attitude, school managerial processes, organisational school value and organisational school structure). These factors were initially identified and used by Marcoulides and Heck (1993) in a corporate organisation and later adopted for testing in a school setting by Gomez, Marcoulides and Heck (2012). A school in Johannesburg East district was sampled through convenience sampling and data was collected through a questionnaire which was administered to the principal, teachers and staff, school governing board members, parents and alumni of the school. The total sample was 120 and a total of 94 questionnaires were returned giving a response rate of 78 percent. Descriptive statistical techniques were performed to establish the mean and standard deviation of perceptions among the respondents. Inferential statistical techniques were used to measure and ascertain reliability through Cronbach’s alpha, comparisons of responses through t-testing and ANOVA, association through correlation and hypotheses were tested through multiple regression analysis. All the variables were found to be valid and reliable. Furthermore, statistical results revealed that in the sampled school, even though all the five factors had an association among each other, only organisational school culture and organisational school value had an association to the dependent variable, performance culture. Organisational school value, however, was found to be the only variable of great influence to performance culture at the sampled school. The ideologies and activities that represent the values, therefore, influence the performance culture of a school.Nelson Mandela Metropolitan UniversityFaculty of Business and Economic Sciences2016ThesisMastersMBAxv, 118 leavespdfhttp://hdl.handle.net/10948/4900vital:20748EnglishNelson Mandela Metropolitan University
collection NDLTD
language English
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Educational change -- South Africa -- Johannesburg
Academic achievement -- South Africa -- Johannesburg
School improvement programs
spellingShingle Educational change -- South Africa -- Johannesburg
Academic achievement -- South Africa -- Johannesburg
School improvement programs
Gumbo, Edwell
Factors that influence a performance culture in a selected school in Johannesburg East district
description A country’s competitive advantage is linked to its educational outcomes. South Africa, as a developing country wants to shift from being a resource based economy to being a knowledge based economy. To enable such a shift, schools must be able to graduate learners who are adequately prepared for the demands of institutions of higher learning. Schools, therefore, must become centres of excellence and a culture of performance must be prevalent in schools. The National Development Plan as outlined by the National Planning Commission (2011) identified education as one of the pillars from which South Africa’s economy will be driven. However, recent studies have rated South Africa’s education system as one of the worst among middle income economies and sometimes even worse than many low-income African economies. To bridge that gap, there is a need to drive schools to be centres of excellence. This study sought to identify factors that influence a performance culture in schools. In order to achieve this objective, literature was scanned and five factors that influence a performance culture were identified (organisational school climate, teacher attitude, school managerial processes, organisational school value and organisational school structure). These factors were initially identified and used by Marcoulides and Heck (1993) in a corporate organisation and later adopted for testing in a school setting by Gomez, Marcoulides and Heck (2012). A school in Johannesburg East district was sampled through convenience sampling and data was collected through a questionnaire which was administered to the principal, teachers and staff, school governing board members, parents and alumni of the school. The total sample was 120 and a total of 94 questionnaires were returned giving a response rate of 78 percent. Descriptive statistical techniques were performed to establish the mean and standard deviation of perceptions among the respondents. Inferential statistical techniques were used to measure and ascertain reliability through Cronbach’s alpha, comparisons of responses through t-testing and ANOVA, association through correlation and hypotheses were tested through multiple regression analysis. All the variables were found to be valid and reliable. Furthermore, statistical results revealed that in the sampled school, even though all the five factors had an association among each other, only organisational school culture and organisational school value had an association to the dependent variable, performance culture. Organisational school value, however, was found to be the only variable of great influence to performance culture at the sampled school. The ideologies and activities that represent the values, therefore, influence the performance culture of a school.
author Gumbo, Edwell
author_facet Gumbo, Edwell
author_sort Gumbo, Edwell
title Factors that influence a performance culture in a selected school in Johannesburg East district
title_short Factors that influence a performance culture in a selected school in Johannesburg East district
title_full Factors that influence a performance culture in a selected school in Johannesburg East district
title_fullStr Factors that influence a performance culture in a selected school in Johannesburg East district
title_full_unstemmed Factors that influence a performance culture in a selected school in Johannesburg East district
title_sort factors that influence a performance culture in a selected school in johannesburg east district
publisher Nelson Mandela Metropolitan University
publishDate 2016
url http://hdl.handle.net/10948/4900
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