Lecturers’, Students’, and Administrators’ Perception of Discipline in the Faculty of Education, University of Cape Coast, Ghana

This study examined some dimensions of discipline as perceived by lecturers, administrators, and students in the Faculty of Education, University of Cape Coast. It sought to find out whether differences exist in their perceptions regarding the importance of discipline, forms of indiscipline, and cau...

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Main Authors: Kwame Bediako Asare, Ben Adzrolo
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2013-06-01
Series:SAGE Open
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/2158244013494208
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spelling doaj-c825d8a516b24db5b1aa3a6ae582ab682020-11-25T03:21:38ZengSAGE PublishingSAGE Open2158-24402013-06-01310.1177/215824401349420810.1177_2158244013494208Lecturers’, Students’, and Administrators’ Perception of Discipline in the Faculty of Education, University of Cape Coast, GhanaKwame Bediako Asare0Ben Adzrolo1 University of Cape Coast, Ghana University of Cape Coast, GhanaThis study examined some dimensions of discipline as perceived by lecturers, administrators, and students in the Faculty of Education, University of Cape Coast. It sought to find out whether differences exist in their perceptions regarding the importance of discipline, forms of indiscipline, and causes of indiscipline in the Faculty of Education. We adopted a cross-sectional descriptive survey for the study involving 358 students, 11 lecturers, and 8 administrators. A customized Likert-type questionnaire was used for data collection to help answer the research questions and hypothesis formulated to guide the study. We found that there was no statistically significant difference in the perceptions lecturers, students, and administrators hold about disciplinary issues in the Faculty of Education. The need for university authorities to continuously use learning dialogue to engage students in decision making was highlighted so as to continue to achieve and enjoy a conducive environment for learning—as efforts are made to focus on students’ learning.https://doi.org/10.1177/2158244013494208
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Kwame Bediako Asare
Ben Adzrolo
spellingShingle Kwame Bediako Asare
Ben Adzrolo
Lecturers’, Students’, and Administrators’ Perception of Discipline in the Faculty of Education, University of Cape Coast, Ghana
SAGE Open
author_facet Kwame Bediako Asare
Ben Adzrolo
author_sort Kwame Bediako Asare
title Lecturers’, Students’, and Administrators’ Perception of Discipline in the Faculty of Education, University of Cape Coast, Ghana
title_short Lecturers’, Students’, and Administrators’ Perception of Discipline in the Faculty of Education, University of Cape Coast, Ghana
title_full Lecturers’, Students’, and Administrators’ Perception of Discipline in the Faculty of Education, University of Cape Coast, Ghana
title_fullStr Lecturers’, Students’, and Administrators’ Perception of Discipline in the Faculty of Education, University of Cape Coast, Ghana
title_full_unstemmed Lecturers’, Students’, and Administrators’ Perception of Discipline in the Faculty of Education, University of Cape Coast, Ghana
title_sort lecturers’, students’, and administrators’ perception of discipline in the faculty of education, university of cape coast, ghana
publisher SAGE Publishing
series SAGE Open
issn 2158-2440
publishDate 2013-06-01
description This study examined some dimensions of discipline as perceived by lecturers, administrators, and students in the Faculty of Education, University of Cape Coast. It sought to find out whether differences exist in their perceptions regarding the importance of discipline, forms of indiscipline, and causes of indiscipline in the Faculty of Education. We adopted a cross-sectional descriptive survey for the study involving 358 students, 11 lecturers, and 8 administrators. A customized Likert-type questionnaire was used for data collection to help answer the research questions and hypothesis formulated to guide the study. We found that there was no statistically significant difference in the perceptions lecturers, students, and administrators hold about disciplinary issues in the Faculty of Education. The need for university authorities to continuously use learning dialogue to engage students in decision making was highlighted so as to continue to achieve and enjoy a conducive environment for learning—as efforts are made to focus on students’ learning.
url https://doi.org/10.1177/2158244013494208
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