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Scholars Journal of Arts, Humanities and Social Sciences | Volume-4 | Issue-12
Effect of Programmed Instruction on Academic Achievement in Radioactivity among Students in Kenyan High Schools
Masinde Joseph Wangila
Published: Dec. 30, 2016 |
289
205
DOI: 10.36347/sjahss.2016.v04i12.008
Pages: 1522-1528
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Abstract
This study was prompted by the urgent need for effective technology-based strategies in the teaching and learning of abstract chemistry topics whose inadequacy has led to students’ low achievement in the subject during in the annual Kenya Certificate of Secondary Education (KCSE) examinations. Focus was on Programmed Instruction, a computer-based way of teaching Chemistry, as an alternative to the conventional methods of instruction in the topic of Radioactivity. The study was carried out in Likuyani sub-county, Kakamega County, Kenya. The pretest posttest quasi-experimental research design was adopted as a model. The study sample consisted of 466 form four students and 16 Chemistry teachers. Purposive sampling was used to select participants from a target population of 2,000 students and 56 teachers. Instructional software was created, validated and used to teach students in the experimental groups, while those in the control groups were taught the same content of Radioactivity using conventional methods of instruction. Two achievement tests were used to collect raw data, one before and the other after intervention. Data were analyzed both descriptively (using mean, mean gain and standard deviation) and inferentially (using One-way Analysis of Variance) at 0.05 alpha level of statistical significance.