The Influence of Clinical Supervision on the Instructional Competence of Secondary School Teachers

Bello, Amelie T. and Olaer, John H. (2020) The Influence of Clinical Supervision on the Instructional Competence of Secondary School Teachers. Asian Journal of Education and Social Studies, 12 (3). pp. 42-50. ISSN 2581-6268

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Abstract

Aims: To determine the influence of clinical supervision of department heads on the instructional competence of secondary school teachers.

Study Design: Descriptive-correlational research design.

Place and Duration of Study: Digos City National High School during the School Year 2018-2019.

Methodology: Respondents were the eight (8) school heads and one hundred seventy eight (178) teachers who were permanently employed at Digos City National High School during the School Year 2018-2019. Complete enumeration was used in the identification of department heads while simple random sampling for the teacher respondents. Mean, Pearson r and Multiple Regression were the statistical tools used to treat the gathered data.

Results: The department heads had a high level of clinical supervision in terms of pre-observation, observation/analysis and strategy post-observation conference/analysis. Similarly, teachers a had high level of instructional competence of teachers. This result signified a very strong positive relationship between the two variables which indicated that about 75.80% on the variance of instructional competence can be attributed by the variation of the level of clinical observation. Regression analysis further entailed that clinical supervision significantly influenced the instructional competence of teachers.

Conclusion: The significant influence of clinical supervision on teachers’ instructional competence implies that the more teachers are mentored, the better teachers they would become. Thus, it was recommended clinical supervision in schools shall be constantly monitored and implemented so as to improve competence of teachers in the teaching learning process.

Item Type: Article
Subjects: STM Digital Library > Social Sciences and Humanities
Depositing User: Unnamed user with email support@stmdigitallib.com
Date Deposited: 15 Mar 2023 11:18
Last Modified: 12 Sep 2024 05:56
URI: http://archive.scholarstm.com/id/eprint/602

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