ABSTRACT
The research work was aimed at examining teachers perceptions of government take over of schools from voluntary agencies in Etsako Edo State. Seven worker hypotheses were formulated and tested. Sixty questionnaires were distributed to a sample of selected teachers who completed the questionnaires which the researcher there on analyzed by means of percentages. From the analysis, it was discovered that while government take over was initially applauded in that is gave equal opportunity and accessibility to formal education to all, and resulted in the formulation of a uniform curriculum, the question of teacher welfare employment and conditions of service still remained largely unresolved, contrastively, moral laxity, depreciation of standard and quality and the dilapidation of structures and equipment were the consequences of government control of schools. The study therefore shows the need for the government to return schools to voluntary agencies grant aids to the school and ensure that government policies and guidelines are complied with in the schools through regular inspection to curb excesses in the areas of admission, teacher’s employment and welfare, and the course contents of the schools curricular.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Chapter One          Â
Introduction/ background of study
Statement of problems
Purpose of the study
Scope of delimitation of study
Significance of the study
Research questions
Research hypothesis
Definition of terms
Chapter Two         Â
Literature review
The need for education
A brief survey of missionary
Activities and their impact on education before the takeover
A review of peoples perceptions of the effect of the take over
Chapter Three       Â
Method of study
Design of study
Research population
The sample
Research instrument
Method of data collection
Method of data analysis
Chapter Four         Â
Data analysis: interpretation and findings
Introduction
Findings
Chapter Five          Â
Summary, conclusions and recommendations
Summary
Conclusion
Recommendation
Bibliography          Â
Appendix    Â
CHAPTER ONE
INTRODUCTION
BACKGROUND OF THE STUDY
Etsako , as a geopolitical entity comprises three local government areas; Etsako  East, Etsako  West and Etsako  Central with their headquarters at Agenebode Auchi and Fugar, respectively. The entire area is occupied by the Etsako  speaking people of Edo State, Nigeria. The three local government areas are made up of clans consisting of Auchi, Uzairae, South Ibie, Anwai, Aviele and Jagbe Clans in Etsako  west local government area and Avianwu, south Uneme and Experi clans in Etsako  central local government area.
Etsako  land mass is on the north eastern part of Edo state. Approximately between latitude 7025 and 6045 east. It shares common boundaries with Akoko Edo, Owan East and Esan North East local government area in Edo state, Kogi state to the north and the River Niger across to Idah in Kogi State.
Before the advent of the Europeans in the later part of the 19th century, there existed a defined informal system of education where vocational, moral and proper housekeeping ethics were taught. As early as the 19th century, Islam had filtered from Idah in Bendel state across the River Niger and Okene Via Okpella, into this area, however, their presence did not subsist as Christianity gained ascending instead. However, one Islamic sect the Quadirriyya brotherhood, an academic or scholarly sect of Muslims founded pockets of study centres in areas such as Auchi, South Ibie, Aviele, Agbede e.t.c.
Where the Quaran was memorized solely for religious purpose. The only landmark educational institute which still stands as a monumental evidence of Islamic contribution to formal education in this area is the present Momodu college, Agbede, then known as Asarudeen college.
The Christian missionaries, consisting the Catholics, Methodists and Anglicans, in tandem with European merchants established a firm foothold in this area. As it was in other parts of Nigerian evangelism was the sole aim of the missionaries as commerce was for the merchants. In this dual transaction, the need to communication barriers necessitated the establishment of schools by the various missions to teach the three “RS” of the reading, writing and arithmetic. They aimed at training interpreters and clerks for their different faiths and administration for economic conveniences.
Erhagbe (1975: 1-3) wrote about the activities of catholic missionaries in Uzairue clan in Etsako West local government area. According to him, the first missionaries to set foot on Etsako  soil were of French and German origin he noted that they came into the religion in 1833. their first settlement, according to him and Asoera, was at Ivianokpodi near Agenebode in Weppa wanno of Etsako  east local government area.
Asoera (1976) an eye witness of the early activities of the catholic missionaries in Etsako  asserted that the mission built and maintained elementary schools and colleges in this area. Eleta (1965:2), also stated that the catholic mission established and financed three boys secondary schools, namely; St. Peters college, Agenebode, our lady’s Fatima college in Auchi, and St. Johns college in Fugar. A girl secondary school St. Angela’s college, Uzairue was also established.
However, the Methodist and the Anglicans established more elementary schools in ever accessible village in this region.
Thus, the advent of formal education in Etsako  comprising the present local government area of Etsako  west, Etsako  east and Etsako  central in Edo state.
At this stage, it is pertinent to briefly examine the goals and content of the educational package of these missionaries or voluntary agencies as they came to be known. The focus of their curriculum was to train Nigerians as evangelists or catechist to help in propagating their denominational doctrines.
Working in tandem with the European merchants, the missionaries also aimed at producing low skilled workers to assist them in their commercial and administrative activities. The entire educational system was parochial and self serving and so did not meet the needs of the people. as in Nigeria, between 1842, which marks the beginning of formal education and 1916 when the first education code was enacted with a provision for the government grants in aid to voluntary agencies, there was little or nothing to reflect the needs of the people in planning and execution of the curriculum in these mission schools; However, by 1925, the Phelps stokes commission, which was set up in 1920 to examine ways of making education relevant to the aims, aspirations and culture of the people, cae up with a memorandum of education with the following recommendations.
i.             education should be adopted to local conditions.
ii.                    Elementary education should be provided for both boys and girls.
iii.                  Secondary education should be diversified to include technical, grammar, and vocational education.
iv.                  To make provision for institutes of higher education.
To this end, by 1943, the Elliot and Abby commissions were inaugurated to fashion a blueprint on higher education in Nigeria.
Inspite of the above attempts, educational activities of the agencies were still circumscribed and restricted to maintaining private interests and standards and to serve the whims and caprices of the colonial masters. Consequently at independence in 1960, the need to draft a more practical, relevant and cost effective curriculum became imperative. This led to the conveyance of a curriculum national conference between the 8th and 12th of September 1969 in Lagos. At the end of the conference, a communiqué christened “A philosophy of Nigeria education” was issued. To implement the communiqué the Nigerian education research and development council (NERDC) was set up to organize seminars and workshops to further deliberate on the recommendation of the conference. The result of these efforts was the birth of the national policy on education (NPE) in 1977. this document was reversed twice in 1981 and 1998, respectively. The NPE, thus became the curriculum documents which encompasses the basic goods for achieving, maintaining and adopting self reliant and home grown education to both personal and national needs in sharp contrast to the parochial, religious oriented, colonial tainted, self serving an fixated curriculum as was been operated by the voluntary agencies spread across the entity called Nigeria. Little wonder then that prior to the emergence of the national policy on education in 1977, the federal government pronounced the take over of schools from voluntary agencies in 1973 and provided legal security for states to do same. Consequently, the Midwestern government (later Bendel state and now Edo and Delta states) announced the take over of both primary and secondary schools owned by voluntary agencies.
RESEARCH HYPOTHESIS
The hypotheses tested in this study are:
H01: the takeover of schools brought about equal opportunity and accessibility to formal education for all children.
H02: the take over brought about uniformity in terms of curriculum development and implementation.
H03: the take over that brought about teachers job satisfaction.
H04: the take over brought about the eradication of discrimination in terms of employment and condition of service.
H05: the takeover did not result in moral decadence among students in the schools.
H07: the take over did not result in increased and sustained funding of the schools.
DEFINITION OF TERMS
Below are the contextual meanings of the keywords using in this study.
1.    Voluntary agencies: they are organized religious and non governmental bodies, which established and owned in Nigeria.
2.    Perception: These refer to the way one observes or view something or an issue. In this context, it refers to one opinion about the issue of take over of the school from voluntary agencies.
3.    Take over: this implies to assume total control of something, in this case, it refers to the government assumption of the total asserts and liabilities of all schools belonging to voluntary agencies in Etsako  west, East, and central local government area of Edo state in 1973
4.    Teachers: it refers to those teachers who were active players in the education system before and after the take over and the products of the system who later became teachers themselves.
5.    Quadiriyya: an academic brotherhood of Muslims formed by Quadiri. It believes that the best way to spread Islam is through literacy education.
This material content is developed to serve as a GUIDE for students to conduct academic research
TEACHERS PERCEPTIONS OF THE EFFECTS OF GOVERNMENT TAKE OVER OF SCHOOLS FROM VOLUNTARY AGENCIES>
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