INFLUENCE OF DISSATISFIERS AND MOTIVATORS ON LEVEL OF JOB SATISFACTION OF TEMPORARY AGRICULTURE TEACHERS IN PUBLIC SECONDARY SCHOOLS IN HOMA-BAY COUNTY, KENYA
No Thumbnail Available
Date
2023-10
Authors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Egerton University
Abstract
Globally, teacher job satisfaction has been positively related to school reform issues such as
participative decision-making, teacher growth and empowerment, collegiality, and workplace
conditions which in turn improves the school effectiveness as a whole. A satisfied employee is
more motivated and shows commitment to duty. Job dissatisfaction on the other hand has been
associated with absenteeism, poor collegial relations and low motivation. In Kenya, labour
turnover in public secondary schools among agriculture teachers has been common. This
situation could be related to presence of dissatisfiers and absence of some motivators leading
to lack of job satisfaction among these teachers. In Homa-Bay County however, there was little
that was known about the level of job satisfaction of temporary agriculture teachers that schools
hired to alleviate teacher shortage and the dissatisfiers and motivators that influenced their job
satisfaction. This study therefore sought to analyse the dissatisfiers and motivators that
influenced job satisfaction of temporary agriculture teachers in public secondary schools in
Homa-Bay County, Kenya. The study employed a descriptive survey design. The target
population was 316 agriculture teachers employed by the Board of Management (BOM) who
were in service during the study period. Proportionate stratified random sampling was used to
select 176 teachers. A questionnaire with closed ended items was used to collect data. It was
given to two experts from the Department of Agricultural Education and Extension, Egerton
University and two agriculture teachers from the technical department at Obera secondary
school to assist with the validation. Data collection was preceded by a pilot test with 29
temporary agriculture teachers from Migori County, whose analysis resulted in a reliability
coefficient of 0.83. Data was analysed using descriptive and inferential statistics on SPSS
version 22. Inferential statistic (linear regression) was used to test hypotheses at 0.05α. The
study found that 84.6 percent of Temporary Agriculture Teachers in Homa-Bay County were
satisfied with their jobs. Among the dissatisfiers, only work condition was found to have
independently contributed statistically (β = .398, t = 2.973, p˂ .05), and significantly to
temporary agriculture teachers’ job satisfaction. The five predictor variables however jointly
contributed statistically (R2=0.09, F=2.976, p˂ .05), and significantly to their job satisfaction.
Of the motivators, recognition independently contributed statistically (β =-.385, t=-2.038, p˂
.05), and significantly to temporary agriculture teachers’ job satisfaction. Predictors of
motivators however, jointly did not contribute statistically (R2=0.048, F=1.525, p˃ .05), and
significantly to job satisfaction of temporary agriculture teachers. The researcher recommends
maintenance of good work condition and recognition to sustain higher levels of job satisfaction
of Temporary Agriculture Teachers