DefinePK hosts the largest index of Pakistani journals, research articles, news headlines, and videos. It also offers chapter-level book search.
Title: EXAMINATION OF THE PERCEPTION LEVEL OF TEACHERS ABOUT THE PROMOTERS TO CREATIVITY IN PAKISTAN: SEEING THROUGH THE DEMOGRAPHIC DIFFERENCES OF GENDER, AREA AND MARITAL STATUS
Authors: Muhammad Kamran, Tanzeela Arooj, Muhammad Amjid
Journal: Pakistan Journal of Humanities and Social Sciences Research
Publisher: Women University Mardan
Country: Pakistan
Year: 2021
Volume: 4
Issue: 2
Language: English
The main objective of the study was to know the level of perception of teachers about the promoters that promote creativity among the students. Further, the teachers’ level of perception were compared regarding demographic variables of gender, area and marital status. The design of the study was quantitative in nature and used the survey method to accomplish the above-mentioned objectives. The target population was all the schoolteachers in Pakistan at various levels. For data collection, an online questionnaire on social media platforms (WhatsApp, Emails and Facebook) was uploaded which was filled online by 400 school-teachers randomly. It must be noted that the original questionnaire was constructed, validated and made reliable by the Sarsani (1999) in India. The original questionnaire had 17 items with 5-point Likert scale but the current researchers just took (adopted) 11 items from the original questionnaire without changing a single word. The current researchers sought the Cronbach Alpha Reliability Coefficient to see if the adopted questionnaire is reliable in Pakistani context. The data were analyzed through SPSS by using descriptive and inferential statistics. The results revealed that Pakistani teachers had a high level of perception about the promoters that promote creativity in students. The gender and area had no significant differences while the marital status had significant differences regarding the teachers’ level of perception about the promoters to creativity. The results were discussed in light of past literature and recommendations were given.
Loading PDF...
Loading Statistics...