PROBLEMS OF TEACHING AND LEARNING CLOTHING AND TEXTILES EDUCATION

            Empirical  studies carried out by various authors in clothing and textiles indicated that there are hindrances to teaching and learning of the course both in secondary school and tertiary institutions in Nigeria. Their views are as discussed below.
            Lemchi (2001) stated that the problem of students poor performance in clothing and textiles could be attributed to the teacher in Nigeria, especially in secondary school or tertiary institutions, clothing and textiles is taught prophetically without serious efforts on the part of teachers to make the students proficient in the course. This implies that availability of teachers who can teach the subject is inadequate.

            Iyere (2002) stated that inadequacy of equipment in the clothing and textiles laboratories is a major problem. The implication of these inadequacies is that teachers and students concentrate on the theoretical aspect of the course.
            In some cases, the equipment such as sewing machines and clothing accessories provided is not properly taken care of by school authorities.
            Ozioko (2006) outlined some school conditions that hinder creativity in students of clothing and textiles to includes presence of large  classes where regimentation is essential instead to effective practical exercises, the belief of teachers that creative students are hard to manage and their work harder to grade; teachers strong emphasis on limitation rather than innovation.
            Discouragement of anything outside the prescribed pattern; instructional strategies that do not engage students in experimental learning but limit them observe, interpret, analyze, make and consider consequences; teachers strategies that do not contextualize learning to provide students reflection over an extended period of time; and teachers not serving as facilitators allowing students to construct their knowledge through learning application, action review and reflections.
            Inadequate funding remains a strong militating factor in the provision of study materials such as textbooks and journal materials, and teachers. In many cases, some textbooks and journals provided are out dated while others are perhaps of foreign background and may not actually meet the local needs of students and teachers in teaching and learning of clothing and textiles. Adejuyigbe and Bolaji (2011) identified the problem of teaching and learning of technological and vocational courses in Nigeria to include: teachers poor attitude towards practical aspects of vocational and technological subjects; wrong use of teaching methods by teachers in teaching, parent perception and attitude towards their children’s choice of vocational courses as career, non-provision of part time teachers or resource persons to teach vocational subject shortage and incessant transfer of vocational and technological teacher, contribute to students not understanding the subjects, inadequate provision of laboratory equipments and machineries, non continuity of technological and vocational education in Nigeria; and failure of the government, curriculum developer and policy makers to introduce vocational and technological subject into compulsory courses in the school system in Nigeria.

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