Draft of Synopsis AJKU
Draft of Synopsis AJKU
Draft of Synopsis AJKU
AT SECONDARY LEVEL
By
Masood ur Rehman
CONTENTS
Table of Contents
1. INTRODUCTION ................................................................................................. 2
REFERENCES ............................................................................................................ 19
1. INTRODUCTION
Physics education has become an integral part of college education. The quality
and ability to apply them. The physics teaching must be effective and innovative and
beneficial to pupils. Daniel (2012). In Pakistan, majority of the parents provides tuition
facilities for their children to improve their academic performance. There are some
reasons for which they arrange tuition for their children. Firstly, some parents are
uneducated or illiterate and secondly some parents are educated but have no time and
remain too much busy to improve their economical position. Therefore, they come late
to their homes. It is a reality that parents spent a lot of their economy on their children
education, but they are not able to look after their academic activities. Research shows
that parental involvement and participations play a fundamental role in increasing the
level of educational attainment of their children. Parents engage some tutors at home
for making up the academic deficiencies and for increasing the academic abilities of
their children. For this purpose, professional tutors are appointed for tutoring the
children at home and gradually this trend of tutoring is being converted into a tradition
rather an academic requirement (Atta, et al., 2011). Research reveals that private or
home tuition after school time plays a crucial role in strengthening and improving
student’s academic achievement (Atta, et al., 2011). Student achievement measures the
grade level has learning goals or instructional standards that educators are required to
teach. Standards are similar to a 'to-do' list that a teacher can use to guide instruction.
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1.1. STATEMENT OF THE PROBLEM
The present study will be conducted to explore the effect of private tutoring on
• To explore the reasons of the trend of private tutoring among the secondary
• The find out the effect of private tutoring on the achievements of physics at
• What are the reasons of the emerging trend of private tutoring among the
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2. LITERATURE REVIEW
for developing scientific attitudes. The learning of sciences is based upon the
Students learn best, when they are actively involved in the learning process. They need
objectives that are the part of curriculum. Physics teaching provides more opportunities
of carrying out practical work in comparison to social sciences which are practical in
nature. Basically, Physic is a very interesting subject and teaching physics involves a
lot of fun.
can facilitate students to learn and help students to get their aims. The importance of
physics teaching and how teachers teach in their classrooms is being recognized as key
importance in many ways. It is clear that teaching their classes is the most important
policies in Pakistan.
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2.2 Aims of Teaching Physics
Government of Pakistan (2006) has set the aims of the physics course at
education for remediation and enrichment purposes. Bray and Kwok (2003) change
these dimensions slightly. They remove the dimension of supplementation and consider
they change the term privateness into financial gain. Other educational models are
similar to private tutoring. Some scholars examine shadow education (Baker et al.,
2001; Baker &LeTendre, 2005; Bray, 2006; Lee, 2007; Stevenson & Baker, 1992).
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that are designed to improve a student’s chances of successfully moving through the
allocation process” (Stevenson & Baker, 1992). However, shadow education could
have some negative connotations because of the word “shadow.” In some English
speaking countries, private tuition is used instead ofprivate tutoring (Foondun, 2002;
Ireson, 2004; Smyth, 2009). Private tuition is “extra coaching in academic and
examinable subjects that is given to students outside school hours for remuneration”
and private tuition is the idea of education outside of school hours. Therefore, we
considered all learning activities out of school as private tutoring in this paper.
categories: human capital theory, status competition theory, and theories from an
increases and thus they can obtain better results (Baker, 1993). Specifically, education,
both formal and non-formal, is considered the most important action to accumulate
human capital in human capital theory. According to this perspective, private tutoring
can become a valuable method of accumulating human capital (Paik, 1999). In other
words, private tutoring is understood as an investment rather than from the perspective
People tend to invest in education to obtain higher levels of education because level of
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education is recognized as an important means to acquire an elevated social status. As
a result, the level of education has continuously increased and schools tend to compete
with each other to send more students to higher grade and prestigious schools. However,
when competition related to education intensifies in this way, parents spare nothing
when investing in their children’s education and this increases the demand for private
From an institutional standpoint, the demand for private tutoring does not
simply result from the competition to acquire a higher status. On the contrary, the
climate in which private tutoring is taken for granted encourages private tutoring (Baker
&LeTendre, 2005; Baker et al., 2001). From this perspective, members make use of
private tutoring because private tutoring is taken for granted by the institution.
• Micro factors
There are several studies that explored the determinants or drivers of private
tutoring. Based on related studies, Dang and Rogers (2008) accumulated the results in
existing studies regarding what kinds of micro and macro factors influence the demand
for private tutoring. In terms of micro factors, many studies show a consensus that the
most influential micro factors are household income, parental education, and urban
Stevenson & Baker, 1992; Tansel & Bircan, 2006; Dang, 2007b). Specifically,
students whose parents live in an urban area with higher income and education levels
have a higher probability of receiving private tutoring than their peers who live in a
rural area with parents with lower income and education levels. Similar patterns have
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In addition, a student’s grade level and household size explain the pattern of
demand for private tutoring in some countries. In Egypt and Vietnam, students in higher
grade levels, especially the ones in the last grade of their current school level or in
diploma-granting years, showed a higher demand for private tutoring (Assaad & El-
Badawy, 2004; Dang, 2007b). And in Korea, Turkey, and Vietnam, the number of
expenditures (Kim & Lee, 2010; Tansel & Bircan, 2006. However, the household size
variable is likely to be endogenous. For example, parents who have several children
may have a lower level of parental concern for their children’s education or different
benefits for people with multiple children may affect parents’ decision on how much
they spend money on private tutoring. However, since these different characteristics of
parents with multiple children are difficult to measure and unobserved, it would create
Baker et al. (2001) also argued that student academic performance is one of the
factors that determine the private tutoring expenditures of households. However, this
factor plays out differently in different countries. For example, using data from the
Third International Mathematics and Science Study (TIMSS) in 1995 for 41 countries,
students spent more money on private tutoring, whereas one-fourth of them exhibited
an opposite pattern. This implies that some countries use private tutoring as a remedial
strategy, while other countries consider it as an enrichment strategy (Baker et al, 2001;
Won, 2001). In this study, Baker et al. (2001) used the OLS estimation to explore the
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school remedial resources, and whether there is a difference between the language used
at home and the language used in school instructions. However, there were many
unobserved variables that the authors failed to control such as student academic
motivation and parent academic aspiration for their children, which make estimates
biased.
Stevenson and Baker (1992) used a logistic regression equation to find the
mentioned above, student’s gender, student curriculum track (academic track vs.
vocational track), and high school reputation seem to explain the pattern of students’
shadow education in Japan. They found that male students, students in the academic
track, and students in high schools that have a higher reputation spent more money on
• Macro factors
In addition to micro factors, the literature on private tutoring has cited several
macro factors that seem to foster the demand for private tutoring. First, Bray (1999)
economy, the demand and supply of private tutoring have substantially increased. As
the economy improves, increasing the real income of households, households would
start spending more money on their children’s education and other goods, an income
effect in economics. Bray (1999) used cases in China, Vietnam, and Eastern Europe to
show the emergence of supplementary tutoring, which previously did not exist in these
countries.
Stevenson and Baker (1992) introduced another macro factor that would affect
people’s decisions on private tutoring. If there is a tight linkage between education and
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future success in the labor market, they argued that this linkage would stimulate the
competition for more education, and thus private tutoring. Given this tight linkage, the
in higher education institutions, increases the demand for education even more
(Stevenson & Baker, 1992; Bray, 1999). In the case of Taiwan, the view is pervasive
the labor market (Lin, 1983). Also, in Hong Kong, there is high demand for shadow
performance on the exam is the most crucial factor that determines their job and salary
level (Sweeting, 1983). However, Baker et al. (2001) found the opposite result in terms
of the influence of high-stakes testing. They analyzed 41 countries using the 1994-95
TIMSS data and found no relationship between the existence of high-stakes testing and
Cultural values are also emphasized to explain the pattern of private tutoring in
many countries. Bray (1999) argued that supplementary tutoring is especially prevalent
in cultures that stress effort. Many Asian cultures, which show a high demand for
tutoring, are influenced by Confucian traditions that stress effort as a factor for future
American cultures (Rohlen & LeTendre, 1996). In addition, “many Asian cultures value
disciplined study and are both competitive and status conscious,” which influence
people’s need for private tutoring (Bray, 1999). In terms of competition, the intensive
competition among students for college entrance in Korea is analyzed as one of the
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The ineffectiveness of the public education system is found as one of the
determinants of private tutoring (Silova & Bray, 2006). In Korea, the public education
system is regulated strictly by the government especially after the introduction of the
Middle School and High School Equalization Policy (Lee & Hong, 2001). Due to this
rigidity, it is completely insulated from the market forces and local parents’ demand for
education (Kim & Lee, 2010). To meet this high demand, parents and students who are
not satisfied with education provided by the public school system find other ways to
meet their needs by participating in the private tutoring sector or by studying abroad
(Kim, 2004). Several Korean researchers have conducted studies to analyze whether
the High School Equalization Policy is one of the factors fanning the increasing demand
for private tutoring, and they argued that this policy has played a significant role (Lee
& Hong, 2001; Kim et al., 2003; Kim et al., 2003). Buchmann (1999) and Silova and
Bray (2006) expressed concerns that low pay levels and weak monitoring of teachers
in the public system may create a private tutoring market for teachers who wish to reap
more rewards from teaching outside the public schools. Private supplementary tutoring
may become more necessary in systems that are teacher-centered rather than child-
centered, and are intolerant of slow learners (Bray, 1999). However, most of these
studies are speculative and anecdotal and do not indicate the causal link between the
nature of education systems and demand for private tutoring. The degree to which mass
education is institutionalized within a nation is also related to the national use of shadow
education (Baker et al., 2001). Baker et al. (2001) used two variables as indicators for
percentage of GNP and gross enrollment ratio at elementary and secondary levels from
the UNESCO Statistical Yearbooks. This study found that the expanded provision of
mass education does not generate a higher prevalence of shadow education use. In other
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words, families in a less funded and less enrolled system use more shadow education
As explained above, many researchers have introduced these macro factors that
may determine the demand for private tutoring. However, there is little formal empirical
research to test the above-described hypotheses, so it is still uncertain whether there are
causal relationships between these macro factors and the prevalence of private tutoring.
sampling methods in the early 2000s. Later, studies began using international
Study) or PISA (Program for International Assessment) (Yang & Kim, 2003; Nam,
2008), and longitudinal data (e.g., Korea Youth Panel, Korean Education &
Employment Panel, Korean Education Longitudinal Study) (Park & Do, 2005; Lee,
2006; Kim, 2007; Lee &Im, 2009; Kang & Lee, 2010).
The results of these studies on the relation between private tutoring and
achievement were not consistent. For example Hahn et al. (2001) analyzed a survey
conducted for 11th grade students and found that the achievement of students who had
received private tutoring was not statistically significant. Moreover, the independent
effects of private tutoring were not verified even after variables such as home
backgrounds, personal characteristics, gender, and region were controlled. Kim (2007)
analyzed the Korean Education and Employment Panel and revealed that expenses paid
for private tutoring had no statistically significant influence on the results of the College
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Other studies have shown that private tutoring exerted a partial effect on
achievement, but the influence was not systematic. Lee (2002) showed that there was a
partial effect of private tutoring on English even though the effect of private tutoring
was not verified in subjects such as Korean and mathematics. Yang and Kim (2003)
in all of the studies performed by Lee (2006), Park (2010), and Lee and Im (2009). On
the other hand, Ban et al. (2005) found a negative relation between private tutoring and
tutoring, specifically the amount of time and expenses invested into private tutoring,
and academic achievement, using the Korean Education & Employment Panel. Finally,
it was shown that the influence of private tutoring on academic achievement differed
Several recent analyses for other Asian countries report mixed findings
Indonesian fourth graders, do not find any significant effect of tutoring on mathematics
or dictation results. By contrast, Dang (2007) concludes that private tutoring has a
students. Achievement, in this study, is construed as the student’s position in the school
academic ranking. An analysis by Ono (2007), applied to the ronin phenomenon (by
prepare for college entrance examinations), shows how the probability of accessing an
however, is limited by the fact that only a small set of variables referring to family
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Finally, mention should be made of the empirical analysis carried out by Banerjee et al.
attendance in Japan. Overall, they found that students who reported that they have
participated in certain types of shadow education during high school years showed a
higher probability of attending universities in their first year following graduation from
high school. For students in the first year out of high school, practice examinations and
probability, which reflects the remedial character of this form of private tutoring in
Japan. In addition, after-school classes had only a small and insignificant effect on
attendance, probably because students in better high schools who tend to be high-
performing use their high school’s after-school program. For students in the second
year out of high school, attending special tutoring school increased the probability of
entering college by 80 percent. However, using the logistic regression, Stevenson and
Baker (1992) failed to remove the bias caused by selectivity of private tutoring
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2.2 PREVIOUS RESEARCHES
tutoring and academic achievement influenced each other through a multivariate latent
growth model. The study identified not only how changes in the private tutoring
measures what kind of changes in private tutoring and academic achievement had
emerged over time. The detailed study results are as follows. First, the analysis of time
invested in private tutoring showed that the higher the grades, the greater were the
amount of time invested in private tutoring in the case of Korean language study. On
the other hand, the results showed that in the case of English and mathematics, the
higher the grades, the lesser was the amount of time invested in private tutoring.
Second, private tutoring and academic achievement were all in a linear relationship.
Third, it was shown that the time invested in private tutoring and academic achievement
Fifty students of class 09 were selected as sample of the study. Sample students were
divided into two groups i.e. control group and experimental group by equating them on
a pre-test. Each group was composed of 25 students. Students of the experimental group
were engaged in tuition for two hours after school time. The study was experimental in
nature therefore, “The pre-test-post-test Equivalent Groups Design” was used for the
collection of data. Statistical tools i.e. the mean, standard deviation and differences of
means were computed for each group. Significance of difference between the mean
scores of both the experimental and control groups on the variable of pre-test and post
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test scores was tested at 0.05 levels by applying t-test. After statistical analysis of the
data, the researchers concluded that there is significant positive effect of private tuition
level. Based on the findings, it was recommended that parents should arrange private
tuition for their children to move up their achievement level in subject of mathematics.
Ünal (2010) estimated the effect of private tutoring (dersane) in Turkey in 15-
year-old students with parents in four occupational categories. Analyzing PISA (2006)
data, found that the effect of private tutoring in math was relatively strong for all four
occupational strata: one hour of tutoring is worth between 12 and 15 points on the math
achievement test, and this return to investment is constant across types. Berberoğlu
some background information on the two major national examinations and three
different kinds of tutoring. The study described how it analysed whether attending
way of multiple linear regression analysis, their study sought to evaluate whether the
impact of private tutoring varies in different subject areas, taking into account several
interest in and perception of academic success. In terms of subject areas, the results
indicate that while private tutoring does have a positive impact on academic
performance in mathematics and Turkish language, this is not the case in natural
sciences. However, as evidenced by the effect sizes, these impacts are rather small
academic success, high school graduation fields of study, high school cumulative grade
While the authors point out that more research on the impact of further important
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variables needs to be done, their view is that school seems to be an important factor for
study cluster sampling technique used to select the sample of the study. Two classes
were selected from each grade and conduct interview randomly from the participants.
Mori (2015) conducted a study to identify the factors that effects the students’
participation in the supplementary tutoring in the United State. Three research questions
included 150 schools 35 students were selected from each school from each country
Burberoglu (2014) studied the impact of high school students’ private tutoring
results showed that the private tutoring does have positive effect On students academic
performance in mathematics, there two factors involve to pass the Higher Education
Examination, the students interest, characteristics and perception of the success. The
during practical assessment s, of the tutors and tutees. The sample of this study is the
final year science students. The results showed that there was significantly great
academic achievement compared students that were tutored and the group of peer that
were not tutored. This study demonstrates that peer tutoring can enhance the
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Guill (2014) conducted a study on effectiveness of private tutoring on
achievement. This study analyzed research questions to found, does private tutoring
improve students’ academic achievements from their parents’ point of view and their
own point of view. Does private tutoring improve students’ marks and grades in the test
at school.
descriptive design. This study utilized the both qualitative and quantitative approaches.
The finding of this study is the all private tuitions and home tuitions influence the
pupils’ academic achievements. The study found that the home-based tuition great
influence on the pupils then the school-based tuition. This study also found that the
private tuition influence only few pupils who take home tuition or private tuition.
A conclusion can be drawn from the studied literature that to find out the effect
However, there is a vast literature available on the impact of private tutoring on students
of secondary school mathematics. No evidence was found that this type of study has
been done in context of Physics students at secondary level. Moreover, this study will
Kashmir. To conduct the study, firstly a pilot test will be administered to draw two
groups from the sample. One group will be taken having students who take private
tutoring of physics either as home tuition or in private tuition centres. Another group
will be taken having students who do not take any private tuition of physics during off
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