Abstract:
These notwithstanding Kirui (2012) posits that the importance of supervision can 
only be realized if the supervisor and the system of supervision are effective. A lazy or 
unmotivated supervisor exerts a demoralizing effect on the teachers he supervises and 
causes the system to lose its positive effects on the school environment. An ineffective 
supervisor turns the instructional supervision exercise into a one-off event rather than a 
programmed progressive process (Abdille, 2012). Haileselasse (2004) in a study of the 
status of professional development programmes in Addis Ababa city administration 
opined that the attitude of supervisors is perceived to be directly correlated to the 
performance of teachers. 
In Ghana, some researchers have put forward analytical analysis on the 
instructional supervision effectiveness or lack of it. Afolabi and Loto (2008) posits that 
the present system of engaging circuit supervision puts unnecessary pressure on teachers 
and take teacher attentions away from classroom activities for days till the period of 
supervision is over, thereby refocusing the objective of supervision from improving 
learning outcomes to satisfying circuit supervisors. Amuzu-Kpeglo (2005) in his treatise 
on approaches to administrative theory in education criticized the effectiveness of 
supervisory methods employed by circuit supervisors in executing their supervisory roles 
and encouraged a move from external supervision to continuous internal supervision by 
school managements. Afful-Broni (2004) added to this analytical debate, positing that 
circuit supervisor supervision methods were deficient in influencing instructional quality 
and teacher attitudes positively. Baffour-Awuah (2011) in a published article on 
effectiveness of supervision in primary schools in Ghana, rejects these criticism, asserting 
University of Education, Winneba http://ir.uew.edu.gh
strongly that the Ghanaian supervision system is generally effective, needing just a little 
fine-tuning here and there to perfect it. 
Despite these intellectual debates, actual studies on the effectiveness of 
supervision in Ghanaian government schools have been few, with most of them focusing 
on basic and tertiary levels. This study seeks to examine the effectiveness of supervision 
of instructions in the Junior High School (JHS) level using a case study of the Dichemso 
and Ashtown circuit in the Kumasi Metropolis.
 
Description:
A Project Report in the Department of Educational Leadership, Faculty of 
Education and Communication Sciences, submitted to the School of Graduate 
Studies, University of Education, Winneba, in partial fulfilment of the requirements 
for award of the Master of Arts (Educational Leadership) degree 
AUGUST, 2016