| dc.description.abstract |
This study examined errors in English language compositions of Junior High School
(JHS) 2 students in the Effutu Municipality and explored teachers’ perspectives on the
causes and solutions to these errors. A mixed-methods approach was employed,
involving quantitative analysis of student essays and qualitative interviews with
teachers of English. Using a multistage sampling technique, 210 students and six
English teachers were selected. Errors in student essays were categorised into
mechanical, grammatical, and lexical types, and analysed using frequency counts and
percentages. Thematic analysis of teacher interviews provided deeper insights into the
perceived causes of errors and suggested interventions. Findings revealed that
mechanical errors were most prevalent, accounting for 67.1% of all errors, with spelling
(25.3%), capitalization (21.1%), and punctuation (20.7%) being the most common.
Grammatical errors represented 25.1%, particularly tense (13.6%) and subject–verb
agreement errors, while lexical errors were least frequent (7.8%). Female students
(54.7%) made more severe errors than males (45.3%), especially in tense, spelling, and
punctuation. Age was also a factor: students aged 12–15 (56%) produced more
moderate to severe errors compared with those aged 16 and above (30%) and those
aged 9–11 (14%). Teachers attributed these errors to interlanguage and intralanguage
interference, limited reading exposure, and variations in parental educational
background. Suggested solutions included peer modelling, peer tutoring, guided
writing, and the use of interactive teaching and learning resources. The study
recommends integrating peer review and guided writing strategies, alongside improved
resource provision, to reduce writing errors and strengthen students’ English
proficiency in the Effutu Municipality. |
en_US |