The Impact of Class Size Reduction on Student Achievement and Teacher Morale in Gambian Senior Secondary Schools West Coast Region
Authors
School of Education, Huazhong University of Science and Technology Wuhan Hubei Province P.R China (430074) (China)
School of Education, Huazhong University of Science and Technology Wuhan Hubei Province P.R China (430074) (China)
University of Education the Gambia, West Africa (Gambia)
Central China Normal University/ School of Foreign Languages / Hubei- Wuhan P.R China (China)
School of Education, Huazhong University of Science and Technology College of Public Administration Wuhan Hubei Province P.R China (430074) (China)
Demba SM Yabou Registrar university of Education the Gambia (China)
Article Information
DOI: 10.51584/IJRIAS.2026.11060088
Subject Category: EDUCATIONAL MANAGEMENT AND ADMINISTRATION
Volume/Issue: 11/6 | Page No: 1064-1075
Publication Timeline
Submitted: 2026-05-31
Accepted: 2026-05-05
Published: 2026-06-24
Abstract
This study employed an explanatory sequential mixed-methods design to investigate the impact of class size reduction on student academic achievement and teacher morale in Gambian senior secondary schools. The quantitative phase used a quasi-experimental, cross-sectional differential design with 360 Grade 11 science students and a correlational predictive design with 80 science teachers. The qualitative phase involved semi-structured interviews and classroom observations with 12 purposively selected teachers. The Integrated Science Achievement Test (ISAT) and the Science Teacher Morale and Efficacy Scale (STMES) were administered following rigorous pilot testing (ISAT KR20 = 0.84; STMES subscale α = 0.79–0.86). Independent samples t-tests revealed that students in reduced classes (≤35 students) significantly outperformed those in large classes (>55 students) on total ISAT scores (t(358)=9.85, p<.001, Cohen’s d=1.04), representing a very large educational effect size. Multiple regression analyses showed that class size was a strong negative predictor of instructional efficacy (β=0.492, p<.001) and workload satisfaction (β=0.614, p<.001), and a strong positive predictor of professional burnout (β=0.685, p<.001). Qualitative thematic analysis identified three major themes: abandonment of constructivist laboratory inquiry, excessive continuous assessment burdens, and chronic discipline problems leading to low instructional self-efficacy. The study concludes that classroom overcrowding constitutes a critical structural bottleneck undermining science education quality and teacher wellbeing in The Gambia. Recommendations include strategic infrastructural expansion, strict enrolment caps of 40 students per science section, differentiated teaching assignments with grading support, and targeted professional development in large-class pedagogy.
Keywords
Class size reduction, student achievement, teacher morale, overcrowded classrooms, Gambian secondary education
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