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INFLUENCE OF AGE FALSIFICATION ON ADJUSTMENT OF TEACHER RETIREES IN NSUKKA EDUCATION ZONE ENUGU STATE

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ABSTRACT

The study examined the Influence of Age Falsification on Adjustment of Teacher Retirees in Nsukka Education Zone, Enugu State. Ex-post-facto research design was adopted  for the  study  .A  sample of 125  teacher retirees  was  randomly selected from 257 teacher retirees in Nsukka Education Zone. The study was guided by four research questions and two hypotheses. Influence of Age Falsification on Adjustment of Teacher Retirees Questionnaire (IAFATRQ) was used for data collection. To ensure the validity of the instrument, the instrument was subjected to face validation by three experts, two from the Department of Science Education and one from Educational Foundations. The reliability index of 0.89 was obtained. The data generated from the study were analyzed using mean and standard deviation. The result of the study showed that gender was not a significant factor on age falsification and psychological adjustment of teacher retirees. The findings also showed that gender influences age falsification and social  adjustment  of  male  and  female  teacher  retirees.  The  findings  further reveled  that  gender  was  not  a  significant  factor  on  age  falsification  and economic  adjustment  of  teacher  retirees.  Based  on  the.  findings, recommendations were made which included that government should pay the retirees their benefits immediately after retirement without stress, for this will encourage them not to have negative mind towards retirement.

CHAPTER ONE

INTRODUCTION

Background of the Study

Retirement refers to the period of one’s life after the person has stopped work at a particular age.  Stonier (2004) defined retirement as withdrawal from office or official position or to give up one’s business or occupation.  Olusakin (2001) defines retirement as a situation in which a person leaves a job he has been used to in order to face another stage in life whereby he now settles down to establish his own private business or job which he does at his own convenience. In this context, retirement is a period of change in one’s life which could be enjoyable for some people and frustrating for others.  However, this is dependent on the way the person involved sees this situation.   So, while some retirees acknowledge that retirement is reducing the number of work hours, from full time to part time, some others see it as working on a voluntary basis or ceasing from all work activities paid or unpaid.

Retirement is of two major types.   These are voluntary and mandatory retirements. Voluntary retirement according to Omeje (2002), is a situation whereby the retiree feels like resting after some years in service while the mandatory retirement is the type stipulated by government policy for all civil servants with emphasis on age limit and years of service, whichever one any intending teacher retiree is involved, it needs proper preparation ahead of this

change in life.  In developed countries of the world, a worker has to sometimes

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make   material,   social   and   psychological   preparations   as   he   approaches retirement, unlike in developing countries like Nigeria where little or no preparations are made (Nwafor, 2002).

In Nigeria, some of the workers especially the teachers had no pre- knowledge of what retirement entails and because of this, some tend to undertake voluntary retirement.   Some who are aware of the difficulties associated with retirement, like delays in processing and payment of retirement benefits, try to avert retirement; hence, according to Jarvis (2006), as a result of the inability of the  tiers  of  the  government  to  implement  enabling  legislation  on  retirees’ pension, the serving civil servants resort to falsification of age.     In the same context, Ochiagha (1999) asserts that teachers and other civil servants falsify their age to avert impending frustration, anxiety, fear, low esteem and penury arising from retirement.   Falsification by Grangaard (2000) is the action of falsifying information or a theory or the act of producing something that lacks authenticity with the intent to commit fraud. Consequently, age falsification involves the fraudulent altering of one’s age. In the word of Idowu (1988) age falsification is the act of altering documents regarding to one’s age fraudulently to avoid being retired.   Similarly, Nwafor (2002) asserts that falsification of real age in variance with biological age has become a disturbing phenomenon. According to Amina (2008), it becomes more glaring when one considers the fact that those who are supposed to be preparing for their retirement falsify their age with  impunity  and  waste  away  in  office.    According  to  Ani  (2000),  these

particular set of workers are always young on paper but appear old and weak. All these as stated earlier are aimed at avoiding the hardships retirees experience in our society today.

For instance,  the Nigeria  Union of  Teachers (NUT) in  her bulletin of March, 1994 exposed how retired teachers experience hardship, anxiety, income problems and other pathetic conditions on retirement.  The effect of this is that those who are yet to retire use every means available to carry out falsification of record of their age, records of service and sometimes plead with and bribe the officers responsible for retirement matters not to enlist them among those due to retire.  It is alleged that most teachers feel very uncomfortable when getting close to retirement as they have to wait for a long time under various hardships before receiving their retirement benefits (Eyaro, 2005).

Retirees are expected to adjust to these prevailing circumstances but they fail to do so due to long stay in service resulting from falsification of records and age.  Adjustment in this context involves one’s struggle to get along or survive in his social environment.   Lazarus (2003) sees adjustment as a man’s efforts successfully or unsuccessfully to  deal with life in the  face of  environmental demands.   This change in environment therefore becomes instrumental to adjustment.   Consequently, this involves psychological, social, economic and health adjustments.

Psychological adjustment involves the way retirees relate with people around their environment and their feelings about life before their retirement.

According  to Kelves (2000),  psychological  adjustment refers to how retirees relate  well  with  people around  them,  thinking and  communicating positively about life after service.  A well socially adjusted retiree is one that relates well with his family, enjoys and cherishes any support given to him, sees himself as somebody who would contribute to the development of his community and ready to take leadership role among his kinsmen at retirement.

On the other hand, a well economically adjusted teacher retiree is normally one who planned well ahead of retirement by way of savings and putting in place income generating investments or ventures before retirement.  It is obvious that a serving teacher who leaves the service healthy and vibrant would achieve a well and balanced adjustment to the challenges of retirement life.   However, it is worrisome that many of them play games as retirement approaches.

In Nsukka Education Zone, it is observed that there is large number of retirees and majority of these teacher retirees look so devastated and aged shortly after retirement from the service.  On the other hand, some do not look healthy enough as to engage in other businesses to support life, while some cease to communicate freely with neighbours and withdraw completely from attending social activities.   Worse still, many suffer high blood pressure, stroke or other related diseases and die shortly after their retirement to the extent that people around begin to wonder what their problem might be.

It is pertinent to note that age and records falsification by primary school teachers and their attendant effects are not restricted to only male teachers or to

the females.  Both sides participate freely in this act while there is no parity in their  psychological  and  economic  adjustments.  This  study  will  also  look  at gender differences of teachers’ age falsification and psychological adjustment. Gender is a range of characteristic used to distinguish between male and female, particularly in the cases of men and women, masculine and feminine attributes assigned to them. Gender is a social construct, it is not biologically determined but  a  concept  equivalent  to  race  or  class  (Offorma,  2004).  This  definition suggests that gender is socially or culturally constructed characteristics and role, which are associated with males and females in society. It is different from sex which is a biological distinction in appearance (morphology) and function (physiology)   as   well  as   reproductive   contributions   of   men   and   women. According to Lee (2001) gender is ascribed attribute that differentiates feminine from masculine.

It  is  on  this  backdrop  that  the  researcher  developed  the  interest  to investigate the influence of age falsification on adjustment of teacher retirees in Nsukka Education Zone.

Statement of the Problem

Presently, the average civil servant, including teachers depend on their monthly salaries to cater for their basic needs and that of their families in and after service.  What is worrisome at present is that while workers in some of the well organized private sectors of the economy perceive retirement as something good and look forward to the day they would retire, those in the public sector –

teachers – dread retirement and seem to embark on age falsification with no regard to typical biological changes that catch up with normal process of ageing. It appears that the sole aim of their action is to prolong their stay in service.  The result seems to be that many of them expire in classroom by staying beyond the age limit of 60 years.   This singular action of teachers creates a monumental difficulty in planning for proper and adequate adjustment measures.

The problem of this study has to do with some negative behaviours of teacher retirees like anxiety devastation, loneliness, withdrawal from social activities, regular health problems, to sudden death.   Hence, because of these problems, there is need to investigate the influence of age falsification on adjustment of teacher retirees.

Purpose of the Study

The main purpose of this study was to investigate the influence of age falsification on adjustment of teacher retirees in Nsukka Education Zone. Specifically, the study seeks to:

1.   Identify  the  extent  to  which  age  falsification  affects  psychological adjustment of male and female teacher retirees in Nsukka Education Zone.

2.   Examine the extent to which age falsification affects social adjustment of male and female teacher retirees in Nsukka Education Zone.

3.   Examine the extent to which age falsification affects economic adjustment of male and female teacher retirees in Nsukka Education Zone.

4.   Examine the extent to which age falsification affects health adjustment of male and female teacher retirees in Nsukka Education Zone.

Significance of the Study

The study has both theoretical and practical significance.  The findings of this study will be significant in various ways.  It will help in providing empirical information  in  investigating  and  explaining  age  falsification  among  primary school teachers.   Theoretically, this study is anchored  on the disengagement theory which is one of the earliest theories on retirement and adjustment.   The theorists do  not  look  at  retirees in  a  positive  way,  rather  they  see  them  as unfortunate set of people.  As a result, teachers with this view do not make proper pre-retirement preparations and the fear induces them to falsify their records of service including their age to avert retirement.

Practically, this study will be beneficial to a number of individuals among who are serving teachers, retired teachers, government, sociologists, counselors and non-governmental organizations.

The findings of this study will enable the serving teachers understand the effect of age falsification on adjustment of retirees.  The insight will make them avoid fraudulent changes of their ages and service records.  This will be achieved through pre-retirement counseling.

To the retired teachers, the result of the findings of this study will enable them  to  be  concretized  about  their  retirement  problems  and  make  proper

adjustments.    The  findings  should  be  presented  to  them  via  post-retirement seminars and workshops.

The findings of this study will guide government in preparing proper social security  scheme  and  enabling  laws  on  retirees’  pension  and  for  retirement benefits.   The government will do  this  by ensuring that the current Pension Reform Act of 2004 is functional and equally make policies for serving teachers. The policies will encourage them to disengage from service with hope and determination to succeed after retirement.

The sociologists/professional guidance and counselors will be in position to expand the scope of counseling beyond the school children to serving and retired teachers.   The result of the study will help them to design programmes which will assist both the serving and retiree teachers develop positive perception and attitudes towards retirement by embarking on pre-retirement preparations instead of age falsification and shying away from the realities of retirement.

The non-governmental organizations will find the result of the study valuable in articulating and packaging workshops, seminars and symposia for serving teachers and the senior citizens.  This will no doubt assist in improving the negative perception of serving teachers toward retirement while it will reduce apprehension arising from retirement on the part of the senior citizens.

Scope of the Study

The study was limited to teacher retirees in Nsukka Education Zone.  The content scope will focus on identifying the extent to  which age  falsification

affects the psychological adjustment of male and female teacher retirees and equally examine the extent to which age falsification affects the social adjustment of male and female teacher retirees in Nsukka Education Zone.  The study will also examine the extent to which age falsification affects economic adjustment of male and female teacher retirees and as well examine the extent to which age falsification  affects health adjustment of  male  and female  teacher retirees in Nsukka Education Zone.

Research Questions

The following research questions were posed to guide this study:

1.  To what extent does age falsification affect psychological adjustment of male and female teacher retirees in Nsukka Education Zone?

2.  To what extent does age falsification affect social adjustment of male and female teacher retirees in Nsukka Education Zone?

3.  To what extent does age falsification affect economic adjustment of male and female teacher retirees in Nsukka Education Zone?

4.  To what extent does age falsification affect health adjustment of male and female teacher retirees in Nsukka Education Zone?

Hypotheses

The following null hypotheses were formulated and were tested at 0.05 level of significance.

1. Ho1: There is no significant difference between the mean ratings of psychological adjustment of male and female teacher retirees due to age falsification in Nsukka Education Zone.

2.  Ho2:  There  is  no  significant  difference  between  the  mean  ratings  of economic adjustment of male and female teacher retirees due to age falsification in Nsukka Education Zone.


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