Computer Security Practices in Senior High Schools in the Keta Municipality

Tetteh, Abraham and Essah, Richard and Opoku, Gifty and Serwaa, Monica Akua (2021) Computer Security Practices in Senior High Schools in the Keta Municipality. Current Journal of Applied Science and Technology, 40 (14). pp. 10-19. ISSN 2457-1024

[thumbnail of 3529-Article Text-6563-1-10-20220914.pdf] Text
3529-Article Text-6563-1-10-20220914.pdf - Published Version

Download (210kB)

Abstract

Aims: To examine security practices in Senior High Schools in Keta Municicpality.

Study design: Descriptive Survey Design.

Place and duration of study: The study was undertaken in the Keta Municipality of Volta Region.

Methodology: The researcher adopted quantitative research design. The target population for the study was made up of eight (8) senior high schools with four thousand two hundred (4200) senior high school students, teachers, administrators and account clerks in the Municipality. The total number of samples for the study was hundred (100) respondents. This comprises forty (40) teachers, forty (40) students, ten (10) ICT teachers, five (5) administrators and five (5) account clerks all from the five selected schools. The research instrument used for the data collection was questionnaire. The usage of a data analysis application known as the International Business Machine, Statistical Package for Social Sciences, assisted the data analysis (IBM SPSS).

Results: The results revealed that 35(87.5%) of students agreed to the fact that they used computer with permission, 32(64%) of teachers emphasized that there were security passwords on computers in their schools, and 27(82.5%) of students indicated that there are codes of conduct guiding computer usage in their schools. However, 20(40%) of teachers emphasized that intrusion detective system was not used on computers in their schools to detect network attack and that 7(70%) of administrators and account clerks attested to the fact that Antivirus is installed on computers in my school

Conclusion: Many schools in the Keta Municipality do not have enough computers let alone sustainable power generation in the schools and this has affected effective teaching and learning and quality education delivering.

Item Type: Article
Subjects: Impact Archive > Multidisciplinary
Depositing User: Managing Editor
Date Deposited: 28 Mar 2023 12:04
Last Modified: 10 May 2024 06:44
URI: http://research.sdpublishers.net/id/eprint/1673

Actions (login required)

View Item
View Item