This study explored the nexus between teachers’, students’, and school system effectiveness in Cross River State, following a factorial research design. One null hypothesis was formulated to guide the study. Convenient sampling technique aided in selecting a sample of 271 principals and 329 teachers from a population of 271 principals and 4,336 teachers respectively. “Teachers’, Students’ and School System Effectiveness Scale (TSSSES)” was constructed. The validity of the instrument was established through Factor analyses (EFA and CFA) with Promax rotation and eigenvalues greater than one. Cronbach Alpha yielded reliability coefficients of .982, .983, .930, and .941 obtained for teachers’, students’, school system effectiveness, and the overall instrument. The Kaiser-Meyer-Olkin measure of sampling adequacy was employed and revealed a coefficient of .960 providing sufficient evidence to conduct factor analysis. The confirmatory factor model fit determined by RMSEA (.068), CFI (.935), TLI (.931), and SRMR (.029) all indicated a good model fit for accepting the proposed model. The null hypothesis was tested at .05 level of significance using Path analysis. All the computations and analyses were aided using MS-EXCEL v2016, Stata v15, SPSS v23, and Amos v23. Findings from the study revealed, among others that, there is a significant direct and indirect parsimonious nexus between teachers’ effectiveness, students’ effectiveness, and school system effectiveness. It was recommended that the government at all levels should provide funds and supply public schools with good school plants such as buildings, laboratories, libraries and teaching aids towards promoting effectiveness.
Keywords: Exploratory Factor Analysis, confirmatory factor analysis, factorial validity, school system effectiveness, students’ effectiveness, teachers’ effectiveness