dc.description.abstract | Academic transition has been known to be affected by many factors. This project sought to
investigate the most effective factors to academic transition. First, the factors were extracted
from literature. They were then grouped into demographic factors, social economic factors,
social cultural factors, student factors, curriculum and school factors, environmental factors, and
social physical factors. Each factor had a number of variables identified from literature. To
understand the factors, the study is based on other research findings on the factors affecting
transition. The factors sampled out from literature and the data on identified factors were
extracted from Kenya Demographic Health Survey of 2008. Using Principal component analysis,
the above factors yielded 11 principal components as the most effective factors to academic
transition. These were; social economic status, family position, home environment, family
composition, regional influence, parents occupation, parents education, house wife status,
mother’s type of earning, preventive health measures, and ethnicity. Later, the identified
principal components were used as predictors to a multiple regression equation with the highest
academic level as the response variable. Among the 11, home environment, mother’s type of
earning and preventive health measures was not significant in estimating academic level. The
most effective factors affecting academic transition were regional influence, social economic
status, parents’ education, house wife status, family composition, ethnicity, family position, and
parents occupation, all ranked in levels of effect to transition. | en_US |