Influence of selected lerarners' characteristics on their academic achievement in public secondary schools in Trans Nzoia and west Pokot counties, Kenya
Date
2016Author
Simiyu, Patrick C
Akaranga, Stephen
Type
ArticleLanguage
enMetadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Learners’ characteristics have been the global subject of on-going debate as reflected, for
example, in the effective schools movement in the United States of America. The debate has
prompted national as well as local scholars to focus on improvement of academic
achievement among learners in different categories of schools. This study investigated the
influence of selected learners’ characteristics on students’ academic achievement in day
secondary schools in Trans-Nzoia and West Pokot Counties in Kenya. The target population
consisted of 30 head teachers, 240 teachers and 2,560 Form Four school learners all
totalling to 2,830 respondents. The stratified sampling procedure was used to identify 374
learners, 79 teachers and 30 head teachers. The ex-post facto and co-rrelational designs
were employed. Questionnaires for learners and teachers, an interview schedule for head
teachers, and a document analysis guide were used to collect data. Instruments’ reliability
was established through the split-half technique, yielding reliability coefficients of 0.8 and
0.75 for learners and teachers instrument respectively. The validity of the instruments was
established through a pre-test. Descriptive statistics which included the mean and standard
deviation together with inferential statistics, using Chi - Square interactive, t-test and
multiple regressions were used to analyse data. The study established that most learners had
a favourable attitude towards day schooling which influenced the learners’ academic
achievement positively. The results further showed that the entry behaviour (Kenya
Certificate of Primary Education (KCPE) mean score) significantly influenced the learners’
academic achievement. The study recommended strengthening of the policy on construction
of day secondary schools in most primary schools, hence reducing the cost of education. This
could improve the KCSE performance of day scholars in secondary schools. In light of the
findings, the study suggested that a comparative study should be undertaken in private
secondary schools to establish the influence of the learners’ characteristics on academic
achievement.
Publisher
University of Nairobi
Subject
Academic achievement, Entry Behavior, Learners’ Attitudes, Learners’ Characteristics, Means ScoreRights
Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 United StatesUsage Rights
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/us/Collections
- Faculty of Education (FEd) [1042]
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