Investigation into training needs of primary head teachers in financial management
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Date
2006-07Author
Nguta-Matheka, Joyce W
Type
ThesisLanguage
enMetadata
Show full item recordAbstract
The study focused on the training needs of headteachers in Financial
Management in Central Division of Machakos District, Eastern Province.
Financial Management was understood to encompass the spending of funds
disbursed to all schools in an objective manner to achieve the educational
objectives.
The income considered was the grants remitted to public primary schools after
Free Primary Education was launched in Kenya in 2003.
The purpose of the study was to investigate the problems headteachers faced in
performing the task of financial management, which may have been related to
inadequate preparedness.
The available literature suggested that financial management is an essential and
involving administrative task; it interacts with human, financial, time and physical
resources, which calls for continuous and thorough training.
Data was collected using one questionnaire and a guided interview. Part A of the
questionnaire touched on personal data, Part B dealt with training of headteachers
in financial management, and Part C was on problems encountered and
recommendations given. To establish whether the instruments would collect the
relevant data, a pilot study was carried out. The results from the pilot study were
used to make the modifications on the instruments. The population consisted of 72
headteachers. Stratified sampling was used to select a sample of 14 headteachers.
The return rate was 100 percent. The District Auditor was interviewed to gather in-depth data on the problems discovered while auditing of accounts prepared by headteachers. Data analysis was done using the Statistical Package for Social Sciences (SPSS).
The descriptive statistics were presented in the form of frequencies and
percentages.
The research revealed that most headteachers were male. Majority of the
headteachers were at the prime of their career and were qualified to be in the
position of headship. Most headteachers attended training on financial
management after appointment to headship. Less than 50 percent of headteachers attended courses on financial management
after introduction ofFPE.
The training on financial management for headteachers was declared inadequate
by all headteachers interviewed. Training needs of headteachers were revealed to
emanate from inappropriate training methods. The needs were summarized as;
writing of trial balances, bookkeeping, general financial reporting, and cashbook
maintenance and extracting balance sheets.
The study revealed that causes of poor financial management were brought about
by lack of accounts clerks, technical language in the Instructional Manual,
inadequate training, lack of experience, hostile relationship between heads and
School Management Committee (SMC) members and insufficient time for the
financial management task. The research recommended more gender balance m headship, more friendly
approach in training, more exposure to the accounting skills before headship,
training to be pegged on 'needs' and to be available to all stakeholders. It was
recommended thaf SMC should have Form Four Education. Further research on
training needs in the primary schools and in the non-formal sectors was
recommended to enable policy makers come up with goals and ob,ectives of
training in financial management.
Sponsorhip
University of NairobiPublisher
School Of Education, University of Nairobi
Collections
- Faculty of Education (FEd) [6022]