Determining the influence of the principals’ use of participatory decision making on the status of students’ discipline in secondary schools in Kiambu county, Kenya.
Date
2016Author
Ogweno, Judith Oriya
Kalai, Jeremiah
Okoth, Ursulla
Type
ArticleLanguage
enMetadata
Show full item recordAbstract
This study was conducted to determinethe influence of the principals’ use of participatory
decision making on the status of students’ discipline in secondary schools in Kiambu County.
The study adopted a descriptive survey method and employed questionnaires and interview
schedules to collect data. The study sample consisted of 15 principals, 21 deputy principals, 55
class teachers and 375 students from selected schools in the County. The quantitative data from
questionnaires was analysed with the aid of SPSS (Statistical Package for Social Science) and
presented using tables, graphs and pie charts. From the principals’ interviews, research questions
were analysed along thematic lines and presented using frequencies tables. The findings
established that schools that had participative decision making practices had fewer cases of
indiscipline (65.97%) as compared to schools which did not (68.87%).The study also noted that
schools that did not use class meetings and suggestion boxes had higher cases of indiscipline
(70.07%) and (70.33%) respectively.
Citation
Ogweno, Judith Oriya, Jeremiah Kalai, and Ursulla Okoth. "DETERMINING THE INFLUENCE OF THE PRINCIPALS’USE OF PARTICIPATORY DECISION MAKING ON THE STATUS OF STUDENTS’DISCIPLINE IN SECONDARY SCHOOLS IN KIAMBU COUNTY."Publisher
University of Nairobi
Rights
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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