Influence of Board of Management Governance Practices on Implementation of Safety Standards Policy in Secondary Schools in Kisumu Central Sub County, Kenya
Abstract
This study sought to determine how BOM governance practices affected the execution of the
safety standards policy in secondary schools in Kenya's Kisumu Central Sub County.
Establishing the impact of BOMs' sensitization of school community, BOMs' approval of school
budget, BOMs' maintenance of institutional infrastructure, and BOMs' approval of enforcement
of school rules and regulations on implementation of safety standards in secondary schools in
Kisumu Central Sub County, Kenya, was one of the study's four research objectives. Stakeholder
theory, developed by Freeman, served as the study's main direction (1984).In Kisumu Central
Sub County, Kenya, a descriptive research design was employed with a sample population of 13
principals, 456 teachers, 221 BOMs, 8289 students, 1 Sub County education official, and 1
SCQASO. A total of 379 respondents were included in the sample for this study, which also
included 143 BOM chairpersons, 169 students, 65 instructors, 1 Sub County education official,
and 1 SCQASO. Interview guides and questionnaires were used as data gathering instruments.
For the study of quantitative data, descriptive statistics such as mean and standard deviation were
used, while inferential statistics such as correlation and regression were employed. Thematic
analysis was employed to examine qualitative data. The version 23.0 of the Statistical Package
for Social Sciences was used to analyze the data.Based on the study's initial objective, the
following were its major findings. BOM determined that BOMs' ability to increase school
community awareness was statistically significant (M=3.12, r=0.908, r2=0.824; p0.05).
According to the study's second goal, the BOMs' support of the budget for the school was
statistically significant (M=3.21, r=0.845, r2=0.714; p>0.05). According to the study's third goal,
the upkeep of institutional infrastructure by BOMs was discovered to be statistically significant
(M=3.16, r=0.815, r2=0.664; p>0.05). based on the study's fourth objective.It was determined
that BOMs' support for the enforcement of school policies and rules was statistically significant
(M=3.35, r=0.191, r2=0.036; p>0.05). This study comes to the conclusion that the school
community's awareness of the safety standards policy, the school budget approval by BOMs, the
maintenance of institutional infrastructure by BOMs, and the BOMs' approval of the
enforcement of school rules and regulations by BOMs all had an impact on funds for project
completion in secondary schools. This analysis came to the conclusion that there weren't enough
finances to implement the safety standards policy. The report suggests that the Ministry of
Education make sure that BOMs at the schools in Kisumu Central Sub-County educate the
school community on the safety standards policy as well as how it is put into practice.Kisumu
Central Sub-County parents and the Ministry of Education should make sure that timely
payments or disbursements of enough monies are made to the schools. To encourage adherence
to school rules and regulations, the Ministry of Education should see to it that BOMs in Kisumu
Central Sub-County provide copies of them to the students.
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) [6060]
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