dc.description.abstract |
Despite the Kenyan government's commitment to providing free primary and
secondary education, the dropout problem still exists in secondary schools in Kesses
Sub-County. Therefore, there was a need to establish how stakeholders conceptualise
the issue of school dropout causes from a multi-dimensional view, such as the school,
the home, and the community. The study examined the stakeholders’
conceptualization of school dropout causes in public secondary schools in Kesses Sub-
County, Kenya. The study's objectives were to investigate how educational
stakeholders conceptualize the school-based, home-based, and community-based
causes of dropout among secondary school students. Structural Functionalism Theory
guided the study. The study adopted an exploratory design to collect qualitative data
and explanatory research design to collect quantitative data. The target population for
the study was 990 respondents and the sample size was 307 participants. Stratified
sampling, purposive sampling, snowball, and simple random sampling techniques
were used to select participants. A questionnaire was used to collect data from 109
teachers, interview schedules were used to collect data from 2 area chiefs, 13
secondary school principals and 27 parents of dropout students, and focussed group
discussions used to collect data from 156 students. Quantitative data were analysed
using descriptive and inferential statistics. Descriptive statistics included frequencies
and percentages. Inferentially, a correlation was used. Analysed data were presented
as tables, graphs, and charts. Qualitative data were analysed using thematic and
verbatim transcription methods and presented as verbatim reports. Quantitively, the
study results indicated that school-based (r = 0.705, n=136, p<0.01), home-based (r =
0.718, n=136, p<0.01) and community-based factors (r = 0.718, n=136, p<0.01) were
positively correlated with school dropout cases. The study findings show that some
schools lacked functional structures to support proper learning conditions. Extreme
home poverty levels made schooling unbearable for some students who could not
persevere. High levels of teenage pregnancies contributed to student dropout cases.
The community also influenced students' schooling life, either with bad or good
morals. In conclusion, stakeholders conceptualised that school-based, home-based and
community factors contributed to students dropping out of secondary school. The
study recommends that the ministry of education could initiate supportive programs
that cater for the needy students to ensure deficiencies in their homes do not affect
their education and school dropout. Parents need to guide their children at home to
make appropriate decisions about their future life and avoid school dropout. The
community should have a capacity-building on a positive upbringing of children to
reduce bad morals that the students might adopt, hence leading to school dropout. |
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