Influence of Principals’ Allocation of Teaching and Learning Resources on Learners’ academic Performance in Kenya Certificate of Secondary Education in Kisii County, Kenya
Publication Date
2024-06Author
Type
ArticleMetadata
Show full item record
Abstract/ Overview
Teaching and learning resources are needed for quality curriculum delivery. The purpose of this study was to investigate the Influence of Principals’ allocation of teaching and learning resources on learners’ academic performance in Kenya Certificate of Secondary Education (K.C.S.E.) in Public Schools. The objective of this study was toestablish the influence of Principals’ allocation of teaching and learning resources on learners’ academic performance in K.C.S.E. This study was anchored on Karl Ludwig von Bertalanffy General Systems Theory. Mixed method research design of explanatory sequential type with a prioritized quantitative approach in phase one followed by qualitative approach in phase two was applied in the study. The target population was 4,691 participants which included: 340 Principals, 1360 Heads of Departments (H.O.Ds) and 2,991 teachers. A sample of 451 respondents participated in the study. The researcher used proportionate stratified random sampling technique to select 85 schools, 114 H.O.Ds and 252 teachers and census sampling to select national and special schools while 85 Principals of the selected schools were purposefully sampled. Questionnaires and interview guides were used to collect quantitative and qualitative data respectively. Content validity, Criterion validity, Construct validity and Face validity, of the research instruments were ensured through evaluation by the University supervisors and other experts while internal consistency reliability was estimated by using Cronbach’s alpha coefficient formula which yielded alpha coefficient of over 0.7 which was considered adequate. Quantitative data were analysed using Statistical Package of Social Sciences (SPSS) Version 29 while qualitative data were analysed thematically and presented using direct quotes from the respondents and integrated with the findings of phase one. Descriptive statistics were presented in tables and graphs while inferential statistics were presented in terms of Pearson’s correlation coefficients, Anova and Regression coefficients. The study found out a moderate positive relationship between allocation of teaching and learning resources (r=.072, p≤.05; 2 tailed) and learners’ academic performance in K.C.S.E. Therefore, the null hypothesis was upheld which indicated that teaching and learning resources are inadequate in the study locale. This result was supported by Principals’ interviews for they cited inadequate funding as a drawback towards providing teaching and learning resources. It is hoped that the findings of this study would provide information that would be a base for corrective measures towards the unexpected low academic performance in the study locale. The study recommended that further research should be done on influence of principals’ leadership skills development on academic performance in K.C.S.E.