Perceived Fathers’ Parenting Behaviours and Adolescent Children’s Academic Performance In Kenya Primary Schools

The study explored the correlation of children’s perceptions of their fathers’ parenting behaviors and the pupils’ academic performance in Kenya. Survey method involving self report measures was used to gather data on perceptions of fathers’ support, monitoring, availability and involvemen...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Githinji, Scolastica Kariuki, Kuria, Stanley Githinji
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: International Journal of Advanced Research 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:https://repository.daystar.ac.ke/handle/123456789/3159
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1809369209644253184
author Githinji, Scolastica Kariuki
Kuria, Stanley Githinji
author_facet Githinji, Scolastica Kariuki
Kuria, Stanley Githinji
author_sort Githinji, Scolastica Kariuki
collection DSpace
description The study explored the correlation of children’s perceptions of their fathers’ parenting behaviors and the pupils’ academic performance in Kenya. Survey method involving self report measures was used to gather data on perceptions of fathers’ support, monitoring, availability and involvement in school activities while official academic records provided mean scores for English, maths, and science. The research was guided by Urie Bronfenbrennerecological theory and Baumrind (1968) parenting model. The respondents comprised of class 7 pupils selected by simple random sampling-of one district, 5 schoolswere were selectedand class in each stream, which led to 166 female and 198 male pupils in the study.Pearson and Spearman correlation coefficient techniques were used to analyze data. Findings revealed that fathers’ high monitoring, availability and provision of basic needs are linked to pupils’ higher academic performance at p< .001. However, fathers’ involvement in school activities was not linked to their children’s academic performance at p< .001. This research has both theoretical and practical implication; Parents and teachers can gain insight as to how fathers’ behaviors relate with the academic outcome of children. The findingsaddedusefulknowledge towards enhancing fathers’ child care activities and improving academic performance. The findings can be used to train fathers on involvement in raising their children and to enhance family-school ecological environment for children’s’ learning.
format Article
id ir-123456789-3159
institution Daystar University
language English
publishDate 2020
publisher International Journal of Advanced Research
record_format dspace
spelling ir-123456789-31592024-07-30T08:41:15Z Perceived Fathers’ Parenting Behaviours and Adolescent Children’s Academic Performance In Kenya Primary Schools Githinji, Scolastica Kariuki Kuria, Stanley Githinji Academic achievement Children Father Availability Control The study explored the correlation of children’s perceptions of their fathers’ parenting behaviors and the pupils’ academic performance in Kenya. Survey method involving self report measures was used to gather data on perceptions of fathers’ support, monitoring, availability and involvement in school activities while official academic records provided mean scores for English, maths, and science. The research was guided by Urie Bronfenbrennerecological theory and Baumrind (1968) parenting model. The respondents comprised of class 7 pupils selected by simple random sampling-of one district, 5 schoolswere were selectedand class in each stream, which led to 166 female and 198 male pupils in the study.Pearson and Spearman correlation coefficient techniques were used to analyze data. Findings revealed that fathers’ high monitoring, availability and provision of basic needs are linked to pupils’ higher academic performance at p< .001. However, fathers’ involvement in school activities was not linked to their children’s academic performance at p< .001. This research has both theoretical and practical implication; Parents and teachers can gain insight as to how fathers’ behaviors relate with the academic outcome of children. The findingsaddedusefulknowledge towards enhancing fathers’ child care activities and improving academic performance. The findings can be used to train fathers on involvement in raising their children and to enhance family-school ecological environment for children’s’ learning. 2020-03-04T08:08:27Z 2020-03-04T08:08:27Z 2016-11 Article S.N, GithinjiK. S (2016). Perceived Fathers’ Parenting Behaviours and Adolescent Children’s Academic Performance In Kenya Primary Schools. International Journal of Advanced Research ISSN: 2320-5407 https://repository.daystar.ac.ke/handle/123456789/3159 en application/pdf International Journal of Advanced Research
spellingShingle Academic achievement
Children
Father
Availability
Control
Githinji, Scolastica Kariuki
Kuria, Stanley Githinji
Perceived Fathers’ Parenting Behaviours and Adolescent Children’s Academic Performance In Kenya Primary Schools
title Perceived Fathers’ Parenting Behaviours and Adolescent Children’s Academic Performance In Kenya Primary Schools
title_full Perceived Fathers’ Parenting Behaviours and Adolescent Children’s Academic Performance In Kenya Primary Schools
title_fullStr Perceived Fathers’ Parenting Behaviours and Adolescent Children’s Academic Performance In Kenya Primary Schools
title_full_unstemmed Perceived Fathers’ Parenting Behaviours and Adolescent Children’s Academic Performance In Kenya Primary Schools
title_short Perceived Fathers’ Parenting Behaviours and Adolescent Children’s Academic Performance In Kenya Primary Schools
title_sort perceived fathers’ parenting behaviours and adolescent children’s academic performance in kenya primary schools
topic Academic achievement
Children
Father
Availability
Control
url https://repository.daystar.ac.ke/handle/123456789/3159
work_keys_str_mv AT githinjiscolasticakariuki perceivedfathersparentingbehavioursandadolescentchildrensacademicperformanceinkenyaprimaryschools
AT kuriastanleygithinji perceivedfathersparentingbehavioursandadolescentchildrensacademicperformanceinkenyaprimaryschools