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Career aspirations, attitude towards gender specific roles and academic performance
are of ultimate importance to the learning process. When students know more about
available career opportunities, they will be able to focus more on their academic
performance. Despite numerous changes in policy and legislation, issues of gender
equity in Kenyan Education system and labour market remain a concern of the
Kenyan public. It is against this background that the current study focuses on the
relationship between career aspirations, attitude toward gender specific roles and
academic performance among Form three students in Bungoma South sub- County.
The objectives of this study were to: determine gender differences in career
aspirations among secondary school students in Bungoma south sub-County;
investigate the relationship between secondary school students’ career aspirations and
their academic performance; establish the relationship between secondary school
students’ career aspirations and their attitude towards gender specific roles; examine
the relationship between gender role attitudes and academic performance of male and
female high school students and lastly to assess secondary school students’ perceived
barriers to their career aspirations and academic performance by gender. The study
was guided by social cognitive career theory by Lent, Brown & Hackett and the
research approach was quantitative. The design was expost facto. The target
population was 3 762; 2 216 were male and 1 546 were female form three students of
the year 2014 from selected public secondary schools in Bungoma South Sub-County.
The sample size was 420 participants from 27 public secondary schools. Both
stratified and random sampling techniques were used to select the sample for study.
Analysis of data was done using the Statistical Package for Social Sciences (IBM
SPSS statistics 20.0,2014 version) to obtain descriptive and correlation statistics of
the responses. A pilot study was carried out in two schools to determine the reliability
of the instruments. The two sets of the scores of the responses from the questionnaire
were used to calculate Pearson moment correlation coefficient (r). The reliability
coefficient r was found to be r = 0.78. Since a correlation coefficient whose
magnitude is between 0.7 and 0.9 indicate variables which are considered highly
correlated, the instrument was therefore considered to be reliable. Chi square results
indicated that there was a significant gender differences in students’ career aspirations
with X 2 (3) =12.808, P<0.05. The results from spearman rho correlation coefficient
indicated a weak positive relationship between career aspirations and academic
performance (rho (418) = 0.265, p < .01). Based on the findings, it was recommended
that career mentorship programs should be integrated in the secondary school
curriculum to enable students acquire necessary information about the nature of jobs
and to develop interest in their aspired careers at an early stage. This might inform
students’ subject selection, enhance their academic performance and increase chances
of attaining their aspired careers. |
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