Abstract

Rapid growth in Education as an investment has necessitated and heightened interest in the determination of institutional influence on Learners’ Academic Achievement in Kenya. This is observed in regular Curriculum reforms in the recent past to align the curriculum to learners’ academic aspirations. This study sought to determine the extent to which teachers’ characteristics and teaching learning resources influence students’ academic achievement as measured by the Mean Kenya Certificate of Secondary Education Examination score and grade. The sample size of 109 Teachers and 384 Learners was obtained from the targeted population of 2830 people. Ex-post Facto Design and Correlational Design were adopted in the investigation. Questionnaires for teachers and learners, interviews schedule and document analysis were utilized to gather data. The Questionnaire instrument reliability co–efficient of 0.8 for Teachers and 0.75 for Learners was obtained following a pre-test based on split half technique. Inferential and Descriptive statistics using Chi square interactive facilitated data analysis. The study showed that favourable institutional factors positively correlates with learners’ academic achievement and vice versa. The study recommended that Day school learning facilities and teacher-student ratio be improved as this will facilitate attainment of a higher mean score by learners in the Kenya Certificate of Secondary Education Examinations. Keywords: Institutional Characteristics, Students’ Academic Achievement. DOI: 10.7176/EJBM/14-24-05 Publication date: December 31 st 2022

Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call