Authors :
Rajarethinam Sebastian Williams; Peter N. Siamoo; Eugene Lyamtane
Volume/Issue :
Volume 9 - 2024, Issue 11 - November
Google Scholar :
https://shorturl.at/qvZkq
Scribd :
https://shorturl.at/NUun5
DOI :
https://doi.org/10.38124/ijisrt/IJISRT24NOV012
Note : A published paper may take 4-5 working days from the publication date to appear in PlumX Metrics, Semantic Scholar, and ResearchGate.
Abstract :
The study focused on the effects of school heads'
administrative strategies on students' character formation
in public secondary schools in the Arusha region,
Tanzania. The study was guided by one research question
and one hypothesis, and it employed a convergent design
using a mixed methods approach to examine the problem.
The research employed probability and non-probability
sampling methods to select 177 teachers, 249 parents, 360
students, and 18 school heads from 18 chosen secondary
schools. Data were gathered using questionnaires
administered to teachers, parents, and students and
interviews conducted with the heads of schools. The
instruments were validated, and the reliability of the
questionnaire was assessed using Cronbach's Alpha
coefficient for Likert scale items. For qualitative data,
reliability was confirmed through peer review and
triangulation. Quantitative data were analysed using
descriptive statistics, including mean scores, frequencies,
and percentages, and then presented in tables. A
hypothesis was tested using simple linear regression at a
significance level 0.05. Qualitative data were analysed
using contextual analysis and transcription. This study
found that schools had a well-defined guidance and
counselling programme in place but needed more
professional counsellors, and it needed further
improvement through external sources. Furthermore, the
findings revealed no significant correlation between the
guidance and counselling strategies of public secondary
school heads and the levels of character development
among students in the Arusha Region. This study
concluded that while school heads’ guidance and
counselling strategy positively affected students' character
formation and goal-setting, this was achieved in
collaboration with parents and professionals despite
challenges and differing viewpoints among stakeholders.
The recommendation study encourages teachers to
participate actively in counselling seminars and strengthen
collaboration with NGOs.
Keywords :
Guidance and Counselling, Character Formation, Professional Counsellor, Counselling Seminar, Collaboration.
References :
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The study focused on the effects of school heads'
administrative strategies on students' character formation
in public secondary schools in the Arusha region,
Tanzania. The study was guided by one research question
and one hypothesis, and it employed a convergent design
using a mixed methods approach to examine the problem.
The research employed probability and non-probability
sampling methods to select 177 teachers, 249 parents, 360
students, and 18 school heads from 18 chosen secondary
schools. Data were gathered using questionnaires
administered to teachers, parents, and students and
interviews conducted with the heads of schools. The
instruments were validated, and the reliability of the
questionnaire was assessed using Cronbach's Alpha
coefficient for Likert scale items. For qualitative data,
reliability was confirmed through peer review and
triangulation. Quantitative data were analysed using
descriptive statistics, including mean scores, frequencies,
and percentages, and then presented in tables. A
hypothesis was tested using simple linear regression at a
significance level 0.05. Qualitative data were analysed
using contextual analysis and transcription. This study
found that schools had a well-defined guidance and
counselling programme in place but needed more
professional counsellors, and it needed further
improvement through external sources. Furthermore, the
findings revealed no significant correlation between the
guidance and counselling strategies of public secondary
school heads and the levels of character development
among students in the Arusha Region. This study
concluded that while school heads’ guidance and
counselling strategy positively affected students' character
formation and goal-setting, this was achieved in
collaboration with parents and professionals despite
challenges and differing viewpoints among stakeholders.
The recommendation study encourages teachers to
participate actively in counselling seminars and strengthen
collaboration with NGOs.
Keywords :
Guidance and Counselling, Character Formation, Professional Counsellor, Counselling Seminar, Collaboration.