IMPACT OF FAMILY CONFLICTS ON THE ACADEMIC PERFORMANCE AND INTERPERSONAL

RELATIONSHIPS OF PUPILS IN PUBLIC PRIMARY SCHOOLS IN NAKURU MUNICIPALITY

TABLE OF CONTENTS

CHAPTER ONE: INTRODUCTION

1.1 Background Information

1.2 Statement of the Problem

1.3 Purpose of the Study

1.4 Objectives of the Study

1.5 Research Questions

1.6 Significance of the Study

1.7 Scope of the Study

1.8 Limitations of the Study

1.9 Assumptions of the Study

1.10 Definition of Terms

CHAPTER TWO: LITERATURE REVIEW

2.1 Introduction

2.2 The Modern View of Marriage

2.3 The Influence of a Family on an Individual’s Behaviour

2.4 Relationship between Parents and their Children’s Educational and Social Life 

2.5 Causes of Conflict in Modern Families

2.5.1 Unrealistic Expectations

2.5.2 External Pressure

2.5.3 Children Related Problems

2.5.4 Money Problems

2.5.5 Communication Breakdown

2.6 Impact of Family Conflicts on Children

2.7 Guidance and Counselling in Schools

2.8 Theoretical Framework

2.9 Conceptual Framework

 

CHAPTER THREE: RESEARCH METHODOLOGY

3.1 Introduction

3.2 Research Design

3.3 Location of Study

3.4 Population of Study

3.5 Sampling Procedure and Sample Size

3.6 Instrumentation

3.7 Data Collection Procedures

3.8 Data Analysis

CHAPTER FOUR: RESULTS AND DISCUSSION

4.1 Introduction

4.2 Results of Research Objective 1: Extent to which Conflicts in a family affect Pupils'Academic Performance

4.3 Results of Research Objective 2: Nature of the Relationship between Pupils who

experience Family Conflicts and their Peers

4.4 Results of Research Objective 3: Male or Female Pupils who are affected by Conflicts

in Families

4.5 Results of Research Objective 4: Nature of the Relationship between Pupils who

experience Family Conflicts and their Teachers

4.6 Results of Research Objective 5: Attitude of the Pupils who experience Family

 

Conflicts towards their Parents, Peers and School

 

4.7 Results of Research Objective 6: Role of the School's Counsellor in assisting Pupils

 

who experience Family Conflicts

 

CHAPTER FIVE: SUMMARY, CONCLUSIONS AND RECOMMENDATIONS

 

5.1 Introduction

5.2 Summary

 

5.3 Conclusions

 

5.4 Recommendations

 

5.5 Suggestions for Further Research

REFERENCES

 

APPENDIX A: PUPIL’S QUESTIONNAIRE

 

APPENDIX B: TEACHER’S QUESTIONNAIRE

 

APPENDIX C: RESEARCH PERMIT

 

LIST OF TABLES

 

 

Table 1: Distribution of Pupils by Gender in Ten Public Primary Schools within Nakuru

 

Municipality

 

Table 2: Summary of Sample Schools and the Number of Pupils in Each School

 

Table 3: Distribution of Pupils per Class

 

Table 4: Distribution of Pupils by Gender

 

Table 5: Distribution of Pupils’ Cases of Beatings

 

Table 6: Pupils’ Cases of Disagreements with Parents/Guardians

 

Table 7: Pupils’ Opinion on their Parents’ Interest in Academic Performance

 

Table 8: Pupils’ Concentration Level after Parents/Guardians Fights

 

Table 9: Pupils’ Opinion that the Parents/Guardians’ Fights affect their Academic

 

Performance

 

Table 10: Frequency of Beating of Pupils by Academic Assistance by Parents

 

Table 11: Frequency of Beating of Pupils by their Academic Performance

 

Table 12: Pupils’ Good Relationship with Peers and Openness about Family Conflicts      

 

Table 13: Pupils’ Opinion that Conflicts between Parents/Guardians affect their Relations

 

with Peers

 

Table 14: Frequency of Beating of Pupils by Gender

 

Table 15: Teachers’ Frequency of Sharing with Pupils who have Problems

 

Table 16: Pupils’ Attitude towards their Peers, School and Parents/Guardians

 

Table 17: Pupils and Teachers’ awareness on the availability of a School Counsellor

 

 

LIST OF FIGURES

 

Figure 1: Effects of Guidance and Counselling on Family Conflicts, Academic

 

Performance and Interpersonal Relationships of Pupils

 

LIST OF ABBREVIATIONS AND ACRONYMS

 

 

AIDS       Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome

 

APA         American Psychological Association

 

HIV         Human Immunodeficiency Virus

 

PTSD       Post Traumatic Stress Disorder

 

SPSS       Statistical Package for Social Sciences

 

 

CHAPTER ONE

 

INTRODUCTION

 

1.1 Background Information

 

Conflict can be defined as the lack of peace in an environment. Conflict in a family therefore refers to a situation whereby the smooth interaction and relation among members of a family is disrupted because of one thing or another. It can be between the two parents or between parents and their children. Conflict in a family can be as a result of lack of trust, drunkenness, lack of dialogue, lack of respect, joblessness and idleness. It comes in form of fights, quarrels, spouse battering, child abuses and child molestation. It can result to a bad atmosphere in the home, separation or even divorce.

 

According to Walker (1999), studies carried out have shown that when one form of violence was found in the family, other forms were more likely to also occur and that violence in the family has a direct relationship to community violence and other forms of aggression and gender based violence. Law enforcement in many countries will not intervene in what is often called a “domestic quarrel” even though psychological research indicates that without such intervention, abusers are unlikely to seek help to stop their battering behaviour. Research has found a strong relationship between violence in the home and violence in the community. Golden (2000) reports that it has been found that prior history of abuse can increase the likelihood of abusive behaviour. According to Steinberg (1996), parental conflict and aggression or a conflict atmosphere in the home is related to offspring’s personal or violent crimes.

 

Murphy and O’Farrell (1994) highlighted the view that parents play a central role in shaping the child’s development through their influence. Thus if parents keep having conflicts in their homes, children are bound to be affected as they grow up. They also asserted that children learn through imitating and identification with the parents and other significant adults. If the children grow up in a family where violence is a common phenomenon, they may end up doing the same in their families, unless intervention is carried out. The first important influence on children is the family but children and families are interactive members of a large system of social institutions, such as the school, the workplace and

 

community. Parental involvement and education improve both family and child functioning. It has been found out that parental involvement in a child might have lasting effects on its behaviour. Steinberg (1996) assets that conflict is a critical aspect of family functioning that often outweighs the influence of family structure on the child’s development. He also reports that studies carried out have found that children’s healthy and social development is most effectively promoted by love and at least some moderate parental control. According to Seifert and Hoffnung (1997), children who have lived for years in situations of neglect or abuse suffer severe stress. They also state that students often receive long term support from parents or other adults at home as well as strong support from teachers and others at school. Involving parents in learning activities with their children at home is one kind of parental involvement that many educators believe is an important aspect of the child’s learning. If the family is undergoing conflict, parents will not have time for their children.

 

Men, who more often use violence, do so in order to obtain and maintain power and control over others. The APA task force on violence and the family defined domestic violence as a pattern of abusive behaviours including a wide range of physical, sexual and psychological maltreatment used by one person in an intimate relationship against another to gain power unfairly or maintain that person’s misuse of power, control and authority. Berk (1999) asserts that problematic school performance is among the more common problems associated with child abuse and neglect. Such children often experience difficulties with social relationship, problem solving and the ability to cope with new or stressful situations. According to studies carried out, some abused or neglected children develop aggressive behaviour patterns, others become withdrawn while others even get PTSD or major depression.

 

Kiura (1999) asserts that a healthy relationship between husband and wife depends on self-understanding, understanding spouse, balance between individuality, mutual relationship, proper management of conflicts, sexual harmony and sound skills in mutual dialogue and communication. He also says that parents need to assume responsibility for their children’s eternal destiny, educate them, prepare them for life and guide them towards the right way. If parents are not in harmony, it follows that their children will suffer too. They not only suffer at home but also when they go to school or visit friends by carrying the burden of their parents with them.

 

 

1.2 Statement of the Problem

 

In Kenya today, hardly a week goes by before it is reported in the media that a child or its parents or both have been hospitalized or killed as a result of family conflicts. Other cases reported are those whereby a woman packs and leaves her matrimonial home with her children because she can no longer tolerate her husband’s behaviour. There are even cases whereby it is the men who move out of their homes to look for peace elsewhere. There have also been cases of suicidal killings, where the head of the family kills his wife and children before killing himself. There is also the case of street children, some of whom are on the streets because they have run away from violent home environments. These incidents take place not only in rural areas but also in urban ones. Nakuru Municipality has also recorded some of these incidents. When families are in conflict, it affects children in their physical, cognitive, affective and even spiritual growth. Their lives are enclosed or imprisoned if they continue being exposed to a violent environment. For some, such an environment means that they have no access to formal education and their cognitive and affective developments are tampered with. This study, therefore, sought to find out the impact of family conflicts on a pupil especially on his or her academic performance and relationship with peers.

 

 

1.3 Purpose of the Study

 

The purpose of this study was to investigate the impact of family conflicts on the academic performance and interpersonal relationships of pupils in public primary schools in Nakuru Municipality.

 

1.4 Objectives of the Study

 

This study was guided by the following objectives:

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

1.5 Research Questions

 

This study aimed at answering the following questions:-

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

1.6 Significance of the Study

 

The findings of this study may be of help to teachers and parents and it will add knowledge to the body of literature on family conflict. The study will be of help to parents and especially those who experience problems in their families. They will understand how problems in a family can affect their pupils’ short-term life and to some extent, their future. This will encourage such parents to embrace dialogue and understanding in an effort of trying to solve their problems. In instances where the problems are severe, they can engage the services of a counsellor so that harmony prevails. The study will also contribute to the body of literature on family conflicts and its influence on a primary school pupils’ academic performance and interpersonal skills with specific reference to primary schools in Nakuru Municipality. This study dealt with primary schools and thus it will make an improvement to the related situations.

 

It may also be of benefit to counsellors, especially those stationed in schools. They can be able to offer intervention measures to pupils who come from families that experience conflict in an effort to help them concentrate on their studies and build good relationships with other pupils. The findings may be useful to teachers especially because they spend more time with the pupils at school. They can intervene by referring pupils to the school counsellor or by calling the parents of the pupil and discussing the pupil’s behaviour and academic performance.

 

1.7 Scope of the Study

 

The study was carried out in Nakuru Municipality, Rift Valley Province. It involved ten public primary schools within the municipality. Two teachers per school and 384 pupils in class seven and eight were involved in filling in the questionnaires. The study was concerned with the impact of family conflicts on pupils in their academic performance and interpersonal relationships. The research was limited to Nakuru Municipality.

 

1.8 Limitations of the Study

 

The study had the following limitations:-

 

 

 

 

1.9 Assumptions of the Study

 

The study was based on the following assumptions:-

 

 

 

1.10 Definition of Terms

 

The following terms, which were important to the study, had the following operational meanings:-

 

Academic Performance:   This  is  how

pupils  are  ranked  in  terms  of  educational

 

achievement. In this study, academic performance means how

 

the pupils fair on in their studies as compared to others in the

 

same class.

 

Child Abuse:

The act of harming a pupil in a physical, sexual or emotional

 

way. In this study, child abuse refers to any harm that pupils in

 

public primary schools undergo, be it physical, sexual or

 

emotional.

 

Conflict:

It is a mutual opposition or difference between two parents or

 

between parents and their pupils in a family.  It is a state of

 

disagreement or argument in a family.  In this study, conflict

 

means the disagreements or oppositions that pupil under study

 

face in their families, either directly from their parents or

 

indirectly when they witness their parents’ arguments.

Delinquency:

Bad or Criminal behaviour, usually of young people.  In this

 

study, it means bad or criminal behaviour practised by public

 

primary school pupils.

Family:

It is a social unit made up of people related to each other by

 

blood, birth or

marriage. In this study, family is a social unit

 

made up of public primary school pupils and their parents or

 

guardians.

 

Family Conflict:

This refers to problems, oppositions or differences that occur

 

within the family set up.  In this study, it refers to problems,

 

oppositions or differences that public primary school pupils

 

face within their families.

Family Violence:

Physical force that is intended to hurt or kill within the family

 

set up. It is characterized by serious physical injury, profound

 

psychological trauma or sexual violation. In this study, family violence means physical or psychological injury that pupils experience within their families.

 

Impact:                  This means to have a powerful effect on something or someone. It can also refer to a force that drives someone into behaving in a certain way. In this study, it means the force that drives pupils to act in a certain way.

Interpersonal Relationships: This is how someone communicates with others; the way a person relates to others in a family or school. In this study, it

refers to the way pupils communicate with peers in school and

 

family members at home.

 

Maltreated Children:                                                                         These are children who experience cruelty from their parents.

 

Maltreatment is characterized by minimal physical or sexual

 

harm. In this study, it refers to pupils who are treated in a cruel

 

way by their parents or guardians.

 

Primary School:      School for those pursuing the Kenya Certificate of Primary

 

Education.                             It begins from class one to eight.  In this study,

 

primary school refers to those public primary schools within

 

Nakuru Municipality.

 

Pupil:                     This is anybody, child or adult, who is enrolled in a primary

 

school or who is pursuing the Kenya Certificate of Primary

 

Education.  In this study, the pupils include those who come

 

from families where there is conflict and those whose families

 

do not experience conflict.

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