A Study of Selected Determinants of Achievement in English Functional Writing Skills among Secondary School Students in West Pokot County, Kenya
Abstract/ Overview
Functionalwriting is a pragmatic use of language for social and personal expression. It is a
universal communication tool that determines achievement of students' lifelong goals.
Teacher factors, resources, attitudes and methods determine students' achievement in
functionalwriting skills. Among the functional skills namely; functional writing, cloze test
and oral functional skills, functional writing skills recorded the lowest mean score in the
Kenya certificate of secondary education (K.C.S.E) examination at 33:'J.% compared to
62.5% for cloze test and 45.6% for oral skills, for period 2008 to 2011 in West Pokot
County.Performance of functional writing skills in the county is the lowest compared to
Turkanawith 42.2% andSamburu with 43.9%. The purpose of the study was to establish the
effects of selected determinants of achievement in English functional writing skills among
secondaryschool students in West Pokot County. The objectives of the study were to:
establish the influence of teacher factors on students achievement in English functional
writing skills, establish the influence of resources on students' achievement in English
Functional writing skill, establish the influence of methods on students' achievement in
English functional writing, and establish the influence of attitude of teachers on students'
achievementin English functional writing skills. A conceptual framework was used showing
the relationship between independent variables (teacher factors, resources, methods and
attitude) and dependent variable (students' achievement in functional writing).The study
used descriptive survey and correlation study designs. The study population consisted of
2580Form4 students who had been taught all functional skills, and 34 teachers of English
subjectfrom 34 schools. The study used saturated sampling technique to select 31 teachers
while Krejcie and Morgan table was used to determine sample size of 334 students who
were then randomly sampled. Data collection was done through teacher questionnaire,
observationschedule, achievement test, focused group discussion and interview schedules.
Pilot study comprised of 3 teachers of English and 250 students from 3 secondary schools.
Cronbach's alpha formula was used to establish instruments reliability whereby reliability
coefficient for Teacher questionnaire was 0.82. Supervisors from the Department of
EducationalCommunication Technology, and Curriculum Studies of Maseno University
ascertainedcontent validity of instruments. Descriptive statistics (percentages and mean),
were used to analyze quantitative data. A random effect model was used to show the
magnitudeof relationship between variables. Qualitative data from open-ended items was
put in categorical -themes as they emerged. The findings revealed that the relationship
betweenteachers' performance and students' achievement was statistically significant (1.67,
95% CL: 1.31, 2.05~ p-value<O.OOl) and that resources, methods and attitude had no
significantinfluence on students' achievement in functional writing skills (p-values >0.05).
The study concludes that teacher performance was the most significant factor. The study
recommendedthat teacher training emphasize actual classroom performance. The findings
m~y.be significant to secondary schoolftaternity to realize better achievement in functional
writing