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The purpose of this study was to examine the influence of principals’ leadership styles on
students’ academic performance in public secondary schools in Mwala Sub-county,
Machakos County. The objectives of the study were to establish the influence of the
principals’ transformational leadership style, transactional leadership style, democratic
leadership style, and autocratic leadership style on students’ academic performance in
public secondary schools in the Mwala Sub-county. This study used a descriptive survey
research design. Target population of the study was all 72 schools, all 72 principals, and
all 471 teachers in Mwala Sub-county public secondary schools. Out of the population of
72 schools, 36 schools were chosen through stratified random sampling technique. All the
36 principals of the sampled schools were purposively included in the study. Yamene
(2007) formula was used to give a sample of 216 teachers. Proportional allocation method
was used to identify a weighted teachers’ sample for each school. Simple random sampling
technique was employed to select the participating teachers in each school. The instruments
were validated through piloting and by research experts to ascertain content validity while
reliability was achieved through piloting using the test-retest reliability technique. Data
were coded and entered into Statistical Package for Social Sciences (SPSS) version 23.0
for analysis. Descriptive statistics which included frequencies, percentages, means, and
standard deviations were utilized to analyze data. Inferential statistics which involved
running correlation analysis at a 0.05 level of significance were employed to test the nature
and strength of relationships between variables. The study used tables to present the
analyzed results. The results revealed that there was a weak positive but statistically
significant correlation between transformational leadership style and students’ academic
performance (R=.374, p=.038). The results established that there was a weak positive but
statistically significant correlation between transactional leadership style and students’
academic performance (R=.428, p=.016). The results also showed that there was a weak
positive but statistically significant correlation between democratic leadership style and
students’ academic performance (R=.365, p=.043). Further, the results revealed that there
was a weak negative correlation between autocratic leadership style and students’ academic
performance which was not statistically significant (R = -.259, p=.160). Based on the
findings, the study recommends to the Kenya Institute of Educational Management
(KEMI) and the Teachers’ Service Commission (TSC) to regularly in-service teachers on
leadership styles; principals to enhance practices associated with transformational
leadership, transactional leadership, and democratic leadership practices since they
improve academic performance; principals to only minimally and exceptionally use
autocratic leadership style in extraordinary circumstances when this style may be extremely
necessary. |
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