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Parental involvement in primary schools : a case study of the Zaka district of Zimbabwe

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dc.contributor.advisor Pretorius, F. J. (Francois Johannes),1947-
dc.contributor.author Chindanya, Andrew
dc.date.accessioned 2012-06-12T08:40:57Z
dc.date.available 2012-06-12T08:40:57Z
dc.date.issued 2011-10
dc.date.submitted 2011-10
dc.identifier.citation Chindanya, Andrew (2011) Parental involvement in primary schools : a case study of the Zaka district of Zimbabwe, University of South Africa, Pretoria, <http://hdl.handle.net/10500/5798> en
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/10500/5798
dc.description.abstract There is compelling evidence that parental involvement positively influences children’s academic achievement. Its benefits occur across all socio-economic classes. In spite of its significance, parental involvement has received scant attention in Zimbabwe. This qualitative study sought to establish how parents in a materially poor rural district of Zimbabwe were involved in their children’s education. Barriers to their involvement were investigated with the view to overcoming or mitigating them for the benefit of the affected primary school pupils. The attribution theory was used not only to substantially explain the status of parental involvement in Zaka District, but also to generate strategies to promote parents’ participation in their children’s school education. Observation, semi-structured interviews (for school heads), focus group interviews (for parents) and the open-ended questionnaire (for teachers) were used in this qualitative study covering ten primary schools. Respondents were selected through the use of chain reference sampling and sampling by case. A total of one hundred and forty (140) participants were selected. It emerged from the research that parents, teachers and school heads/principals had very limited understanding of parental involvement. They generally thought that it was confined to activities done at school such as payment of school fees and levies, providing labour for the construction or renovation of school buildings and providing teaching/learning resources. Most teachers, school heads/principals and parents believed that parents were too poor and too lowly educated to meaningfully be involved in their children’s education. However, there were a few parents who believed that their socio-economic status did not prevent them from participating in their children’s education. They actually indicated useful ways in which they could be involved. The research also revealed that parents, school teachers and school heads/principals made wrong attributions about themselves and each other in connection with limited parental involvement in their schools. Both school staff and parents, after identifying barriers to involvement, were willing to learn about how they could overcome or mitigate the barriers. They believed that the challenges they were facing regarding parental involvement were capable of resolution. en
dc.format.extent 1 online resource (iv, [5], 179 leaves) : illustrations
dc.language.iso en en
dc.subject Parent involvement en
dc.subject Academic achievement
dc.subject Attribution theory
dc.subject Socio-economic status
dc.subject Homework
dc.subject Home supervision
dc.subject Home discussion
dc.subject Determinants of parental involvement
dc.subject Barriers to parental involvement
dc.subject Teacher education curriculum
dc.subject Good parenting
dc.subject.ddc 372.1192096891
dc.subject.lcsh Education, Elementary -- Parent participation -- Zimbabwe -- Zaka District -- Case studies
dc.subject.lcsh Education, Rural -- Zimbabwe -- Zaka District -- Case studies
dc.subject.lcsh Academic achievement -- Zimbabwe -- Zaka District -- Case studies
dc.title Parental involvement in primary schools : a case study of the Zaka district of Zimbabwe en
dc.type Thesis en
dc.description.department Teacher Education
dc.description.degree D. Ed. (Education Management)


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