Abstract:
Young people are considered as the cogwheels of development in any society. Therefore,
educators and parents wish that students, who will ultimately be the future leaders and
professionals, prosper academically. Nationally there has been a decline in academic
achievement in secondary schools as indicated by the available statistics and Nairobi City
County has not been left behind. Research indicates that attitude is considered as an
important determinant of student’s achievement in an education setting. It is therefore
necessary that learning institutions establish and clarify the cause of good academic
achievement. The purpose of this study was to determine if factors such as age, gender,
and type of school (which determine locus of control and attitude) have an impact on
academic achievement in Nairobi County Secondary School. The study's main objectives
were to determine the relationship between locus of control and attitude toward academic
achievement, to determine whether age variation has an impact on the relationship between
locus of control and attitude toward academic achievement, to look for any gender
differences in the relationship between locus of control and attitude toward academic
achievement, and, finally, to determine whether the type of school has an impact on the
relationship among locus of control and mindset toward academic ability. The study was
founded on Rotter's (1954) social learning theory and Katz's (1960) functionalist theory.
The research design used in the study was correlational. The target population consisted of
6460 form three secondary school students from Nairobi City County. Boys boarding, girls
boarding, and mixed day schools were separated into three strata using stratified random
sampling. Seven public institutions, including two mixed-gender day schools and two
boarding schools for boys and three for girls, were chosen using simple random selection.
Following proportional allocation, a simple random selection was utilized to choose 385
pupils from form three (208 boys and 167 girls). The academic attitude scale and Rotter's
locus of control scale (internal vs. external, or I-E) were the study tools used. After being
piloted, the tools were used to determine their applicability. 32 students who were not a
part of the study's main subjects were used to test the research tools. To assess reliability,
the Cronbach alpha coefficient (𝛼) was computed to test for reliability. Both descriptive
(percentages and mean) and inferential statistics were used to analyze the data (KruskalWallis one-way analysis of variance and Pearson correlation). The findings showed that
there was a linear relationship between locus of control scale score and attitude towards
academic achievement scale scores of public secondary school students from Nairobi
County was very weak(0.00196) though not significant at the 0.05 level of significance;
that age negatively correlates with both attitude and locus of control scores, but these
relationships were very weak(-0.099, -0.021) and not significant at 0.05 level of significant,
that there were gender differences across attitude and locus of control scale scores, hence
the null hypothesis was rejected at 0.05 level of significant and that there were significant
differences across school type in relation to locus of control and attitude scale scores, thus
the null hypothesis was rejected at 0.05 level of significance. Policy recommendations were
made to students, Teachers, school counselors and policy markers in regard to creation of
awareness and sensitizations on the relationship between locus of control and attitude
towards academic achievement in learners. Further research was recommended in relation
to inclusion of other variables such as culture, social economic status so that it is clear
whether disparity in these variables affect the locus of control and attitudes towards
academic achievement in learners.