Abstract:
The performance of students in Kenya Certificate of Secondary Education (KCSE) in
Makueni County has been dismal. There have been various dialogues at county and
sub- county levels on how to remedy the situation, but the consensus still lacks. There
is no convergence in empirical literature as to whether organizational culture affect
performance owing to mixed findings. The general objective of this research was to
ascertain the nexus between the attributes of school organizational culture and student
academic performance of public schools in Makueni County, Kenya. The specific
objectives were to: investigate the influence of the mission statement on students’
academic performance in public secondary schools in Makueni County, Kenya; to
explore the effect of the vision statement on the students’ academic performance in
public secondary schools in Makueni County, Kenya; determine the influence of
adhocracy culture on the students’ academic performance in public secondary schools
in Makueni County, Kenya and to examine the effect of market-oriented culture on the
students’ academic performance in public secondary schools in Makueni County. This
research employed descriptive survey design. The study is grounded on organizational
culture assessment and organizational configuration theories. Regarding philosophical
orientation, the study is grounded on positivist research paradigm. The target
population comprised 114 public secondary schools in Makueni County. The researcher
adopted proportionate stratified sampling technique to select the desired sample size of
1,140 respondents. A structured questionnaire and a checklist were used to collect data.
A pilot study was conducted using respondents from 10 schools from the target
population which was not included in the final sample. Random sampling was used to
identify the 114 schools whereby 570 HODs and 570 students participated in the study.
The questionnaires were administered to the respondents with the help of the research
assistants. The Cronbach’s alpha was used to evaluate reliability and all items had a
coefficient that was < 0.07. Content validity was established by ensuring that the
questionnaire items covered all the study objectives. The researcher secured research
permit from the National Commission for Science, Technology and Innovation
(NACOSTI) to conduct this study. Data was analyzed using descriptive and inferential
statistics. The study findings established that mission statement (β = 0.50, t = 2.93, p <
0.05), vision statement (β = 0.52, t = 3.21, p < 0.05), adhocracy culture (β = 0.56, t =
2.85, p < 0.05) and market-oriented culture (β = 0.54, t = 2.89, p < 0.05) had a positive
significant effect on student academic performance from the teacher’s point of view
while from the students’ point of view, the mission statement (β = -0.51, t = -3.47, p <
0.05), vision statement coefficient (β = -0.44, t = -3.30, p < 0.05), adhocracy culture (β
= -0.53, t = -3.08, p < 0.05) and market-oriented culture (β = -0.50, t = -3.42, p < 0.05)
had negative significant effect on the student academic performance. The findings are
expected to make valuable contributions to theory propagation, policy formulation and
management practice. The study concludes that attributes of the school organizational
culture had a significant effect on the student academic performance. The study
recommends that future studies should utilize longitudinal datasets; combine both
public and private schools while undertaking analogous studies and also go beyond
Makueni County to include others counties so as to aid in generalization of the study
finding.