ABSTRACT
The
descriptive survey research was adopted in this study. It is an attempt to
investigate the impact of deviant behaviour on the academic performance of
senior secondary students in Educational District VI of Lagos State
Oshodi/Isolo Local Government Area. A sample of 200 randomly selected students
were used, from four secondary schools. Another sample of 50 randomly selected
teachers were also used from the above measured schools. A 5 point likert scale
type questionnaire containing 20 items and 30 questions in Mathematics and
English Language were also administered to the students. The content of the
instruments were face validated by my supervisor and other experts in the
department. While the reliability was ascertained at 0.9 significant level.
Two
null hypotheses were postulated and tested using the independent t-test. The
first and second hypotheses were analyzed at 0.9 level of significance. The
result from this study showed that deviant behaviour of students has a negative
impact on their academic performance.
Governments
should adequately provide the needs of the learner at school. Parents on their
parts should adequately provide for their children because this will go along
way in preventing deviance. Parents should show love and affection for their
children. Also parents, must control and prevent their children from watching
unwholesome mass media programmes.
Teachers
should on their part, show affection and care to their students. They should
also have interest in their teaching as a career and attend classes regularly
in order to prevent students from developing deviant behaviours.
CHAPTER
ONE
INTRODUCTION
1.1 Background
to the Study
Deviant
behaviour no doubt, affects the academic achievement of students negatively.
According to Uzor (2000), children who exhibit behaviour deviation, are often
times prone to poor academic performance than children who behave well in the
society. Students who are disrespectful to the normal societal behaviours do
not see learning activity as something with devoting time for. Rather, as their
normal characteristics, they tend to disregard serious learning activity and
this has often translated in their poor or dismal academic outcomes. Shaw
(2001), is of the opinion that students should not be distracted in their focus
on learning. He opines that individuals who are given deviant behaviours are
also distracted from proper and serious learning activities in schools. According
to him, those who disregard and disrespect the laid down rules and regulations
of the school, do so at their academic peril.
Nwaka
(2004) added that, students’ academic performance has a negative correlation
with deviant behaviour. According to her, students who do not regard the
instructions of their parents, teachers and adult members of the society,
hardly make it in life. That they hardly progress and reach the goals of life,
including their academic goal.
In
everyday language, to deviate means to stray from an accepted path. Many
sociological definitions of deviance simply elaborate upon this idea. Thus,
deviance consists of those acts which do not follow the norms and expectations
of a particular social group or society (Arnolds, 2005).
In
practice, a field of study covered by the sociology of deviance, is usually
limited to deviance which results in negative sanctions. Infact, the American
Sociologist Marshal (2000), has suggested that the term deviance, should be
reserved for those situations in which behaviour is in disapproved direction
and of a sufficient degree to exceed the tolerance limit of the community.
Recently,
there have been increasing concern in the tertiary institutions that students’
behaviours have deteriorated. The most concerning behaviours for teachers are
those that involve minor violations of rules and regulations, disruption to the
smooth running of the classroom. Violent behaviour in schools is also a major
concern of most teachers, although, extreme incidents of school violence are a
global phenomenon (Infantino and Little, 2004).
There
is considerable evidence that those students who are deviate are not regular in
school for whatever reason, have limited lifetime opportunities, socially,
professionally and economically (Reid, 2004). They are more likely to
experience unemployment, underemployment and long term dependency. There are
strong association, between deviant behaviours like truancy, exclusion, crime
and high students’ achievement in school (McCarthy, 2004).
Deviant
behaviour like poor attendance to classes is a major source of discontent among
teachers and it hinders teaching and learning (Macbeath, 2005). Teachers are
often frustrated by the persistent non-attendance of certain students, particularly
as helping them to catch-up takes time and distracts from teaching the
remainder of the class. Students who are deviant in school fall behind in their
work and frequently have difficulties within friendship, McCarthy et al (2005).
According
to Owuamanam (2003), deviant behaviours refer to the problem of wrong doing by
young persons. It involves the problem of truancy, absenteeism, stealing,
vandalism, drug abuse, use and addict, terrorism, disobedience to laid down
rules and regulations of the school authorities, including other behaviours
that are against the social norms. Anyamele and Adeleke (2004), observe that
adolescents tend to move in groups because they are in the era of peer group
relationship. They want to be seen acting in conformity with their peers,
however, unconventional such act may be. Hence, the need for some understanding
and responsible adults at background, who would serve as role models for the
youngsters to re-direct their energies towards the right channels that would
produce rewarding and satisfying pattern of behaviours in them. This patterns
of wrong behaviour enstrange them from their teachers and peers and the
resultant effect is low academic achievement.
The
study of deviant behaviour in our secondary school and other institutions of
learning, has assumed greater attention. For sometime now, especially in the
last decade, it has become a common feature in our secondary schools and
universities to see students engage in street fighting, sports hooliganism or
carry out violent acts, and in the process engage in wanton destruction of life
and properties. It has become a more common feature in Nigeria today, to hear
from one media or the other about secondary and tertiary school students that
engaged in crimes such as drug abuse or addictions, sex offences, smuggling,
armed robbery, pick-pocketing, snatching of cell phones, cybercafe crimes,
rapping, truancy and theft of all kinds. These no doubt, are heights of deviant
behaviours and its resultant effect has been maladjustment of the perpetrators
(students) and consequently the dismal failure or downward performance of
students in our tertiary institutions.
1.2 Theoretical
Framework
Man
has always found the stage of human development interesting and fascinating.
Consequently, man has always entertained theories about the nature of
development. One of the ancient notions was known as pre-information, that is,
man'’ tendencies and attributes were thought to exist performed at birth. Then
came the homonculus view of human development which was an elaboration of
pre-formationism and which proposes that the sperm contains a fully form
miniature man, who simply-develops, once conception has taken place, in an
incremental way until maturity is reached (Herbert, 1981).
Theologians
and philosophers also speculated about the nature of man and his motives. While
some thought of man’s nature as selfish, and pessimistic, others fell that man
is not basically selfish and had optimistic views of man’s behaviour. One of
the controversies in developmental psychology concerns the concept of “stage”,
and its importance in describing the development of psychological processes
such as thinking and personality. Ausubel and Sullivan (1990) describe the
periods in which qualitatively new and discontinuous (inter-stage) changes in
personally organization are being formulated as transitional phases or
developmental changes. During this transitional periods, the individual is in
the marginal position of having lost an established and accustomed status, and
of not yet having acquired new status towards which the factors impelling
developmental changes are driving him.
These
transitional periods according to Eriks (1993) are ‘sensitive period and impose
a heavy burden on his adjustive capacities. Since each stage of development
corresponds with a particular form of social demand, the individual must deal
with and master a central problem in order to avoid a potential crises”.
Various
theories of adolescent development have been formulated as far back as the
period of Plato and Aristotle, the great Greek Philosophers.
The
next stage which is between the ages of the five and twelve is described by
Freud as the period of ‘latency’. This is a period of calm, when the attention
of the child is focused on the school work, play and friends. This period of
calm is disrupted by the onset of ‘puberty’. And once again the child relives
the conflicts of early childhood. Psychoanalysts are of the opinion that, the
adolescent turmoil as postulated by Hall is inevitable. They claim that without
this turmoil, the young person will not be able to make necessary adjustments
which will help him in his transition to adult life (Adamson, 1995).
Psychoanalysts
believe that at adolescent stage, girls have strange feelings towards males,
and boys also get themselves attached to the females. However, both male and
female engage in forms of sublimation in order to meet the demands of society
and in forms of intellectualism and ascentism.
Morrish
(1978) on his part, suggested that deviant behaviour was not necessarily
delinquent or criminal behaviour. Although, it may of course, be the first step
to some anti—social behaviour which may come within the sanction of the law and
therefore irrevocably delinquent. According to him “deviancy” was relative as
well as contextual. He suggested that it was better to speak of deviant forms
than to stigmatize the individuals as deviants. Similarly, Tattum (2002), and
Brown (2004) subscribed to the belief that norm was genetically or
instinctively violent and aggressive. These writers haven maintained that human
beings are killers by nature, stating that it was a built-in characteristic
which man had inherited from his animal ancestors and instincts.
The
adolescent child begins to manifest good reasoning power. He therefor begins to
ask questions and to challenge the adult authority at home, in the school and
in the society at large. There is need for proper guidance in order to curb
indisciplinary behaviours among the adolescent children since this is a common
problem. Certain actions embarked upon the adults should be explained to them
in order to carry them along (Adamson, 2000).
Adolescents
get excited because of their intellect. They begin to show interest in things
of the mind the arts and ideas for their own sake. They have certain interests
which get them excited and worked up when the adults are opposed to such. For
example, religion could be a bone of contention. Hence, many adolescents
nowadays are found trooping in large number to the new found ‘Pentecostal’
churches which seem to satisfy their needs socially and intellectually when
compared with the Orthodox churches.
This
refers to the problem of wrong-doing by young persons. It involves the problem
of truancy, stealing, vandalism, terrorism, drug addiction and other behaviours
that are against the social norms. Adolescents tend to move in groups because
they are in the era of peer group relationship. They want to be seen acting in
conformity with their peers, however unconventional such act may be,
(Owuamanam, 1988). Hence, the need for some understanding and responsible
adults at the background who would serve as role models for the youngsters to
re-direct their energies towards the right channel that would produce rewarding
and satisfactory patter of behaviour in them.
1.3 Statement
of the Problem
There
is a general poor academic orientation among students these days. The society
is angered by the poor performance in West African Senior School Certificate
(WASSC) and NECO in 2009 and 2010 sessions respectively. Reasons for this trend
has engaged scholars and researchers in different fora. One of the reasons for
the recorded poor academic achievement of students at the senior secondary
school level, is the deviant behaviour of students. For instance, many
adolescents engage themselves in truancy; absenteeism; drug abuse, disregard
and disrespect to the constituted authorities of the home and school; terrorism
and unwanted violent demonstrations in which valuable school and government
properties are brazenly destroyed. These negative and unwarranted attitudes by
some students have caused most of them to stay away from the school for a
period of time. Even, some of the students have dropped out of the school
completely due to deviant behaviour, and the resultant effect is low
performance in their education.
The
above problems gave rise to the investigation into the influence of proneness
to deviant behaviours on academic orientation among undergraduate students in
Lagos metropolis.
1.4 Purpose
of the Study
The
followings are the specific objectives of the study:
1. To
find out whether the ethnic background of students influences their behaviour
at school.
2. To
evaluate whether religious background of students influences their deviant
behaviours.
3. To
assess whether the socio-economic status of students affect their behaviours in
the school.
4. To
ascertain the impact of deviant behaviours on students academic performance.
1.5 Research
Questions
The
following research questions were asked in this study:
1. Does
ethnic background influence students’ behaviours at school?
2. Does
religious background influence students’ attitudes at school?
3. To
what extent do students’ socio-economic status affect their overall behaviours
in the tertiary institutions?
4. To
what extent does deviant behaviour impact on students’ academic performance.
1.6 Research
Hypotheses
The
following hypotheses stated in the null terms are developed to guide the study:
1. There
is no significant influence of ethnicity on the behaviour of students at University
of Lagos.
2. There
is no significant influence of religion on students’ attitude at University of
Lagos.
3. There
is no significant impact of socio-economic status on students academic
performance at school.
4. Students’
deviant behaviour will not significantly impact on their learning activities at
school.
1.7 Significance
of the Study
This
study will focus on the beneficial of the following individuals:
(1) The
Students: The findings and recommendations of this study will be of
great benefit to the students who would be enlightened concerning the character
they should put across in the society. This study will also afford the
students, the opportunity to know the effects of deviant behaviours. This study
will also lead them to avoid those behaviours labelled as deviant in the
society. With the recommendations of the study, students would be able to
identify the attributes of deviants. This study will also assist students at
all levels to stop the use of cell phones and watching of blue films in the
classroom when lesson is going on. The reason being that it makes students to
loose concentration in the class thereby affecting learning.
(2) Teachers: Would
be beneficiaries of this study, because, the study will afford them the golden
opportunity of knowing how to detect students who exhibit deviant behaviour and
how to tackle them or remedy them. With the findings and recommendations of
this study, teachers would be able to know those activities that would enable
them to remedy the bad behaviour of the students who are under their care.
(3) The
School Authorities: With the recommendations of this study, the school
authorities would be able to solve the problem of deviation of students or
adolescents in our tertiary institutions. This study also, will recommend to
the school authorities all it takes to arrest the dwindling or negative
behaviours of students in our schools and the society at large. Though some
school do not allow the use of cell phones and other P3 equipment in schools,
but some students smuggled them into the classroom and used them to disturb
learning in the classroom. Schools should be more restricted and punished any
child found in the classroom with any of this equipment that can distract
attention in the classroom while the lesson is going on.
(4) Government: Government
would be opportuned to gather information concerning adolescents’ deviation in
the society. It will be of great help to the government, if this study is
completed. This is because, it will afford the government the opportunity to
know how to go about solving the society’s problems which is mostly on youths.
(5) The
Parents: Parents would also benefit from this study because, it will
enable them to be able to know the characters of their children and wards and
how to go about solving the perceived problems. No doubt, deviant behaviour of
the youths has been one of the major problems of the society, and government is
interested in solving the problems of youth restiveness in the society.
Therefore, government will collaborate with parents and teachers to solve this
problem of deviance amongst the youths in our schools and homes. They should
observe their children and wards on the use of cell phones especially in the
schools because of its negative effect on learning.
(6) Not
only that, the society will be able to benefit from this study, because it will
help it to know or identify the problems of deviation amongst the youths and
how to help in solving it.
1.8 Scope
of the Study
This study examines the impact of deviant behaviours among
students in Mainland Local Government Area of Lagos State.
TOPIC: IMPACT OF DEVIANT BEHAVIOUR ON THE ACADEMIC PERFORMANCE OF SENIOR SECONDARY SCHOOL STUDENTS
Format: MS Word
Chapters: 1 - 5
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Number of Pages: 65
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