ABSTRACT
The study examined the influence of
parents on children’s emotional adjustment in selected secondary schools in
Lagos State. The descriptive survey research design was used in this study in
order to assess the opinions of the respondents using the questionnaire. A
total of three hundred and twenty (320) samples were used in this study to
represent the entire population of the respondents. Five (5) null hypotheses
were tested in this study using t-test statistical tool at 0.05 level of
significance. The following results were obtained:
1. The
role of parents affect their children’s emotional adjustment in school.
2. Difference
exists between intact/single parents and their influence on emotional
adjustment of students.
3. There
is a significant gender difference in emotional adjustment of students due to
parental discipline.
4. There
is a significant difference between the emotional adjustment of students who
are brought up by parental discipline and those who were not.
5. There
is a significant difference between the social adjustment of students who are
brought up by parental discipline and those without parental discipline.
At the end of the study, it is
recommended that parents should rear up their children with good discipline and
not leave them to behave as they like. Parents should not spare the rod, in
order not to spoil the child. Rather, children should be taught the proper way
they should behave and then, it will be difficult for them to depart from those
expected values and norms they were taught by their own parents.
CHAPTER ONE
INTRODUCTION
Background
to the Study
Discipline
has been defined as a set of rules and regulations, rewards and punishment
administered in order to teach self-control, increase desirable behaviour and
decrease undesirable behaviour (Okoli, 1996). As Brown (2000) puts it, to
discipline someone means to make that individual or individuals to follow a
laid down code of conduct. In discipline, the ultimate goal is to foster sound
judgment, positive moral development and positive social and emotional
adjustment.
According
to the Bible, God gave Adam and Eve an instruction not to eat of the fruit in
the Garden of Eden, but when they disobeyed, they were promptly punished by God
which resulted in sending them out of the Garden. Also, the Bible states that,
when you spare the rod, and you spoil the child. In the same vein, Proverb
13:24 states that “He that spareth his nod hateth his son, but he that loveth
him, chasteneth him”. Hence, the influence of parents on the child can be the
most important influence given to the child in his/her life because parents are
accountable to God on how they influence their children’s’ lives.
Parental
discipline has been in existence since the inception of man. The provision of
positive influence by parents gives the child security and emotional
adjustment, which assists the child to grow up as a decent member of the
society (Amos, 2003). The quality of time parents spend with their children is
the most important aspect of parenting and parent-child relationship. This
could be day by day, hour by hour training and instruction in order to secure
the appropriate atmosphere necessary in the child’s growth and emotional
development.
Mustapha
(2006), stated that parents who have the habits of spending quality time with
children, bring up good children who are socially and emotionally balanced in
the communities where they live. He went ahead to claim that children who are
well behaved and emotionally balanced are normally influenced by effective
parental discipline and strong training given to them during the childhood and
adolescence stages.
Locke
(1963), theorized that the child is resembled like the black tablet (tabula
rasa) at birth and that it is the print made in it that is physically seen. In
the same vein, Adamson (2000) admitted that the cultural, educational,
financial and the social status of the home have bearing on the child’s
emotional adjustment, it is the environment and the type of home that makes a
man what he is. Therefore, when and how a child is nurtured and bred, determine
who and what the child becomes in the near future and the overall social and
most importantly, emotional adjustment.
Some
thoughts concerning education suggested that the task of the parents was mainly
to build in the child a strong body and habits that would allow for capacity of
reasoning to develop and that parents could reward good behaviour, punish or
discipline bad behaviour with disgrace and the withdrawal of parental approval
and affection as opposed to beating (Arnolds, 2001).
According
to Eden (2002), misbehaviour ought to be punished, so that a child does not
repeat what he termed or seen by the society as unwanted behaviour. According
to him, if bad behaviour is left unaddressed by applying disciplinary measures,
the child tends to repeat the unwanted behaviour, thinking that those
behaviours are normal norms or values cherished by the society.
Waller
(2005) opined that parental discipline with love and affection makes a child to
adjust emotionally, socially and psychologically in the society. He went on to
opine that operant conditioning as a form of punishment with artificial
consequences for misbehaviour could be used. According to him, a child who used
the family car without parental permission, the punishment is that the car is
taken from him for a period of time while or praise and reward, operant
conditioning could be used through encouragements and presentation of valuable
gifts to the child in order to encourage him to repeat the valuable norms or
behaviour so exhibited.
Statement
of the Problem
These
days, many parents shy away from using disciplinary measures as corrective
instruments toward the remedying of children’s bad or unwanted behaviour in the
society. Because of this, child’s negligence or avoidance of parental control
through disciplinary actions (discipline), most children these days grow up to
lack emotional adjustment.
Children
nowadays, do not exhibit positive emotional adjustment, they do not feel bad
whenever they do wrong or step upon the recommended norms or values stipulated
in the society as laid down rules and regulations. This kind of hardened
behaviour by our youth, have caused negative effects in the society.
For
the fact that youth do not feel bad about the wrong attitude, exhibited in the
society, this, has resulted into wayward behaviour; prostitution; armed
robbery; lying, stealing; fraudulent activities; examination malpractices;
raping; disrespect and disobedience to the authorities of the parents and
significant others in the society. This study therefore, focused on the
influence of parental discipline on emotional adjustment of secondary school
students.
Purpose
of the Study
The
objective of this study include:
1. To
investigate the role of parents in the emotional adjustment of secondary school
students.
2. To
identify the extent at which parental discipline has affected the emotional
adjustment of students in secondary schools.
3. To
enumerate the different disciplinary measures taken by parents.
4. To
differentiate different categories of single or intact parents that have
influenced the emotional adjustment of secondary school students.
5. To
suggest solutions to be taken in order to avoid emotional imbalance while
trying to impose discipline on children.
Research
Questions
The
following questions were raised and answered in the process of carrying out
this research.
1. How
can the role of parents in the emotional adjustment of secondary school
students be investigated?
2. Is
there a differentiation between the different categories of single or intact
parents and their influence on the emotional adjustment of secondary school
students?
3. Is
there any difference between the emotional adjustment of students who are
brought up by parents who are disciplinarians and those brought up by parents
who are not?
4. Is
there any gender difference in emotional adjustment of children due to parental
discipline?
5. Will
the social adjustment of students who are brought up by parental discipline
differ from those who are not?
Hypotheses
The
following hypotheses were formulated and tested in this study.
1. The
role of parents will not significantly affect children’s emotional adjustment
in school.
2. There
will be no significant difference between intact and single parents and their
influence on emotional adjustment of the students.
3. There
will be no significant gender difference in emotional adjustment of students due
to parental discipline.
4. There
will be no significant difference between the emotional adjustment of students
who are brought up by parental discipline and those who are not.
5. There
will be no significant difference between the social adjustment of students who
were brought up by parental discipline and those who are not.
Significance
of the Study
It
is hoped that the findings of this research work will help parents realize
their roles toward the emotional adjustment of their children in the secondary
schools.
The
study will contribute to the extent at which parents could influence the
emotions of their children at all levels of their education. It will also be
beneficial to teachers, educators and counsellors in dealing with students’
emotional adjustment during their educational career in school.
Theoretical
Framework
The
Emotional Theory (Lake, 1980) stated that parental discipline is necessary for
the emotional, social and psychological adjustment of the child. According to
this theory, the child is helpless when left without personal upbringing of the
parents and the significant others in the nearby community or environment where
the child is nurtured and brought up. In this regard, Lake (1980) opined that
the discipline of the child is necessary, as without disciplinary measures in
terms of smacking and or punishment when the child is wrong, the child tends to
grow up upholding the wrong ideas and negative life and behaviour.
Arnolds (2000),
stated that individuals cannot give what they do not possess. According to him,
parents who are not disciplined themselves will find it extremely difficult to
instruct their children/wards to toe the part of discipline. He went on to
state that most parents who train their children on the part of strictness and
absolute discipline, are those who themselves are strict, disciplined and
principled as well.
Children
who are brought up by parents who are authoritative (i.e. not completely
authoritarians and not completely laizzez affaire parents), tend to rear
children whose character conform to the dictates, norms and values of the
society. As Adamson (2001), put it, no society frowns at positive and good
norms. Rather, all societies welcome children or members of the society who are
well behaved, who dance to the positive tune of the societal music and values.
Therefore, any society in the world, welcomes its members whether adult or
children, who are well adjusted to the ethics and morals of the larger society.
Mundi
(1990), theorized that the characters of children solely depend on the
upbringing they have while growing up. As he puts it, parental discipline helps
children to be either positively or negatively adjusted in any society. For
instance, parents who bring up their children/wards through aggressive ways are
aggressive and violent because aggression beget aggression while parents who
bring up their children/wards in the democratic way, rear up children who are
well behaved who know how to live well in a decent society.
Scope
of the Study
This
study covered Lagos metropolis especially, the Mainland Local Government
Education District.
Definition
of Terms
The
following terminologies were used in the research work. Some of the operational
definitions of the terms are as follows:
i. Influence: This
is what makes an individual to take action whether positive or negative.
ii. Parental
Discipline: These are the rules and regulations set out by parents
which are observed by their children/wards.
iii. Emotional
Adjustment: This is the ability to make right changes in behaviours
due to agitation or disturbance occasioned by strong feeling.
iv. Intact
Parents: This connotes the family in which there is a unity between
father and mother who live together as husband and wife with their
children/wards.
TOPIC: INFLUENCE OF PARENTAL DISCIPLINE ON EMOTIONAL ADJUSTMENT OF SECONDARY SCHOOL STUDENTS
Format: MS Word
Chapters: 1 - 5
Delivery: Email
Delivery: Email
Number of Pages: 65
Price: 3000 NGN
In Stock
 (+234)07060722008
sales@graciousnaija.com

No comments:
Post a Comment
Add Comment