TABLE OF CONTENTS
Title Page i
Approval ii
Dedication iii
Acknowledgement iv
Table of Contents vi
List of Tables ix
Abstract x
CHAPTER ONE: INTRODUCTION
Background of the Study 1
Statement of the Problem 17
Purpose of the Study 18
Research Questions 18
Research Hypothesis 19
Significance of the Study 19
Scope of the Study 20
Operational Definition of Terms 20
CHAPTER TWO: REVIEW OF LITERATURE
Preamble 22
Influence of Domestic Labour on Secondary School Students
Performance 22
Influence of Absenteeism on Secondary School Students Performance 25
Influence of Commercial Child Labour on Secondary School Students
Performance 26
Influence of Household Poverty on Secondary School Students
Performance 27
Influence of Social Roles in Child Labour on Secondary School
Students
Performance 30
Theoretical Framework 32
Conceptual Framework 33
Summary of the Review of Related Literature 34
CHAPTER THREE: METHODOLOGY
Preamble 36
Research Design 36
Population, Sample and Sampling Techniques 37
Instrumentation 37
Validity 38
Reliability 38
Procedure for Data Administration and Collection 39
Data Analysis Techniques 39
CHAPTER FOUR: RESULTS
Preamble 40
Demographic Data 40
Hypotheses Testing 43
Summary of Findings 47
CHAPTER FIVE: DISCUSSION,
CONCLUSION AND
RECOMMENDATION
Preamble 49
Discussion 49
Conclusion 51
Recommendations 51
Suggestions for Further Studies 52
Reference 53
Appendix 58
LIST OF TABLES
Table1: Distribution
of Respondents on the basis of Gender, School
Type,
Class taught and Teaching Experience. 40
Table 2: Mean and Rank order of respondents on the influence of
child labour on academic performance on secondary
school
students. 42
Table 3: Mean, Standard Deviation and t-value of Respondents
on the influence of child labour on students
performance on
the basis of genders 44
Table 4: Mean, standard deviation and t-test of Respondents on
influence of child labour on students’ academic
performance on the basis of school type. 44
Table 5: Mean, Standard Decision and t-value of Respondents on
the influence of child labour on students academic
performance on the basis of class taught. 45
Table 6: ANOVA of Respondents on the influence of child labour
on student’s academic performance on the basis of
teaching
experience. 46
Table 7: Duncan Multiple Range Test on
Teacher’s Teaching
Experience. 47
ABSTRACT
Child Labour is a working child who is under the age
of 18 years specified by law. Any child who is involved in gainful employment,
feed self and augments family income at the experience of learning for the
purpose of school examination success is being subjected to child labour.
Influence is the power to make other people agree with your opinions or do what
you want. Agents this background, the study examined the influence of child
labour on academic performance of secondary school students as perceived by
teachers in Ila Local Government.
Data collected were from Ten (10) Secondary Schools in
Ila Local Government. Two Hundred (200) respondents were engaged in the study.
The percentages t-test and ANOVA statistical method were used for analysis of
data collected. The result derived from the analysis revealed that child labour
influence academic performance of students as perceived by teachers in Ila
Local Government among others. In the hypothesis for influence of child labour
on students’ academic performance on the basis of gender, there was no
significant different.
In hypothesis for influence child labour on academic
performance of students on the basis school types, there was no significant
difference. In the hypothesis for influence of child labour on academic
performance of students on the basis of class taught, there was no significant
difference. In the hypothesis for influence of child labour on academic
performance of students on the basis of teaching experience, there was no
significant difference.
Based on this findings, it was recommended that parent
should be sensitized by the teachers on the importance of their student
academics so as to understand their role and involvement in their children’s
academic performance. This will make them minimize the child labour at home and
make them concentrate in their school work. It was also recommended that, there
should be enforcement of law by the Ministry of Education and other education
stakeholder to guide the children against child labour that affect their
academic performance.
CHAPTER ONE
INTRODUCTION
Background to the Study
According to Pinzo and Hofferth (2008),
child labour is a far reaching and complex problem in developing countries. It
has existed in various forms (force labour, trafficking and street trading) in
different parts of the world since ancient time. The types of child labour vary
according to the country’s culture, and family culture, rural or urban
residency, socio-economic condition and existing level of development among
other factors.
A
survey by Global March (2008) stated that child labour emerged as an issue
during the industrial revolution when children were forced to work in dangerous
conditions for well up to 12 hours in a day. In 1860, 50% of children in
England between the ages of 5 and 15 were said to be working. However, 1919 saw
the world systematically begin to address the issue of child labour and the International
Labour Organization (ILO) adopted standards to eliminate it. Throughout the
20th century, a number of legally binding agreements and international
conventions were adopted but despite all this, child labour continues to this
day. The highest number of child labourers are said to be in the Asia-pacific
region, but the largest percentage of children,
as proportion of the child population, is evidently found in sub-Saharan
Africa with Nigeria (Ila Local Government, Osun
State) having a fair share.
The word child labour is any form of
physical, psychological, social, emotional and sexual maltreatment of a child
whereby the survival, safety, self-esteem, growth and development of the child
are endangered. Herrenkohl (2005) and Psachropoulo (2007), viewed child labour
as a disinvestment of social and human capital, a compromising of the
development of the individual, and a hindering of the development of skills,
abilities, and knowledge necessary to make significant contribution to society,
Convention on the Rights of the Child CRC, (2002) described child labour as
paid and unpaid work that occurs in any sector, including domestic, and
agricultural sectors, that are harmful to children’s mental, physical, social
or moral development of the child in the modern society; any work that deprives
children opportunity to attend school, obliges them to leave school permanently
or requires them to attempt to combine school attendance with excessively long
and heavy work is categorized as child labour.
The Article I of the United Nations Convention
on the Rights of the child, defines a child as any one below the age of 18.
Child labour does not only exist in the impoverished areas of developing
countries, but also flourish in other developed nations. Though, it is a
complex problem in developing countries.
Child labour remains a major source of
concern in Nigeria, in spite of legislative measure taken by the government at
various levels. In 1998, a report from the International Labour Organization
(ILO) estimated that 24.6% of children between the ages 10-14 in Nigeria were
working (World Development Indicator 2000). Earlier before that time in 1994,
the United Nations children’s Emergency Fund (UNICEF) reported that
approximately 24 percent (12 million) of all children under the age of 15 worked
(UNICEF, 2005). It is a ridiculous sight in most big cities, as well as rural
villages today to see children of school age, trading food on the street,
herding animals, tanning and drying raw leather product, fetching water for
commercial purpose, washing dishes at restaurants, serving as domestic hands,
selling wares at kiosks, collecting fire wood for business, harvesting crops in
family farm or commercial plantation amongst other activities (Thomberry 2013),
agreement with the labour abuse (child labour) trend, the International Labour
Organization (2002) in it other report issued, states that the global figure of
child labourers was put at appropriately 250 million. The report adds that the
ages of the children range between 4-14 years with 120 million of them working
full time.
According to Robinson (2009) the
phenomenon of child labour is arguably the tallest challenges that impacts
directly on school enrolment, attendance, academic performance, completion
rates as well as health rest, leisure and the general psychological disposition
of children. As stated earlier, child labour takes various forms such as street
trading, gardening, child caring, handicrafts, house chores, prostitutions and
trafficking etc., there all have implication on the learners level of
commitment.
Obinaju
(2005) also viewed child work in a more detailed way, in the perspective of
culture. To the author, child labour covers tasks and activities that are
undertaken by children to assist their parents or guardians. In particular,
such jobs as cooking, washing dishes, planting, harvesting crops, fetching
water and firewood, herding cattle, and babysitting. In this case child labour
simply aims at tasks and activities which are geared towards the socialization
process, if education must be wholesome.
However, the International Labour
Organization (ILO), in it condemnation, said, child labour is as stipulated
hereunder: children prematurely leading adult lives, normally working long
hours for low wages under conditions damaging to their health and to their
physical and mental development, sometimes separated from their families,
frequently deprived of meaningful educational training opportunities that could
open for them a better future. International Labour Organization (2001), in a
study entitled” focusing on the worst forms of child labour in Tanzanian says
child labour refers to work carried out to the detriment and endangerment of
the child, mentally, physically, socially and morally.
Child labour is generally interpreted as “all
cases in which children are exposed to harm at work whether or not children are
less than 14 years old or less” (UNICEF, 2005).
The meanings and implications of child
labour have been highly dependent on it social, cultural and economic context
as well as missions, strategies, and objectives of each organization. Two of
the major international organizations traditionally working on behalf of child
labour issues, the International Labour Organization (ILO) and United Nations
Education and Scientific Organization (UNESCO) had utilized quite different
child labour concepts and categorization until at least the early 1990s. Trade
unions and ILO often used “child labour” and child laborer” instead of “working
children” implying that children should be kept away from the labour force at
least until they reach a minimum working age on the basis of the fact that this
organizations historically tended to protect and secure adult labour market.
Scanlon (2002) conversely, referred to
“child labour” according to articles 32 of the conventions on the rights of the
child, in which child labour includes any economic activities impeding or
hindering the child’s full development or education. UNICEF described child
labour as work that violates children’s human rights (Post, 2001).
The International Labour Organization categorized
child labour as follows.
i.
Agricultural
labourers.
ii.
Domestic
labourers.
iii.
Street laboureres
and
iv.
Factory labourers
with wages.
Golden and Prather (2009) claimed that
“child labour” is exploitative, as the latter potentially impairs the health
and development of the children. By contrast, James and James (2008) although
agencies such as ILO, and UNICEF working on child labour issues originally had
different concepts on child labour, following the establishment of the worst
form of labour convention 182 in 1999 as well as inter-agency research
cooperation such as understanding children’s work in 2000, a growing consensus
has emerged that child labour refers to unacceptable forms of child work.
According to UNICEF (2005), the current
official definitions of child labour involves as follows:
1.
Child work or
children’s work is a general term covering the entire spectrum of work and
related tasks performed by children.
2.
Child labour
refers to the subset of children’s work that is injurious to children and that
should be targeted for elimination.
3.
Hazardous work
refers to physical, psychological or sexual abuse.
(unconditional) worst form of child labour includes
“children of any age below 18 who are involved in forms of slavery and force
labour, including forced recruitment for use in armed conflicts, commercial
sexual exploitation (prostitution or pornography), illicit activities
(particularly the production or trafficking of drugs) and hazardous work that
jeopardizes their lives, health or moral”.
On the other hand, the International
Labour Organization’s official defines child labour in the following categories.
1.
In ages 5-11 = all
children at work in economic activity.
2.
In ages 12-14 =
all children at work in economic activity minus those in light work.
3.
In ages 15-17 =
all children in hazardous work and other worst forms of child labour
International Labour Education and
International Programme for the Elimination of Child Abuse (ILO, IPEC, 2002).
The South Asian Coalition on child
servitude, (SACCS, 2003) in its perspectives defined “labour as a set up where
an employee (labour) sells his or her labour to an employer with certain work
related conditions, such as wages, amenities bargaining power, rights and legal
safe-guards. It implies that not all work performed by children can be termed
child labour. In some studies like Aderinto, (2000) children labourer are
regarded as “street children” or “children of the street” who run away from
parental or guardian abused, leaving them to eke out a living on other. This
name “street children paralyzed them from thinking ahead, thus rendering them
educationally useless and hopeless.
Teichman (2000), states that most times
they go through physical and health consequences such as respiratory problems,
injuries, accidents, physical and sexual abuse such as rape and molestation
malnourishment, extortion of income, police harassment, and participation in
harmful delinquent activities all inimical to educational successes. In other
studies, by (Charles & Charles, 2004) child labourers face robbery,
inadequate sleep due to fatigue and long hour job, and confinement in juvenile
hondes. Most times they suffer from mental related sickness such as;
stigmatization from the press and public, feelings of disheartenment, stress
and irritability, personality disorders, and anti-social behaviour, and
alienation and isolation from their family and these have significant negative
effect upon the level of education, school attendance, academic performance,
grade, literacy, leisure time, and overall human capital formation of the child
worker.
The general
notion held by many is that child labour, is detrimental to learners academic
capability, however, some opinions differ regarding “when and how” a particular
work is to be truly regarded as harmful to the future of a child or even
interferes with his wellbeing. There is an argument of relativism in this
discourse. A possible interpretation in this regard is to look at it in terms
of opportunity cost” (gains and foregone alternatives). From this purview, a
particular work would be harmful if it entails an opportunity cost in terms of
other activities that are beneficial for the child and his development with
reference to safety, nutrition, study, morality, leisure, rest (Okafor, 2010).
This school of thought believes and sees child labour as an inevitable process
of growth, development and integration of the child as stated in the social
theory above. Nevertheless, the adverse consequences of child labour differ by
whether they are oriented toward market or home production, as well as whether
they are inside or outside the home. Therefore, the question should be child
time allocation to work activities by where they occurs (inside or outside
household) by whether or not they are related to a family enterprise.
For Rosati and Rossi (2003), attending
school and working are decision that are usually considered simultaneously as a
family conversely, these authors also posit that the number of hours the child
devote to work is one of the fundamental variables for evaluating the child
wellbeing. Added researches in developing countries have found that the
majority of child and youth labourers regularly attend school. However, in
certain cases, a negative relationship between the number of hours worked and
the hours of school attendance has been found (Boozer and Suri, 2001).
Buonomo (2011) found that children who
work below the medium predicted by the proposed statistical model (up to two
hours daily) demonstrated better school results (measured years in school, age
grade ratio, completion of elementary education, completion of at least one
year secondary education) than those children who only attend school. This
finding indicates that while there is clear evidence of the negative impact of
labour on the minor education, a minimal devotion to labour does not seem to
have a significant effect on the education of children and youth.
However, attendance is an indication that
does not sufficiently explain the impact of child labour, as it does not take
into account the quality of the child’s experience in school. Meanwhile,
majority cases, child labour makes adequate child and youth inclusion in the
educational system difficult. (Grootaert and Kanbur, 2005). Dyer (2007)
observes that, given that the time for work takes away from the time allocated
to studies and that the attention to academic activities is reduced, due to the
fatigue produced by the labour. .
One of the major adverse trends in child labour
is the proliferation of young conductors in the transport industry. Horsch,
(2002) state that most victims work in public place such as street, markets
which does not give them time to go to school and perform excellently this is
mostly affected by students in secondary school. All in all, child labour seems
to have a clear negative effect on academic performance. Ukwu (2001) estimate
on child labour in Nigeria in general and Ila Local Government Osun State in
particular, indicate that 20 percent of children between the ages of 10 and 14
involved in street trading on cheap articles, edible and products such as
sachet water, plantain chips, bread, biscuit, okpa, ugba, fruits, vegetable,
wears and newspapers in the streets and along the road especially at damaged
portions of the roads where motorist and other road users are constrained to
slow down due to bad condition of such roads. Bonded labour which is also known
as debt bondage is another form of child labour suffered by most youths at the
current generation (Sebre, 2004).
Child labour, also according to Okafor,
(2010) exists in the form of house help or domestic servants. In this case,
privilege people from the cities easily convince poor rural parents to hand in
their children to them with various promises of better life and education.
However, these children are sooner than later turned into house helps who cook
food, wash clothes, care for babies, fetch water and attend to all sorts of
household chores etc.
Children in domestic service in Nigeria can be in
several forms.
Firstly, it may include children from
other families, parents or another society employed by certain people who are
believed to be wealthy and sometime of modest income. Abused children gets up
very early in the morning and begins his or her work by fetching water from a
nearby well, balancing the heavy jug on his or her head as he or she returns,
Prepares breakfast, and serve members of household. In addition, he/she later
does the remaining jobs in the evenings and late in the night (Moses, 2005). In
other instances, some of the children are taken to shop and business
centres/workshops, to serve for a number of years (usually between 5-7 years)
with the promise to assist them establish their personal business outfit at the
end of their service period. In many case such children are exploited as they
are merely used and dump on the basis of one accusation or the other. This has
led to the frustration of many youths who lack the adequate machinery to seek
any form of redress or social safety nets to fall back on. (Nanchi and Uba
2003).
Sabate and Rayah(2011), in his assertion,
comment as thus: child labour impacts negatively on the achievement or
performance of basic education because it leads to high drop rates as it easy
for children to be easily deceived by meager income that trickle in, into
believing that leaving school to give more time and attention to their work is
a better option as they will get rich faster than their peers who have to spend
many years in school. This can also lead to low academic achievement/poor
performance on account of which the child would be expected to repeat a grade,
this can cause fear, low self-esteem/shame both on the parts of the child and
parents and make them to develop certain apathy for schooling and in such
cases, and drop out could be a possible consequence. In some situations, such
children are considered poor and unfit for academic pursuits and the tendency
is usually to pull them out of school for a certain trade or apprenticeship
thereby perpetrating further abuses since many poor parents may not be willing
to give them a second chance. There is trade-off by most parents between the
time children spend in labour and that spent attending school and doing some
school related assignment (homework). Majority of child labourers either do not
attend school or skip school to various degree (Ekwe 2002).
Obviously, the greater the time children
allocated to work and economic activities, the increasely difficult it becomes
to attend school since one cannot eat his/her cake and still have it.
According to ILO 2006, report, 74.4
million children aged 5-14 year who skipped school and engage in employment
were victims of physical and mental hazard, most common are road and industrial
accidents, abduction and ritual murder etc. many of them have been hit by cars,
tricycle (Kekenapep), motor cycle (Okada), bicycle etc leading to deaths,
disabilities and various magnitude of injuries. The National Modular Child
Labour Survey (NMCLS 2001) confirmed that “across zones, South East recorded
the highest percentage – 16.4 percent-of children who suffered injury often,
followed by children in the North-West who recorded 7.8 percent. Whilst
South-South, South-West and North-central recorded 2.8 percent, 2.9 percent and
1.1 percent respectively, North-East had the least percentage of .0.9 percent
of children who suffered injury often (NMCLS, 2001 P.97). There is also a
psychological dimension to the health related issues of child labour. These
include; low self-esteem, stigmatization, personality crises since they often
see and hear things beyond their maturity. Thus posit a huge challenge that
negatively affect their cognition and retention abilities.
Generally, working children are known
perceived themselves as less privilege and less fortunate than their
non-working counterparts. An ILO survey across 26 countries found that at least
one in every four economically active children suffered sickness and injury as
a result of their work, while about 2.7 million healthy year of life are lost
due to child labour, each year with the highest rate in the sectors where
children are employed, (ILO, 2006). Such hazardous incident could eventually
jeopardizes the capability of being sound academically.
Despite the various views on the effect of
child labour and the contradictory opinions by some authorities, in all, time
spent in school is a poor measure of learning in school. Above, it was
separately indicated that child labour and time in school may be inversely
related, even if child labour does not harm learning. It is possible that child
labour harms learning even if it does not alter time in school. For example, it
is possible that child labour does not alter school enrolment, or even that it
does not alter school attendance because child leisure is lowered to make time
for child work. However, child labour could still adversely affect school
outcome by limiting time spent on homework, or it could leave the child too
tired to make efficient use of the time in school. Numerous studies of learning
tell us that it is cognitive achievement or highest grade attained that matter
for learning’s not time spent in school perse.
Statement of Problem
The Children academic
performance in secondary schools in Nigeria cannot be over emphasized.
Nevertheless, the trend of poor academic
achievement among students’ over the years seems to be on the increase. It may
be due to influence of child labour
which has been the prevalent mode of Child hard labour and child abuse
which affect the performance of secondary school students in Ila Local
Government and does not inspire and motivate students’ interest towards the
learning of the subjects in secondary schools. The students may end up
therefore having low interest which could lead to poor achievement in academic
performance in schools. There appears, to be no available empirical study on
the influence of child labour on academic performance of secondary school
students in Ila Local Government, Osun state, Nigeria.
Therefore, the problem of
this study posed as questions are “what are the influence of child labour on
academic performance of secondary school students’ in Ila local Government,
Osun state? Could failure of student, low enrollment of student, gender and
interest be militating factors on students’ academic achievement in secondary
schools in Ila Local Government, Osun state?
Purpose of the Study
The
purpose of this study was to investigate the influence of child labour on
academic performance of secondary school students in Ila Local Government.
Research Questions
The
study attempts to address the following research questions;
1.
What is influence
of child labour on students’ academic performance of secondary school students in
Ila Local Government?
2.
Is there any
difference in the influence of child labour on academic performance of
secondary school students on the basis of gender
3.
Is there any
difference in the influence of child labour on academic performance of
secondary school students on the basis of class taught
4.
Is there any
difference in the influence of child labour on academic performance of
secondary school students on the basis of school type
5.
Is there any
difference in the influence of child labour on academic performance of
secondary school students on the basis of teacher experience
Research hypotheses
1.
There is no
significant difference in the influence of child labour on students’ academic
performance as perceived by teachers in Ila Local Government on the basis of
gender.
2.
There is no
significant difference in the influence of child labour on students’ academic
performance as perceived by teachers in Ila Local Government on the basis of
School type.
3.
There is no significant
difference in the influence of child labour on students’ academic performance
as perceived by teachers in Ila Local Government on the basis of teacher
experience.
4.
There is no
significant difference in the influence of child labour on students’ academic
performance as perceived by teachers in Ila Local Government on the basis of
class taught
Significance of the Study
Elimination
of child labour can only be achieved when causes behind their working are
identified. The findings of the study will assist in providing data and
information for proper planning and decision at the Ministry o f Education,
local leadership, CDF administration and NGOs in trying to find out the root
cause of child labour and the interventions to be undertaken in order not to
have a negative effect on pupil’s academic performance.
The
findings will assist various organizations involved in education improvement in
the country such as UNESCO, UNICEF and other NGO’s who have interest in
improving schools. The result assists school administrators in dealing with
constraints or drawbacks caused by child labour.
Scope of the Study
This
research work focuses on influence of child labour on academic performance of
10 public secondary schools students in Ila Local Government. However, this
study was limited to 5 out of 10 selected secondary schools in Ila Local
Government in Osun State. Two hundred respondents took part in the study, who
were be randomly selected for the study.
The t-test and analysis of variance
(ANOVA) were used to analyse the data collected for the study. A self developed
questionnaire titled “Influence of Child Labour on Academic Performance
Questionnaire” (ICLAPQ) was used to collect data for the study.
Operational Definition of Terms
Child labour: A working child who is under the age of 18
years specified by law. Any child who is involved in gainful employment, feed
self and augments family income at the expense of learning for the purpose of
school examination success is being subjected to “child labour’.
Academic
Performance: Academic performance is
refers to the measure of what a learner has comprehended over during the period
of teaching and learning session. According to Melissa (2009), academic
performance refer to how students deal with their studies and how they can cope
with or accomplish different tasks given to them by their teachers.
Influence:
Influence is the power to make other people agree
with your opinions
or do what you want.
Influence is also the capacity or power of persons or things to be a compelling
force on or produce effects on the actions, behavior, opinion, etc of others.
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