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PARENT’S SOCIO-DEMOGRAPHIC FACTORS AS DETERMINANTS OF CAREER CHOICE CONFLICT AMONG SENIOR SECONDARY SCHOOL STUDENTS IN ABUJA (FCT)

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ABSTRACT

This study investigated the extent to which parents’ socio-demographic factors such as age, educational qualification, type of education and socio-economic status influenced career choice conflict of senior secondary school students in Abuja, FCT. To guide the study, four research questions were posed and four null hypotheses formulated. Ex-post facto research design was adopted for the study. The study was carried out in Bwari, Gwagwalada and the municipal area councils of Abuja. The population for the study consists of 17,913 senior secondary school one (SS1) students in the approved government senior secondary schools in Abuja (FCT). The sample size for the study was 350 students from the area of study. Multistage sampling technique was adopted in selecting the sample. A structured questionnaire titled Students’ Career Choice Conflict Questionnaire (SCCCQ)’ was used for data collection. The research questions were analyzed using descriptive statistics such as Mean and Standard Deviation while the hypotheses were tested at 0.05 level using one-way ANOVA. The results of the study revealed that age range and socio-economic status level of parents do not significantly influence   the   students’   career   choice   conflict.   However,   Parents’   educational qualification as well as their type of education does significantly influenced the students’ career choice conflict. This study has educational implications on career choice conflict of students from highly qualified and educated parents from high schools such as University and secondary schools. Based on the findings, it was recommended among others that significant career influencers such as friends, parents, members of the community and media personnel need to be equipped with correct career information for them to guide students appropriately.

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CHAPTER ONE

INTRODUCTION

Background of the Study

In our society today, students face a complex and rapidly changing society. It has been reported that regardless of great effort put forth by families, government agencies and non-government agencies, many young people encounter difficulties in the transition from the world of school to that of work (Atchoarena cited in Pilot & Regis,  2012).  Investigating   and  better   understanding   the  myriad  factors  that contribute to career choice is a topic of recurring interest in our schools today. To guide students in their career  decision making, socio-demographic  factors play a central  role in  this lifelong  process  (Pilot  & Regis,  2012).  These  factors include family,  school,  career  guidance  program,  media  and  peers.  In  this  study,  the influence of family will only be investigated.

Family involvement was found to be the most significant predictor of  career choice in gender dominated occupations (Salami, 2006). Family involvement refers to the extent to which the parents or family members are involved in the career plans of children  (Salami, 2006). According  to Kniveton  (2004), the family can provide information and guidance directly or indirectly, to influence a young person’s career choice.  For  example,  parents  offer  appropriate  support  for  certain  occupational choices which tend to follow their own (Small & McClean, 2002). Family involvement also  includes  the extent  to  which  parents  give  encouragement,  responsiveness, approval and financial  support in matters concerned with the career plans of their children (Salami,  2006). Families treat boys and girls differently. Boys are shaped and groomed  into stereotypic masculine careers and are given more status in the

family (Grant,  2004).  However,  Carter  and Wojtkiewicz  (2000)  argue that  female students receive more attention from parents than male offsprings. They attribute the parents’ behaviour to the current emphasis on educational  attainment for females. Students identify parents as the strongest influence on career and course decisions (Barnett, 2007). Teachers or counselors cannot replace the influence parents have on  their  sons’  and  daughters’  career  plans.  Research  shows  that  parents  and caregivers influence  student’s  career  choices (Muthu-  krishna and Sokoya, 2008) with the mother being the most influential person the adolescent talks to concerning career choice (Otto,  2000). Mothers were cited as particularly  influential because they  provided  support  that  eased  the  children’s  apprehensions  about  careers (Hairston, 2000).

In South Africa, Ngesi (2003) notes that poor financial base of students from disadvantaged  communities deter choices of appropriate educational  programmes and careers. Such students tend to avoid careers which appear to them to require long period of training their finance cannot support (Ngesi, 2003). This suggests that students from lower socio-economic families are not given adequate space to make independent  decisions  on their careers.  For instance,  a study by Salami  (2006) shows   that   the   higher   the  attitude   towards   religion,   socio-economic   status, achievement  motivation  and  family  involvement,  the  more  the  female  students tended to choose gender dominated careers like nursing and engineering. Most of the females who  chose engineering were from high socio-economic  status homes while feminine stereotyped occupations were chosen by females from lower socio- economic status homes (Salami, 2006). The trend suggests that parents in higher socio-economic  status homes have more opportunity  structures  like financial  and

material  resources,  wider  information  and  horizons  about  occupations  (Salami,

2006).

It is a well know fact that in our society today,  parents are the ones  that nurture, raise, promote and support the physical, emotional, social, intellectual and career development needs of the students. They serve as significant interpreters for children of information about the world and children’s abilities (Pitol & Regis 2012). The students on their part tend to seek help from parents to learn to interpret reality. The reliance invariably gives parents undeniable opportunities to make impact on the development of their children’s future, aspirations and career choices. Sad enough, the researcher  observed  that parents due to some personal considerations  fail to play this vital role well. This is because they shift focus from the child’s interest and abilities  to  some  personal  factors  peculiar  to  them  in  reaching  decisions.  This situation  becomes a problem when the parental  views differ remarkably from the career intentions of their children. When this happens, it might result to career choice conflict.

According  to  (Ngesi,  2003)  Conflict  is  a  part  of  all  nature  and  systems including the parents and the adolescents in relation to their choice of career. Career choice conflict between parents and students from the researcher’s view point occur when there is a disagreement between parents and their child over the career the child should pursue. This is experienced when the freedom to make a choice of a career by young people is not always allowed by their parents. It also arises when a parent pressures a child toward a particular career just for the purpose of ensuring that the child pursues his/her career intentions. Otto (2000) observed that parents’ reasons  for enforcing    their  own career goals   on the students  is because  they believe   they know  more than the students   and the career they select for their

children will be most likely  the best for them.  In addition,  parents  in their   selfish pride  regard certain  careers as more prestigious than others and would want to be seen  as parents whose child is in that career. Often times, parents who owned and established  a successful  career/business  in a specialized  field  like medicine law, pharmacy, etc would want their children to follow that same career so that they can pass it on to them even when their children may not  have the aptitude for such careers (Grant, 2004). For instance, the researcher has witnessed a scenario in one of the placement services conducted for JSS  3  students going into SSI where a parent who was a pharmacist insisted that his ward must study pharmacy and take over from him. Even though his ward indicated that he has no such ability and did not express an interest or intention to become one, his father wants him to become a pharmacist. There are also instances where parents who could not achieve a certain career during their lifetime would try to pass their failed ambition to their children and would make it  mandatory for the students to attain that career they did not attain. There  are  other  occasions  where  parents  fear  that  the  careers  chosen  by  the students  are not realistic and may not give them a secured future. This happens when a child decides to become an entertainer, comedian, musician, artist, dancer, modeler, actor/actress, footballer etc and feels that schooling is no longer relevant to him/her. In such instances, any plan by the parents to get him to focus on his studies would be construed by him as being obstacles to his future. Because most parents feel that those career paths are not real and sustainable careers, they would want to persuade the students not to follow such career paths by engaging in career conflict with the child. The  researcher has witnessed a case where a student was disowned by his parents because he wants to be a musician as against  a lawyer  which  was

intended  by his parents  and this is usually the problem or situation when there are two divergent views on the career choice of an individual.

From the researcher’s observation, parents’ ability to influence the  students towards a career path or engage in a career choice conflict with their children may be related to the parents’ socio-economic  and demographic  factors. For instance, some parents use their age advantage to dictate choices for their children and by virtue of their age make their children to suppress what they want. When the children perceive  that  their  parents  are  using  their  age  influence  to  make  persuasive statements, convictions or threats about a particular career expectation preferred by them, they engage in conflict with their parents. Again when parents build and design a future for a child based on their dreams and not on the child’s talent and pressures him/her to pursue a quality, level,   or type of education that will not give him/her fulfillment in life in  his/her  intended career, it leads to conflict.   Sometimes  when parents  only  want  a career  that will  protect  their  social  class  and image  in the society, it  makes them to engage in conflict with their children. For instance when parents  only consider their  status which is at stake if they allow  their  children  to take  to another  profession without due recognition of the  their  children’s interest, abilities,  performances  and   preferences,  the   young persons  may  object  to the parent’s career plan and refuse to accept the choice made and this action will  result to conflict.

In  this  study  the  researcher  is  investigating  the  extent  to  which  socio- demographic factors of the parents influence career choice conflict of the students. Socio-demographic factors could include marital status, educational status, religious status, socio-economic  status, age etc. For this study; the  researcher  limited the socio-demographic   factors   of   parents   to   age,   educational   type,   educational

qualification   and  socio-economic   status  of  the  parents.  These  variables   are explained below according to the researcher’s observation as follows;

Age of the parents is the chronological number of the parents; how does the chronological number (age) of the parents determine career choice conflict between the parents and the children? Is it possible that parents who are more advanced in age (for example between 50-60) would engage in less career choice conflict with their children than parents who are less advanced  in age?  Does the age of the parent have any influence on the tendency to engage in career choice conflict with their children?

Another  socio-demographic  factor  which is also  the focus  of this study  is parent’s educational qualification. What educational qualification did the parent stop at?  Educational  qualification  could  include  primary,  secondary,  diploma,  tertiary, post-graduate  diploma, masters or Ph.D. It is possible that  parents who are more educated would have more career choice conflict with their children because they believe they know better and so whatever the child chooses that is not agreeable to what they have may lead them to engage in career choice conflict with their children while parents who have lower level of education may not know so much about career and so may agree to whatever the child decides to adopt as his/her career, and this will  be  acceptable  to  the  parents.  Research  evidence  advances  the  notion  that parents’   educational    background   moderate   children’s   educational    decisions (Borchert 2002; Huang 2008). Judge and Livingston (2008) pointed out that highly educated parents may discuss social equality more openly with their children, hence sharing more egalitarian  perspectives  on gender  roles more openly.  Remarkable gender differences were found in the levels of education of all  participants in the study  sample.  More  female  than  male  students  had   both   parents  with  post

secondary education and only mother with post secondary education. This suggests that female students benefited more from the mother’s  post  secondary education than males. This corroborates several studies (Edjah et al. 2007; Esters and Bowen

2005; Falaye and Adams 2008) that suggest that the level of education of the mother is the major contributor to the daughter’s career choice. Despite this assertion, one cannot evidently say this is so, that is what this study is set to investigate. Would the parents’ level of education influence the tendency of the parents to engage in career choice conflict with their child?

Parents’  educational  type  is  the  type  of  educational  system  the  parent attended. This may include, primary, secondary, university, polytechnic,  college of education,  monotechnics,  professional  schools  like  school  of  aviation,  school  of maritime  studies,  Nigerian  Defence  Academy  (NDA),  nomadic  education,  adult literacy  programme  etc. The parents’  educational  type may have the capacity  to determine   the career   path the child would  tow  and it may also determine if the parent  would engage in career choice  conflict with the child or not. This is what the researcher intends to find out in this study.

Socio-economic status entails the economic standing of the parents in  the society (Salami, 2006).  There are three levels of socio-economic status  which  are: high  socio-economic status; these are the ones  who are in the upper  echelons of the society, middle socio-economic status are those who are in the middle ranks of the society while low  economics status are those who are in the lower echelons of the  society.  Socio-economic  index  is  an  index  that  is  used  to  measure  one’s economic  standing  in  the  society  and  the  major  indicators  that  will  be  used  to estimate   parents   socio-economic   status  in  this  study  include   housing   type, electronics possessed, cooking facilities and mobility possessed by parents.

From the researcher’s  observations,  it is the wish  of every  parent  to  see his/her child succeed and become established in life. No parent actually sets out to do his or her child harm. Even  when parents  have selfish  reasons why  they want their child to undertake a particular   choice   of career,  underneath  those   selfish reasons  is still a heart that loves the child  and truly  wants the child to succeed. Yet children on the other hand are the ones who would be going into that career. They are the ones who are going to do the  reading and make all necessary sacrifices required to excel in that career. They are the ones who know their ability and their interests; they are the ones who know what they can excel at and what they cannot excel at. These two conflicting circumstances have become the problem which has captured the researcher’s interest. The extent to which this conflict will occur may be determined   by  the   parent   socio-demographic   factors   such   as  parents   age, educational  qualification,  type  of  education  and  socio-economic  status  of  the parents.  The  extent  to  which  these  socio-demographic  factors  determine  career choice conflict of parents and senior school students in  (FCT)  Abuja is what this study seeks to investigate.

Statement of the Problem

The problem of career choice conflict between students and their parents is becoming an issue of concern crying out for solution. It is an act which seems to put students in senior secondary schools in a state of dilemma of leaving their career aspirations and yielding to the career preferred by their parents. This situation arises when parents’ views differ remarkably from the career  intensions of the students. When this situation happens, the result is conflict. This problem is traceable to the fact that most parents  no longer  play the  supportive  and complementary  role of congruent  assistance  to the students in  the career decision making. Rather they

insist  on  a  particular  career  for  the  students  based  on  their  age,  educational qualifications, type of education and socio economic status. This accounts for the many Cases of dropout of senior secondary school students who have reluctantly left their career aspirations due to pressure firm their parents.   As a result, the children go in to study courses to please their  parents  even when they do not have the necessary skills or abilities to excel in them. However, there are also students who vehemently resist this attempt by their parents to deny them of their freedom to make appropriate career decisions or choice. Hence, they reject the career chosen by their parents on the ground that such decisions are not to their best interest. But these are just a minority compared to the enormous number of students who drop out of school because  their career aspirations have been disfigured or marred by their parents’ choice for them.

If this problem is not addressed, the students may not be able to exercise the freedom the career path to pursue without undue interference from their parents. It may lead to confusion,  discouragement,  dissatisfaction,  frustration  and refusal  to practice the forced.  It may also destroy potential gifts, hinder creativity and career fulfillment  for  the  affected  students.  Therefore,  the  problem  of  this  study  put in question  form  is;  what  are  the  parents’  socio-demographic  factors  that  act  as determinants of students’ career choice conflict in Abuja FCT?

Purpose of the Study

Purpose  of this is to investigate  the extent to which parents’  socio-demographic factors such as age, educational qualification, type of education and socio-economic status influence career choice conflict of senior secondary school students in Abuja, FCT.

Specifically, the study sought to:

1.         Determine the extent to which age range of parents influence students’ career choice conflict.

2.         Determine the extent to which educational qualification of parents influence students’ career choice conflict.

3.       Establish the extent to which parents’ type of education influence  students’

career choice conflict.

4.         Ascertain  the  extent  to  which  socio-economic  status  of  parents  influence students’ career choice conflict.

Significance of the Study

The findings  of this study have both theoretical  and practical  significance. Theoretically,  the  findings  of the  study  support  Donald  Super’s  theory  of  career choice and conflict theory. These are the two major theories upon which this study in hinged on.

Practically, the findings of this study are of immense benefit to the following group of persons; school career counselor, parents, students, ministry of education and further researchers. For the school career counselor, the findings will sensitize them to organize career workshops, seminars, and conferences for both parents and their senior school children to create  awareness  among them about career, their roles and ways of minimizing conflict in the choice of career. Additionally, information from this study can help the career counselor to be mindful of parental factors as a vocational problem that should be put to check in making a career choice. It will also sensitize the  counselors  to conduct placement services at the senior school level

carefully  and  properly  to  avoid  any  anticipated  conflict  from  both  students  and parents.

The findings of the study provide information for parents. Such information will help them to endeavour to find out where the interest, aptitude, abilities potentials and  values  of  their  children  lie  before  suggesting  career  options  for  them.  The outcome of this study will assist students in a special way to develop self-knowledge of their career goals and how to make the right choice of career in life.

The findings of the study also provide information that will guide students to seek for proper career education on how to make right career choices and plans.

It is expected  that the  findings  of  this  study  will  sensitize  the  Ministry  of Education to develop a broader and more valid vocational inventories in line with the new curriculum (9:3:4) which will cover the career aspirations of students and their parents and translate into successful vocational out comes that will minimize conflict

Finally,  it  is  hoped  that  this  study  will  add  to  the  existing  body  of  educational research literature, which might be harnessed for further research in this and other related fields.

Scope of the Study

This work is concerned with the study of parent’s socio-demographic  factors  as a determinant  of career choice conflict among senior secondary  school  students in Abuja, (FCT). The level of the students for the study is SSI students. The student population  for the study was also limited  to Abuja  because  it is the area of the researcher’s interest.

The socio-demographic  variables in the study include, the age,  educational qualification,  type of education  and socio-economic  status of  parents. The socio- economic indicators for measuring socio-economic  status in this study are type of housing, electronic possessed, cooking facilities and mobility possessed by parents.

Research Questions

The study was guided by the following research questions.

1.       To what extent does age of parents influence students’ career choice conflict?

2.       To  what  extent  does  parent’s  educational  qualification  influence  students’

career choice conflict?

3.         To what extent does parent’s  type of education  influence  students’  career choice conflict?

4.         To  what  extent  does  parents’  socio-economic  status  influence  student’s career choice conflict?

Research Hypotheses

These null hypotheses were formulated to guide the study and tested at 0.05 level of significance

1.       Age of parents does not significantly influence the mean response of students’

career choice conflict.

2.         Parents’ educational  qualification  does not significantly  influence  the  mean response of students’ career choice conflict.

3.         Parents’ type of education does not significantly influence the mean response of students’ career choice conflict between students. 4.          Parents’  Socio-economic  status  does  not  significantly  influence  the  mean response of students’ career choice conflict.


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