Abstract:
The purpose of this study was to explore the psychosocial experiences of married
female students in colleges of education in the Central Region and to find effective
ways to assist the married female students in dealing with such psychosocial
experiences. The study adopted the interpretive paradigm or philosophical world view.
The study adopted the hermeneutic phenomenology with the qualitative approach.
Snowball and purposive sampling techniques were used to sample 15 married female
students and 3 counselling coordinators for the study. The study utilised the semistructured
interview guide to gather data to answer the stated questions. The
trustworthiness of the data was established. The data was analysed and organised in
themes supported with verbatim quotations. The study findings revealed that married
female students of the colleges of education undergo psychosocial experiences as
expressed in the form of social isolation and stigmatization, emotional struggles,
intrusive advances or proposals. However, the findings also suggested positive
experiences including social acceptance and respect and support and encouragement.
Further, the study revealed that married female students faced stress and worry, low
academic performance and study disruption, forgetfulness, suicidal thoughts, time
management challenges as negative effects of their psychosocial experiences. The
study concludes that the guidance and counselling services available to married female
students, including rehabilitation services, referral services, educational counselling,
orientation services, consultative services, and life planning and emotional support,
play a vital role in mitigating their psychosocial challenges. Based on the findings, the
study recommends that the Management of OLA College of Education, Fosu College
of Education, and Komenda College of Education should establish on-campus
accommodation care units specifically for married female students to provide a
supportive living environment.
Description:
A thesis in the Department of Counselling Psychology, Faculty of
Educational Studies, submitted to the School of
Graduate Studies, in partial fulfillment
of the requirements for the award of the degree of
Master of Philosophy
(Counselling Psychology)
in the University of Education, Winneba,
JULY, 2024