| dc.description.abstract |
This study investigated how teacher-parenting styles influence student engagement
and motivation in selected basic schools in Winneba, Ghana. Grounded in
Baumrind’s Parenting Styles Theory and Self-Determination Theory, the study
conceptualized teachers as key socializing agents whose patterns of warmth, control,
responsiveness, and expectations shape learners’ behavioral, emotional, and
cognitive investment in schooling. An explanatory sequential research design was
adopted. The quantitative phase involved a descriptive survey of Junior High School
students and teachers across four public and two private schools, generating data on
the prevalence of authoritative, authoritarian, permissive, and neglectful teaching
styles and their relationship with students’ motivation and engagement. The
qualitative phase followed with semi-structured interviews that provided deeper
insights into how these relational orientations were enacted in classrooms and
experienced by learners. Findings revealed that authoritative teaching characterized
by warmth, clear expectations, and autonomy support was the most consistently
associated with high levels of behavioural participation, emotional connection,
cognitive effort, and intrinsic motivation. Authoritarian and neglectful styles,
common in resource-constrained classrooms, were linked to fear-based compliance,
reduced enthusiasm, and lower self-regulated learning. Permissive styles generated
emotional comfort but limited academic discipline. Contextual factors such as
cultural norms of respect, class size, institutional policies, and teacher motivation
also shaped teaching behaviours. The study concludes that teacher-parenting styles
are significant determinants of engagement and motivation in Ghanaian basic
schools. It recommends integrating relational pedagogy, emotional intelligence, and
autonomy-supportive practices into teacher education and continuous professional
development to foster more supportive and learner-centered classrooms. |
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