TITLE:
The Influence of Structured and Unstructured After-School Activities on Academic Performance of Junior High School Students in Cape Coast Metropolis in the Central Region of Ghana
AUTHORS:
David Turkson, Francis Britwum, Abraham Yeboah
KEYWORDS:
Structured Activities, Unstructured Activities, After-School Activities and Extra-Curricular Activities
JOURNAL NAME:
Creative Education,
Vol.12 No.2,
February
10,
2021
ABSTRACT: Despite the fact that adolescents’ waking hours are flexible, little is known about the links of adolescents’ choices of leisure time activities for academic, psychological and behavioural functioning. Participation in activities can provide opportunities to develop specific skills and to interact with nurturing and caring adults as well as a sense of belonging with particular peer groups and recognition from others. Time use and monitor studies have provided rich descriptive pictures of adolescents’ daily lives including what teens do, who they are with and their affective states across their out-of-school experiences. The study therefore examined the influence of structured and unstructured activities on academic performance of Junior High School students in Cape Coast Metropolis in the Central Region of Ghana. A descriptive survey design was adopted using a sample of 364 students selected from six public junior high schools in Cape Coast. A questionnaire was used to gather the data. The Cronbach’s alpha co-efficient for the reliability of the instrument was 0.76. Simple linear regression was used as statistical tools to analyse the data collected. The findings of the study were that both structured and unstructured activities respectively do influence students’ academic performance.It was recommended that stakeholders such as parents, guardians,and teachers must be aware of the kind of after-school activity their wards/studentsengage in so as to help them make better choices due to the influence that their choices make on their academic performance.