
Impact of Child Labour on Children’s Academic Activities in Krachi East District
Author(s) -
Jacob Issaka,
Francis Hull Adams,
Ethel Gyimah,
Barbara Amoako Kissi
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
asian journal of education and social studies
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2581-6268
DOI - 10.9734/ajess/2021/v18i230439
Subject(s) - child labour , functional illiteracy , nonprobability sampling , poverty , psychology , data collection , government (linguistics) , agriculture , economic growth , socioeconomics , political science , sociology , social science , geography , economics , engineering , demography , population , law , work (physics) , mechanical engineering , linguistics , philosophy , archaeology
Child labour is one of the contemporary issues that has attracted the attention of many researchers. Most school children all over the world are engaged in child labour. This research investigates the effects of child labour on children academic activities in the Krachi East District in Ghana. The research adopted the mixed method. The purposive and snow ball sampling technique were used to select one hundred and sixty (160) victims of child labour. The questionnaire was the main instrument used for data collection. The questionnaire was edited by experts in child labour and this helped to achieve validity. Data were analysed using tables and figures. It was realized that 68.7% of the children were engaged in agricultural activities and the major reasons for their plight include large household size, parental illiteracy and poverty. Child labour leads to low academic performance. The study recommends that government should support children from poor homes.