Volume 5, Issue 2, February – 2020                           International Journal of Innovative Science and Research Technology
ISSN No:-2456-2165
        Influence of Role Play Teaching Technique on
          Secondary School Students’ Acquisition of
            Life Skills through Christian Religious
           Education in Ndhiwa Sub-County, Kenya
                                                  Daniel Omondi Onyango
                                                  PhD Student of Pedagogy
                                                  Maseno University, Kenya
Abstract:- Christian Religious Education (CRE) is a                   positive behaviour depends upon the depth of life skills
carrier subject of Life Skills content in Kenyan                      acquired by the individual (Subasree, Nair & Ranjan,
Secondary School Curriculum. The purpose of this                      2014). Secondary students in Kenya are provided with Life
study was to establish the effect of Role Play Teaching               Skills (LS) training to foster good critical thinking skills,
Technique (       RP) on secondary school students’                   interpersonal relationships develop a sense of self-respect
acquisition of life skills through Religious Education in             and respect for others and contribute positively to the
Ndhiwa Sub- County, Kenya. The study adopted a                        transformation of self and society as a whole Kenya
Quasi Experimental Research Design involving                          Institute of Curriculum Development (KICD, 2006). Xaxx
Solomon Four Non – Equivalent Group Design. The                       (2014) asserts that people with solid sense of life skills are
population of the study was all Form Four CRE                         less easily coerced by others particularly where peers
students in public co- educational day secondary                      pressure is intense, hence, the need for life skills education.
schools. Purposive sampling technique was used to                     In Kenya, students are trained to acquire life skills through
select 169 students and simple random sampling was                    carrier subjects like Christian Religious Education in
used to determine four schools with similar                           secondary schools.
characteristics to participate in the study. RE students’
Life Skills Test was used to generate data. CRE teachers               Role Play as a Teaching Technique
were provided with a RP guide for teaching the                             According to Webster's New World College
experimental groups the selected CRE topic. The                       Dictionary, (2014) role play is described as a way of acting
reliability of the tool was estimated by use of Kuder                 of a specified part of a person or a character as a way of
Richardson’s Formula and the reliability coefficient was              therapy or psychotherapy. In this thesis the intention of the
.78. Data was analyzed with SPS. The research question                use of role play is not far fetch from the dictionary
was tested at α= .05 using a t- test. The study results               definition. In the use of role play, students are expected to
indicated that RP positively affects secondary school                 act out a part of a story or a certain scenario, usually based
students’ acquisition of life skills. The t- test results             on the real-life issue. This is attested by Altun (2015) who
indicated that the difference between the mean gains                  defined role play as a method or strategy in which students
was statistically significant at .05 in favour of the                 are expected to act out a specific role through saying, doing
experimental group. The study concluded that there is a               and sharing. Through the process of role play, the students
significant relationship between the life skills                      gain competence in the life skills characteristics such an
acquisition of students taught CRE using RP and those                 enthusiasm, self-confidence, empathy and critical thinking
taught using the traditional methods. Teachers need to                Alabsi (2016).
use RP to enhance their life skills pedagogical
approaches so as to attain the intended objectives of                      Mwaka, Nabwire and Musamas (2014) aver that role
learning CRE.                                                         play is a heuristic/ constructivist teaching technique which
                                                                      involves indirect instruction where the teacher facilitates
Keywords:- Acquisition, Role Play, Christian Religious                learning by posing questions, guiding, indicating sources of
Education, Life Skills, Traditional Method.                           information, and sharing of ideas, problems and solutions.
                                                                      Further, it encourages learners to display elements of
               I.    INTRODUCTION                                     scientific reasoning such as recognition of the problem,
                                                                      formulation of the hypothesis, construction of mental
     Life skills are set of human skills acquired via                 models and reaching possible conclusions (Otewa, 2015).
teaching or direct experiences that are used to handle                Randall and Cox (2015) assert that role play not only
problems and questions encountered in daily life (Nivedita            provides a variation in teaching techniques but also allows
& Singh, 2016). They are positive behaviours that                     a more student centered approach to learning. Whilst in the
encompass a mixture of knowledge, behaviour, attitudes                orthodox method only the bold students manage to raise
and values and designate the possession of certain skills             questions, in a role play all students are actively involved.
and know how to do something positively. The strength of
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Volume 5, Issue 2, February – 2020                               International Journal of Innovative Science and Research Technology
                                                                                                                ISSN No:-2456-2165
      By getting students to play roles, they come to feel                competency. Cases of students’ bullying others, theft cases,
issues, experience tension and conflict and enter into                    strikes, students’ fights dominate the learning institutions
bargaining and cooperation. As a means of increasing                      despite the teaching of religious education which is viewed
students’ participation, role play can stimulate interest in              as a carrier subject to life skills. Oyaro (2009) adds that
the subject and encourage students to continue reading.                   Kenyan reform institutions are full of the students who
Role play is a very well-known teaching method that helps                 should belong to secondary schools rather than
students to become familiar with their natural environment                penitentiary. Peace Net- Kenya (2007) reported that
where society dwells. This is because role play that is                   students in Ndhiwa Sub- County were being used by the
introduced at the beginning of learning can prepare learners              politicians to disrupt meetings organized by the leaders.
to deal with situations that they would come across in their
future endeavours (Sullivan & Clarke, 2013). Put together                       Teachers are the implementers of the Life Skills (LS)
with the objectives of learning life skills, role play                    curriculum. Their teaching strategies towards the life skill
facilitates life skills enhancement among the learners.                   objectives affect the learner LS acquisition. Role play
                                                                          allows teachers to make their teaching engaging, active,
 Religious Education and Life Skills                                     real, and student – centered to achieve their teaching and
     Debate on the place and purpose of Religious                         learning goals. CRE has not adequately achieved its
Education (RE) was vigorously pursued in Britain in the                   intended objectives (Makewa & Ngussa, 2018; Kowino,
19th century and even generated a lot of research work                    2012). Failure of CRE to achieve its objectives may
(Lord & Barley, 1973). For more than half a century after                 perhaps be attributed to teachers’ instructional techniques.
1870 Education Act, the main question remained to be how                  This study investigated the influence of Role Play teaching
RE was to be offered in the country’s schools. By 1944,                   technique on Secondary school students’ acquisition of life
school curriculum in Britain was conceived as two fold-                   skills through RE curriculum.
secular instruction and religious instruction. Distinction
was made between evangelization and education, as the                             II.     RESEARCH METHODOLOGY
former was affecting religious teaching in the country’s
schools.                                                                   Research Design
                                                                                The study involved a Quasi-experimental research
      Religious education has been an important subject of                design using the Solomon Four Non-Equivalent Control
study in USA because of its role in equipping learners with               Group Design (Gall, Borg & Gall, 2003) .The design was
LS (Eric, 1994). It was first conceived as Comparative                    preferred because the classes involved in the study
Religion or Science of Religion in the early years of its                 remained intact , this was to avoid disrupting the school
inception as a discipline in the 1950s. Hull (1982) notes                 schedule (Coolican, 1999; Wachanga, 2002). It assesses the
that by the second half of the 20th century the study of                  plausibility of pre-test sensitization effects, that is,
religion had become a prominent and important field of                    whatever the mere act of taking pre-test influences scores
academic inquiry. This made several state agencies and                    on subsequent test administration (Clark & Elen, 2006). It
local school districts to create mandates and guidelines                  also ensures that administration of pre-test to two groups
regarding the teaching of religion (Eric, 1994).For instance,             and post-test to all four groups (Gall, Borg & Gall, 1996;
California were among the first to publish the handbook on                Wachanga, 2002 & Mwangi, 2007). The independent
life skills, civic education and teaching about religion. The             variable was the RP teaching technique while student’s
National Council for Social Studies gave a statement on its               acquisition of life skills was the dependent variable with
position about religion that stated that knowledge about                  teachers being intervening variables. The design is
religion was not only a characteristic of an educated person,             structurally represented as shown in Table 1.
but it was also necessary for understanding and living in a
world of diversity (Eric, 1994).                                          Group         Pre-test       Treatment          Post- test
                                                                           E1             O1               X                 O2
      The Kenyan secondary Religious Education syllabus,
Kenya Institute of Education ( [KIE], 2002) provides the                    E2            -               X                   O5
following as the objectives of teaching CRE: acquire social,                C1           O3               -                   O4
spiritual and moral insights to think critically; and to make               C2            -               -                   O6
appropriate decisions in rapidly changing society,                          Table 1:- Quasi – experimental, Pretest- Postest, Non-
appreciate and respect their own; and other peoples’                                  randomized Control Group Design
culture, acquire the basic principles of Christian living; and
develop a sense of self-respect and respect for others,                    Population and Sampling Techniques
promote international consciousness through the                                The population of the study consisted of all 1850 form
understanding of universal brotherhood and sisterhood; and                four CRE students. Purposive sampling was used to select
contribute positively to the transformation of self and                   four (4) co-educational schools from the four main
society as a whole.                                                       administrative units of the study area. A random sample of
                                                                          169 students was selected for the study.
     However, (Bowen & Karanja, 2012) contend that the
Kenyan learning institutions have been plagued with
students’ characters that does not indicate life skills
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Volume 5, Issue 2, February – 2020                               International Journal of Innovative Science and Research Technology
                                                                                                                   ISSN No:-2456-2165
 Research Instrument                                                     Gall, 2003). The reliability coefficient was estimated at
      The research instrument developed and used for the                  0.78 which was deemed reliable given that its coefficient
study was CRE Students Life Skills Test (CRESLST). It                     was above the recommended 0.7 threshold (Fraenkel &
consisted of three parts; preliminary information of the                  Wallen, 2000)
respondents, multiple choice questions and defining issue
life skills test. The CRESLST multiple choice questions                            III.     RESULTS AND FINDINGS
and defining issue life skills test were of standard
objectives adapted from past question papers of Kenya                     The research question was:
National Examinations Council. The test was used both as a                      What is the difference in life skills acquisition between
pre-test and a post-test.                                                 students taught CRE using RP and those taught using the
                                                                          traditional methods?
 Validity and Reliability of Research Instrument
      Validity is the degree to which results obtained
from the analysis of data actually represents the
phenomenon under study (Mugenda & Mugenda, 2003).
The test was examined for both content and face validity.
The validation was done by two CRE teachers and a team
of experts at Maseno University in the department of                         Table 2:- Showing Comparison of Students’ Life Skills
Educational Communication, Technology and Curriculum                            Pre- test Mean Scores by Gender Categorization
Studies. The opinions of the experts were used to improve
the instrument before its use in the actual study. Further, it                  The results in Table 2 indicate that the students life
was piloted for reliability.                                              skills achievement mean score (M= 5.79, SD= 2.52) of C1
                                                                          was higher than that of (M= 5.61, SD= 2.28) of E 1. The
      This was to ensure that it yields consistent results or             difference between the two means was however not
data repeatedly (Gall, Gall & Borg, 2003). The KR21                       statistically significant at .05 level (t (81) = 4.906, p>. 05).
formula was used to estimate the reliability coefficient of               This means that the two groups, C1 and E1 were similar
the tool. KR21 was deemed appropriate since the test was                  before commencement of the study.
administered once and its data was continuous (Borg &
                        Table 3:- Students Life Skills Post- test Mean Scores and their Standard Deviations
     The mean scores of the experimental groups E1 (M=                          The ANOVA test results show that the difference in
11.41, SD= 3.73) and E2 (M= 10.59, SD = 1.92) were                        mean scores among the four groups E1, E2, C1 and C2 was
higher than those of the control groups C1 (M= 8.20, SD =                 statistically significant at the .05 level in favour of the
2.89) and C2 (M= 7.49, SD= 2.22).                                         experimental groups, F (3, 160) = 18.950, p<.05.The results
                                                                          of ANOVA test only show differences among a group of
      The results suggest that students exposed to RP                     more than three variables, it does not reveal where the
perform better than their counterparts taught using                       differences are. Therefore, there was need to conduct
traditional teaching approaches. The ANOVA test was                       further analysis to reveal where the differences were. The
conducted to establish whether the difference among the                   Least Significant Difference (LSD) test was conducted to
mean sores of E1, E2, C1 and C2 was significant.                          reveal where the differences were
 ANOVA
                                                                            Table 5:- LSD Multiple Comparison of Life Skills Post-
                                                                                   test Mean Scores by Learning Approach
Table 4:- Comparison of Life Skills Post-test Mean Scores
                by Learning Technique
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Volume 5, Issue 2, February – 2020                              International Journal of Innovative Science and Research Technology
                                                                                                                ISSN No:-2456-2165
      The multiple comparison results reveal that there were                  The t-test was used to establish whether the two mean
significant differences between pair groups E1-C1 (p<.05),               gains were statistically significant as presented in Table 8.
E1-C2 (p<.05), E2-C1 (p<.05) and E2-C2 (p<.05).
However the differences between E1-E2 (p .05) and C1-                   Group      N       Mean       SD       df       t-       ρ-
C2 (p .05) were not statistically significant. Generally the                               Gain                       value    value
experimental groups outperformed the control groups.                       E1       40      5.80     3.15     79       4.104    .000*
Further analysis was conducted by comparing the mean                       C1       41      2.54     3.95
scores of the control (C1 and C2 combined) and                           *Significant at .05
experimental (E1 and E2 combined) groups using the t-test                   Table 8:- Difference in Mean Gain on Life Skills Test
to confirm the results of the ANOVA test. The comparison                                      between E1 and C2
was conducted using the t-test.
                                                                               The t-test results show that the difference between the
                                                                         mean gains of E1 (M = 5.80, SD = 3.15) and C1 (M =2.54,
                                                                         SD 3.95) was statistically significant at the .05 level, in
                                                                         favour of the experimental group (t (91) = 7.606, p<.05).
                                                                         The experimental group thus had a higher improvement in
                                                                         learning outcomes as measures by the mean gain. That
Table 6:- Showing Comparison of the Students’ Life Skills                high improvement in the experimental group is attributed to
 Post- test Mean Scores between the Experimental and                     the treatment. The results of life skill post-test analysis
                    Control Groups                                       revealed that the difference among the means scores of
                                                                         groups C1, E1, C2 and E2 were statistically significant in
     The test results reveal that the mean (M =11.00, SD =               favour of the experimental groups. On the basis of these
2.99) of the experimental group was higher than that (M                  results, the research hypothesis which stated that the
=7.83, SD = 2.57) of the control group. The results further              difference between the life skills of students taught using
reveal that the difference between the means of the two                  RP is not statistically different from those taught using
groups was statistically significant at the .05 level, in                traditional strategies was rejected.
favour of the experimental group (t (162) = 9.306, p<.05).
                                                                                 IV.      DISCUSSION OF RESULTS
 Gain analysis - groups C1 and E1
     Gain analysis examines the achievement levels of E1                       As revealed by the mean scores between the
and C1 before and after the programme and tries to explain               experimental groups and their SD, RP teaching techniques
improvements in learning outcomes as measured by the                     improves the students’ acquisition of life skills. This was in
mean scores.                                                             agreement with the findings of studies by (Ilori, 2001;
                                                                         Njoku, 2015) that effective use of learner-centred teaching
    Stage             Scale                Group                         approaches helps in attaining religious education learning
                                     E1 n =   C1 n = 43                  outcomes among secondary school students. Ilori (2001)
                                       40                                emphasized the need for RE teachers to always pay
   Pre-test          Mean             5.61       5.79                    attention to the teaching approaches that caters for the
                   Standard           2.28       2.52                    needs of the students as a factor in attaining CRE learning
                   Deviation                                             outcomes. RP technique presupposes that students learn
   Post -test        Mean           11.41        8.20                    faster through experience. When students are exposed to
                   Standard         3.73         2.89                    making their own findings, (Njoku, 2015) contend that they
                   Deviation                                             gain knowledge faster, and as such knowledge is usually
                  Mean Gain         5.80         2.41                    permanent.
Table 7:- Students’ Pre- test and Post- test Mean Scores,
Standard Deviations and Mean Gains by Learning                                 The findings of this study, further, synchronized with
Approach                                                                 the submission of Nelson (2002) that constructive approach
                                                                         to teaching yields positive attainment of desired learning
      The pre-test life skill mean (M =5.61, SD = 2.28) of               outcomes. RP therefore supports the adage that says
E1 and that (M = 5.79, SD = 2.52) of C1 were comparable                  experience is the best teacher hence life skills knowledge
before the commencement of the programme. After the                      can best be achieved from learners’ experience. RP appeals
treatment, the mean (M = 11.41, SD = 3.73) of E1 was                     to the students’ conscience on the need to learn. This agrees
higher than that (M = 8.20, SD = 2.89) of C1. The result                 with Njoku (2012) that effective use of teaching strategies
also reveal that the mean gain of E1 (M =5.80) was higher                helps the teacher to develop ethical and responsible
that (M = 2.41). This means that improvement in learning                 students by encouraging them to acquire life skills required
outcomes of the experimental group E1 was higher than                    to operate in the society. RP not only exposes the students
that of the control group C1.                                            on the need to be diligent with their study but also help
                                                                         teachers to advocate for conducive environment that would
                                                                         enable effective learning to take place.
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Volume 5, Issue 2, February – 2020                              International Journal of Innovative Science and Research Technology
                                                                                                                ISSN No:-2456-2165
      The results of this study complement the observation               [5]. Erick, D. (1994). Religion in the Social Studies
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