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    <dc:date>2026-04-06T19:28:39Z</dc:date>
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  <item rdf:about="https://cris.library.msu.ac.zw//handle/11408/6581">
    <title>Financial management policies and practices in Secondary Schools within Kwekwe District of Zimbabwe</title>
    <link>https://cris.library.msu.ac.zw//handle/11408/6581</link>
    <description>Title: Financial management policies and practices in Secondary Schools within Kwekwe District of Zimbabwe
Authors: Njini Stephen
Abstract: This study was motivated by reports that school leaders in charge of financial management &#xD;
abuse school resources despite policy guidelines on school financial management that are in &#xD;
place. Stoker’s (1998) Governance Theory and Freeman’s (1984) Stakeholder Theory guided&#xD;
this study. Stoker’s (1998) Governance Theory focuses on power decentralisation, local self governance, and involvement of all sectors in the school governance process. Freeman’s &#xD;
(1984) Stakeholder Theory focuses on, engagement, stakeholder value, accountability, &#xD;
collaboration, and the identification of interested parties, The two theories’ tenets were &#xD;
relevant to the study of policies and practices in a decentralised financial management system &#xD;
in secondary schools within the Kwekwe district. The Pragmatic Research Paradigm, Mixed &#xD;
Methods Research (MMR) approach, and explanatory sequential mixed methods research &#xD;
design formed the basis of this study. Disproportionate stratified sampling was employed to &#xD;
select 4 clusters from 30 clusters housing 56 secondary schools in the Kwekwe District. The &#xD;
population of the study was 570 school officials in charge of financial management in the &#xD;
secondary schools. Data generation instruments were closed-ended questionnaires, in-depth &#xD;
interviews, and document analysis. A stratified random sample of 61 respondents answered &#xD;
close-ended questionnaires during the quantitative phase. A purposive sample of 19 &#xD;
participants answered in-depth interviews during the qualitative phase. A purposive sample of &#xD;
documents on school financial management was read during the qualitative phase until &#xD;
saturation. Quantitative data from the survey questionnaires were analysed using the Statistical &#xD;
Package for Social Science (SPSS) version 20. Atlas Ti was used to analyse qualitative data &#xD;
derived from interviews. Manual techniques complemented document analysis.&#xD;
The study showed that 95.2 % of the respondents agreed that the unavailability of documents &#xD;
that guide financial management affected actual practices in financial management. Similarly, &#xD;
43.8% of the respondents agreed that available and adequate documents were good for practice,&#xD;
and (78.6%) of the respondents did not associate actual practices in school financial &#xD;
management with the usefulness of documents that guide financial management. The study &#xD;
recommends,training, simplification and translation of financial management documents into &#xD;
vernacular languages. The study also found that financial control policies, challenges with &#xD;
school financial management policies, and policies on financial management had a significant &#xD;
positive relationship with actual practices in financial management. The study recommends &#xD;
regular auditing of schools, capacity building of school finance committees by schools, &#xD;
government, universities, and the Ministry of Primary and Secondary Education, and &#xD;
recruitment of school financial management personnel with appropriate skills. The study &#xD;
developed a framework for financial management policies and practices that serve as strategies &#xD;
and guidelines for financial management in school</description>
    <dc:date>2024-06-01T00:00:00Z</dc:date>
    <dc:creator>Njini Stephen</dc:creator>
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