EFFECT OF KNOWLEDGE ACQUISITION ON ACADEMIC PERFORMANCE OF POSTGRADUATE STUDENTS OF PRIVATE UNIVERSITIES IN KENYA
View/ Open
Date
2022Author
Ouma, Onditi Walter
Murithi, Simon
Nzioki, Susan
Type
ArticleLanguage
enMetadata
Show full item recordAbstract
The concept of Knowledge Management (KM) has been used in measuring and gauging
institutional performance. However, the effect of Knowledge Acquisition (KA) practices on
academic performance of higher learning institutions is yet to be contextualized. This study
attempted to bridge the aforementioned academic gap by assessing the effect of KA practices on
academic performance on postgraduate students of private universities in Kenya, based on the
theory of Resource Based View (RBV). Descriptive cross-sectional survey design was employed.
A sample of 370 respondents was drawn from a population of 12,919 postgraduate students and
faculty/department heads. Stratified random sampling technique was adopted in obtaining this
sample. The findings established 27.8% variation in postgraduate academic performance; KA
practice had very weak positive and insignificant correlation (r=0.044) and insignificant partial
factor effect (β = 0.040, p=0.526) on postgraduate academic performance in private universities.
The study concluded that KA did not have significant effect on postgraduate academic
performance in private universities in emerging economies. Therefore, factors other than KM
contributed to the academic performance, and they are worth exploring in future studies. The study
recommends further research in methodologies and measures of knowledge acquisition as ways of
improving application of knowledge management practices on students’ academic performance
Publisher
International Journal of Professional Practice (IJPP)