Refugee Students’ Academic Motivation in Displacement: The Case of Kakuma Refugee Camp

Building on the existing body of literature on academic motivation, this research examines various factors associated with the academic motivation of students living in refugee camps in Kenya. I employ self-determination theory and a sense of belonging at school construct to explore the academic motivation of these students who, despite the overwhelming challenges of their life in exile and an unpredictable future, remain eager to learn. I use ordinary least squares regression modeling to examine the relationship between students’ motivation and their individual and social predictor variables. Drawn from a survey of 664 primary school students across nine schools in Kakuma refugee camp, the findings suggest that students’ sense of  belonging at school is the strongest predictor of academic motivation, even after adjusting for other demographic and family-related variables. While these factors do not represent all possible predictors of motivation among students in refugee camps, the study does suggest that fostering a sense of belonging at school in a context of displacement could help educators create learning environments that promote and sustain refugee students’ academic motivation.

DOI: https://doi.org/10.33682/pe90-33g2

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Información sobre el recurso

Tipo de recurso

Journal Article

Publicado

Publicado por

Journal on Education in Emergencies (JEiE)

Escrito por

Jihae Cha

Tema(s)

Adolescents and Youth
Refugees

Enfoque geográfico

Kenya