Aloka, Peter J.Bojuwoye, Olaniyi2014-01-092014-01-092013Aloka, P. & Olaniyi, B. (2013). Gender, age and teaching experiences differences in decision-making behaviours of members of selected Kenyan secondary school disciplinary panels. Asian Social Science, 9(10): 43-551911-2017http://hdl.handle.net/10566/922The study investigated gender, age and teaching experiences differences in decision- making behaviours of members of selected Kenyan secondary school disciplinary panels. Mixed Methods design was adopted for the study. Both quantitative and qualitative data were collected. Study sample comprised 78 participants drawn from ten secondary school disciplinary panels. Participants comprised 45 males and 33 females, clustered into four age groups of-29 years (n=21), 30-39 years (n=28), 40-49 years (n=14), and 50-59 years (n=15); and six teaching experience categories of 1-5 years (n=33), 6-10 years (n=14), 11-15 years (n=5), 16-20 years (n=6), 21-25 years (n=8), and 26-30 years (n=12). Data analysis results revealed gender, age and experience differences in decision-making behaviours of members of disciplinary panels who participated in the study. Male participants were found to tend towards risky decision-making behaviours while female participants tended towards cautious decision-making behaviours. Younger and less experienced participants were also found to be risky in their decision-making behaviours also tended panel members made risky pre-disciplinary hearing decision-making behaviours, while their older and more experienced counterparts were more cautious. Based on the findings of this study it is recommended that, in order to cater for the diverse nature of student behaviour problems and to effectively manage the same, consideration must be given to delicate balance of age, gender and experience in the composition of members of a school disciplinary panel.en© 2013 Aloka and Bojuwoye; licensee Canadian Center of Science and Education.This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.GenderAgeDecision-making behavioursStudent behaviour problemsDisciplinary panelsSecondary schoolsTeaching experiencesGender, age and teaching experiences differences in decision-making behaviours of members of selected Kenyan secondary school disciplinary panelsArticle