| dc.description.abstract | The study sought to assess the influence of Family constellations on psychosocial adjustments of 
regular third year undergraduate Students in Nakuru County, Kenya. The specific objective was to 
determine the influence of family constellations on emotional intelligence of regular undergraduate 
third year Students in Nakuru County, Kenya. The study used a mixed-method research approach 
and adopted a cross-sectional survey research design. The target population was 2862 third year 
regular undergraduate students from five selected universities. A random sample of 307 students 
forming a 90.6 percent response rate participated in the study. Stratified random sampling was used 
to distribute the sample in the five selected universities. Primary data was collected using semi structured questionnaire and interview schedule, while secondary data was collected from existing 
documents about the topic under study. Quantitative data was analyzed using descriptive statistics 
(frequencies, percentages and means) and inferential statistics (ANOVA and Chi Square tests) with 
the aid of Statistical Package for Social Sciences version 26.0 for Windows while qualitative data 
was analyzed using thematic content analysis. The study findings indicate that majority of the 
respondents came from dual (nuclear) parent families. There was no statistically significant 
difference in the emotional intelligence of regular third year undergraduate students from different 
family structures. The study recommends that there is a need for parents to maintain a unified 
family structure in order to encourage holistic psychosocial development and adjustment of their 
children in universities. The output of the study would be a tool for learning and professional 
development in psychological counselling discipline equipping the mental health service providers, 
educators, guidance and counselling committees in our learning institutions with the new 
knowledge of family constellations and psychosocial adjustment among ongoing undergraduate 
students in the universities | en_US |