Concern as over 600K students fail to apply for university placement
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More than 600,000 students who qualified for
placement in institutions of higher learning did not apply for any of the slots
available this year.
The Kenya Universities and Colleges Central
Placement Service (KUCCPS) says only around 153,000 students have been placed
in private and public universities, while 11,000 students who qualified for
degree courses have opted to study diploma courses.
KUCCPS' release of this year’s placement of
students came at the tail end of what started out as a tumultuous exercise in
February when the agency run into headwinds as it implemented the new online
selection process for students.
When the system challenges had been finished
and the three application cycles completed, 258,935 students, out of a possible
895,000 had been placed.
Of these, 153,274 are set to join public and
private universities. 75,718 will pursue their education in public and private
TVET institutions, while 10,263 will train as either primary or secondary
school teachers.
For the first time, the Kenya Medical
Training College (KMTC) also had KUCCPS place students for this year’s calendar
with a total of 19,653 students joining this year. Over 600,000 students who
qualified did not apply for placement through KUCCPS.
"Applications to join both universities
and colleges is a choice, not mandatory, because we know that there are
students who choose to go abroad, join the military or join other programmes
that are not under the government programme," said KUCCPS CEO Dr. Agnes
Wahome
"The KUCCPS placement system gives
special consideration to eligible applicants on account of gender, marginalised
and minority and also the aspect of disability," Ministry of Education
Secretary Fredrick Nyambare added.
The students placed represent only a fraction
of the available capacities in various higher learning institutions. This year,
there were 1.07 million places available across universities, TVETs, TTCs, and
the KMTC.
In a notable change, KUCCPS has adjusted its
placement criteria for the Bachelor of Education program by removing
Mathematics and English as mandatory requirements. Consequently, there has been
a surge in the number of students opting for this course.
"TSC requires that you just have a C+
and two teaching subjects, and we had added Maths and English in Bachelor of
Education arts, and when we removed this we saw a lot of students apply. We
have over 30,000 students who have gone to pursue education," said Wahome.
At the same time, KUCCPS says male students
continue to dominate placement into degree programmes while female students
were the majority of those placed in TVETs.
Students dissatisfied with their placement
will have a chance to apply for transfers from June 5, 2024.
Those who have been placed in universities
and colleges have been encouraged to apply for funding from the Higher
Education Loans Board (HELB) in good time to enable them be ready for admission
later this year.


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