Gov't considers extending Grade 10 reporting deadline over low turnout
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With less than 24 hours to the deadline for Grade 10 admission into senior secondary school, only about 400,000 of the 1.1 million learners placed have reported to school.
While national schools
are recording over 90 per cent turnout, hundreds of thousands of
learners—mainly those placed in sub-county and extra-county schools—remain at
home as parents grapple with high costs, long distances and concerns over
inadequate facilities.
The Ministry of
Education is now considering extending the deadline even as it insists it will
achieve 100 per cent transition.
On Thursday, Basic
Education Principal Secretary Prof. Julius Bitok toured several schools to
assess the transition of Grade 10 learners.
He visited Alliance
Boys High School, a Category One institution, where the majority of learners
have already reported.
However, the situation
is markedly different in Category Two and sub-county schools, where more than
700,000 learners placed in these institutions were still at home just hours
before the reporting deadline.
Ministry data shows a
sharp divide in reporting rates across the country. National schools,
classified as Cluster One, are recording the highest turnout at 91 per cent.
Cluster Two extra-county schools stand at about 50 per cent, while sub-county
schools, now known as Category Four, are lagging at less than 40 per cent.
For many parents whose
children are yet to report, finances remain the biggest hurdle. Beyond official
school fees, families say they are being asked to pay for uniforms, textbooks,
bedding and equipment, pushing the cost of joining school by between Ksh.20,000
and Ksh.50,000.
For many struggling
households, this has proved unaffordable, leaving thousands of learners at home
despite having confirmed placements.
Other parents are
demanding transfers, arguing that their children were placed in schools that
are too far from home or in institutions they believe lack adequate teachers,
laboratories and facilities required for their chosen pathways under the new
curriculum.
With science,
technical and vocational subjects now central to senior secondary education,
there are growing fears that many sub-county and extra-county schools are not
yet fully equipped to deliver.
However, Prof. Bitok
expressed confidence that the transition will be smooth.
“We are confident that
by the end of this process all the students will have been placed successfully.
We shall have 100 per cent transition because we have enough spaces in Grade 10
senior schools to take all the learners. We expect more students to go to
Category Four schools because they have more capacity, but so far 42 per cent
of the students who have reported have reported in Category Four schools,” he
said.
The ministry says more
than 50,000 learners applied to just 20 popular schools, leaving thousands
unable to secure placement in their preferred institutions. Parents are now
being urged to accept placements in other schools, particularly those in
Category Four, which still have available space.
“We are asking
principals that if parents walk into your school, place your request in the
portal and the approval will come if the capacity is there. But without
capacity, it is hard because the system will not allow you to place a student in
a school that is full. We encourage parents to take up the schools the students
have been placed in. There is no confusion. We are very clear in our minds and
we are sure all learners will be transitioned,” Prof. Bitok added.
The ministry also says
it is working closely with the Teachers Service Commission to address shortages
of instructors in specialised subjects.
“We are working very
closely with TSC and we have had a few meetings to ensure we build capacity for
those specialised areas which have fewer teachers. Over time, we want to build
the capacity of some of our big schools to teach these technical areas which
were not there in the previous curriculum,” he said.
With the low turnout
persisting, the government says it is considering extending the reporting
deadline to allow more learners time to join senior secondary school.


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