Elimu ya majirani ndio inakwamisha EAC

Yani ndugu upo vizuri the Kenyans are so aggressive in nature due to the hardships they passed like famine,terrorism,droughts,tribalism etcetera


Unajua system anazokuja nazo magufuli zitaondoa huu upuuzi wa kukariri ingawa msingi halisi wa elimu ni mbovu...


Zamani mtanzania akiajiriwa tu serikalini haikujalisha kama ni efficient ama LA..yeye atasubiri kustaafu tu lakini kwa sasa upepo unabadiliKa kwa kutengeneza mfumo wa kupima uwajibikaji na ubunifu via mikataba ya kazi..

hii itawasukuma watu kusoma kwa maarifa na si paper kwa kuwa kupata kazi utakuwa ni mwanzo na si mwisho kama ilivyozoeleka...lundo LA wasomi limewafanya vijana wengi wanaojielewa kugeukia ujasiriamali na hata kwenda nje ya nchi kutafuta kazi

Miundombinu inaboreshwa KWA kasi hivyo, Tanzania nzima inaungana hata southern corridor imefunguliwa...
Na hii ndio siri kubwa ya mapato kuongezeka

SIWEZI NIKAYAANDIKA YOTE ILA KWA MTU AMBAE ANAISHI MKOA MMOJA HAWEZI KUELEWA MCHEZO ULIVYOBADILIKA NCHINI...
RAIS KAJA WAKATI MUAFAKA
 


Nimependa hapo kwenye rangi nyekundu
Pia KWA MTU ANAE KARIRI NA KU GOOGLE PEKEE BILA KUITEMBELEA
KWASASA HATAJUA KAMA TANZANIA YA SASA SIO YA KUBEZA
 
It's not possible, because we are forced by circumstances to relate in one way or another. More like siblings in a family, you can't let go and are forced to coexist shortcomings notwithstanding.

Why do you use all that energy to show off? That's how far your masters went to progress the British East Africa?
 

Nimeipenda hii, inafaa kuwa taswira Afrika yote.
 

Hongera kama kuna mabadiliko, hususan katika utendaji. Serikali ikiongeza bidii kwenye kuwapima waajiriwa wake kwa mikataba ya utendaji (performance contracts), hakika mambo yataenda.
Pamoja na kupunguza rushwa na urasimu. Unakuta mkandarsi umemaliza mradi na kupokeza invoice ya malipo, halafu jamaa wanaiweka chini ya zingine na inabidi umuahidi asilimia kiasi fulani cha malipo ndio aisogeshe ilipwe. Hayo yapo hata huku, yanatamausha sana.

Lakini bado nashikilia bango kwamba elimu iunganishwe kwenye nchi hizi, tuwe na mtaala mmoja.
 


Humu ndani enedlea kudanganya wasio kujua.

Soma kuanzia ukurasa wa 338 hadi 390.., halafu leta porojo zako za kuhusu quality of education.

and befoe you start with the usual we are better nonsense. be honest and say these countrymates are lying.

Kenyan graduates 'lack crucial skills'

Subiri Mkenya8 months ago


Kenyan universities are churning out graduates faster than a queen termite lays eggs. Its all about numbers, not quality. The problem is deep. Kibaki in his last days in power turned many colleges into full fledged universities without any investment into these institutions in the form of equipment, labs, libraries or personnel. The parallel degree programmes led us into commercialization of education - there has been a rush to convert every available building into a university, leading to the likes of Nairobi Aviation college (who even after the expos'e by the media are still operating). The Ministry of Education and those who head it are all clueless.

Orkoiyot Kamau8 months ago


The govt has made the wrong investment in higher education in Kenya. Higher education should produce helpful researchers to the nation, but does that happen at undergraduate level? The system is only producing dependent minds, released to look for employment and zero support in research and innovation.

Mzalendo waKenya8 months ago


The report is sadly true. Quality of most Kenyan degrees is wanting. Actually it is pathetic. Education has become a business, with unqualified lecturers. There is little to no research material. The resources are few. It's a murky mess that is sure to doom Kenya. From a personal experience, my 4 years in a Kenyan University was a waste. I learnt more in two years in an Foreign University than I did in Kenya. The resources and the lecturers were a joke compared to what a real University ought to have. There is a big gap between what colleges are teaching and what the market needs.


ernest otieno8 months ago
A University is evaluated based on its research output rather than regurgitation as in our University and some Secondary schools were turned in to university campus with name change without necessary investment.


tomyebei8 months ago


Commercialization of the education sector is the root cause of all these quality issues

3

Frank Menges8 months ago


Kenyan education System is bad, no wonder so many people have degrees which are obviously worthless. I would never hire someone with a Kenyan degree in any discipline....


Jayson 158 months ago


I saw Job advert this week. they were demanding for an Upper Second class honors degree "from a Kenyan University that has been in existence for at least 10 years". Employers know there is a big problem with these newly promoted universities.


Upus Deili8 months ago


In Kenya, any storied building which has doors, windows and a toilet can be a university. It has never been about quality, its all about the balance sheet at the bank. Our universities are wasting our youth, our youth are smart but the system is failing them. A C+ guy in a university in Canada or the UK is much better that an A student at UON. It's not the students but our institutions that are useless.
 
The poor stand no chance at education
Updated Sunday, May 22nd 2016 10:00am


Author


Vollah Owino

Gone are the days when education brought uniformity amongst members of a society irrespective of their social status. Nowadays the bourgeoisies are in control of the education system. They build private primary schools which drill children through their cram to pass technique. This has been crafted and proved effective over the years thus ensuring children of the haves in the society pass with flying colours. Thereafter, they join the limited national high schools and best county schools in their numbers.

Those who will not have the opportunity to join national schools and county schools due to their below par performance will head to private high schools for advanced drilling to justify the capita investment of their parents.

WERBUNG
inRead invented by Teads
Here spoon-feeding is the order of the day considering the favorable teacher-student ratio mostly 1:25 at most. Making them record business attractive mean scores such as 399.9999 in primary level and 10.999 in secondary level to boost the student enrollment numbers the following year.

Whereas their colleagues in the public sector, a hustlers paradise where everything is low; low teacher student ratio, low book ratio, low morale due to low remuneration of teachers and low class attendance. The only thing, which is high, is the student population which leads to ‘mediocre’ mean scores that depict teachers as jokers who just come to school for the sake of their salaries.

See Also: Hire more teachers to end current crisis
Here, read to understand technique applies if you can’t understand the train has just left you at the station. Students from these schools are often faced with financial challenges but those who manage to join national and top county schools become instant performers who are found on the upper sphere of the academic merit list.

The number of parallel students in competitive courses such as medicine, law and engineering has either doubled or tripled the number of their government sponsored counterparts. This is because varsities claim they don’t have the ‘capacity’ to train them but they always have capacity to train the privately sponsored students.

Courses such as piloting are a preserve of the rich whereas the poor shift their focus to Education and other arts courses which the government willingly sponsors them in their numbers. Some of these courses are ‘irrelevant’ to the current job market. This is the case of generational poverty where the poor are to remain poor until the Lord returns.

The poor stand no chance at education

MY TAKE

Kenya having over 40% living under a dollar a day, how will a fool come here and brag about being more educated while the poor in his backyard can not afford to pay for that luxury?

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Hii mada tamu kweli
 
kenyas-free-education-system-is-making-inequality-worse/

https://qzprod.files.wordpress.com/...ol-in-nairobi.jpg?quality=80&strip=all&w=1600
There is a new brand of educational entrepreneur emerging in Nairobi’s slums: privately owned and run schools that promise particularly poor children a good education at little cost.
These schools position themselves as providing a public good. But the majority are not registered with Kenya’s Ministry of Education, Science and Technology. This means they miss out on the country’s free education grants—and, because of this, perpetuate a major social injustice in the Kenyan capital.

A word here about the structure of Kenya’s education system. At primary school level there are public or government schools. These tend to be regarded with suspicion by ordinary Kenyans, who question the quality of their teaching. Most are in more developed areas rather than in slums, which are largely served by low-fee private schools. There are also private schools in wealthy areas, but they charge higher fees.

There is a new brand of entrepreneur emerging in Nairobi’s slums: privately owned and run schools.Similar structures ex

A policy that doesn’t help the poor
Under the primary school policy, grants are drawn from tax dollars and then distributed directly to all government primary schools. Every child who attends one of these schools is allocated 1,420 Kenyan shillings (about US$14) a year.

Many parents living in the slums see education as a way for their children to climb out of poverty. There are very few government schools in Nairobi’s slums, and parents do not trust them to provide a quality education. The schools also don’t offer adequate services for pre-primary children, which is hard for parents who want to spend their days looking for work.

So they send their children to low-fee private schools, which are well regarded and offer better pre-primary services.

People set up private schools for reasons of faith, philanthropy, or profit. While there are many groups with good intentions, the profiteers are the most callous of all. They promise low school fees, quality education, flexibility in payments and good teachers. They attract international investors who naturally mistrust any African government and put their faith in such methods as privatization.
 
Dr Ndii explains better about the education situation in Kenya

From polls to academia, stealing is now the norm


Defence of academic fraud is emblematic of a society without moral compass.

Saturday May 21 2016

In Summary
  • Proper functioning of systems is predicated on most people being honest.
  • From money, to elections to qualifications, stealing is now the normative behaviour in our public realm.
  • There is no system or institution that can work when dishonesty is the norm.
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By DAVID NDII
More by this Author
A few weeks ago my friend John Githongo and I were hosted to a town hall meeting on corruption and tribalism by the most friendly, graceful people of Taita Taveta, at which I posed the following question.

If during the next General Election Uhuru Kenyatta gets a handful of votes in a polling station somewhere deep in Bondo and conversely, Raila Odinga gets a similar handful in a polling station deep in Gatundu where neither of the two candidates have agents, can either of them be certain that their vote would be protected?

The participants were unequivocal that neither of the candidates could be sure. In fact, there was general agreements that the votes would almost certainly be stolen.

Earlier this week, my good friend and hardworking Education Cabinet Secretary Fred Matiang’i put forward draconian measures to combat examination fraud, among them outlawing contact between candidates and parents in boarding schools during third term, which seems to me to tilt the playing field in favour of day schools.

The only way we can ensure fidelity of examinations, it seems, is to put all candidates in solitary confinement once the examinations are set.

Proper functioning of systems is predicated on most people being honest. What if all of us were honest people who would feel morally obliged to protect our worst enemy’s five votes, and go as far as swearing an affidavit and testifying in court if the votes were stolen in our presence?

From money, to elections to qualifications, stealing is now the normative behaviour in our public realm. There is no system or institution that can work when dishonesty is the norm.

A couple of years ago, I needed a research assistant to do a fairly sophisticated piece of statistical modelling. I searched the internet and came across a recently completed Masters thesis in one of our public universities on precisely the work I needed.

I tracked down the owner of the thesis to one of our policy research institutions and offered her the assignment which she accepted. It was just before Christmas, and we agreed she would complete the assignment by the end of January. It should have been a piece of cake, since all she needed to do was update the data and replicate the work she had done of her thesis.

EVASIVE MANOUVRES

She never did the work. I was intrigued. $4,500 (about Sh450,000) was, still is, good money for someone at that level to pass up, and then the boost to her CV. After several evasive manoeuvres, she agreed to meet. I sought to understand what the challenge could be. No straight answer. I then delved into her thesis subject. It was soon apparent that she did not have even a basic grasp of the subject. She could not have written the thesis.

I had not thought it important to interview her at the outset. I had trusted the reputations of both the university and the research institution where she was interning. One thing that had intrigued me was that she was assigned to a different, non-technical department, even though the subject area was more prestigious. But I had let it pass.

I subsequently learned that there is a thriving thesis outsourcing industry in the country. I was recently told an episode of a gentleman who made a living writing MBA theses for working people, who died in a road accident with several theses in his laptop, putting the students into the unseemly situation of enquiring about the laptop from a grieving widow. Unfortunately for them, the laptop had been stolen at the scene of the accident.

They did not graduate.
Debate has been raging recently over two prominent columnists lying about their academic credentials, who have been called out, coincidentally, by fellow columnists Godwin Murunga, a senior academic, and bona fide professors Makau Mutua and Lukoye Atwoli. A rejoinder by Harry Mulama ‘No need for wrangle over academic titles’ (Saturday Nation, May 14) makes very disturbing reading.

Mulama either misses the point, or pretends to justify his sour grapes flavoured tirade against the academy writ large. He exposes himself most when he wonders sarcastically, whether there is any difference between the professorial spat and the Kabogo-Waititu one about the latter’s questionable academic credentials. He is off tangent by a country mile because the issue is exactly the same! It is about academic fraud.

Academic credentials and accolades are EARNED. This is not unique to the academy. Think about the military. If a retired major goes around signing himself of as General so and so, I would expect that other military officers would take offence.

The culprits have been using these titles to command prestige that they have not earned. There is a name for people who appropriate for themselves something of value that they have not earned. We call them thieves.

Little wonder then, that one of the culprits features prominently in one of the Jubilee administration’s mega corruption scandals. The culprits are in fact quite academically and intellectually accomplished, but they have not earned those credentials. Yet they are not satisfied with what they have achieved and are entitled to.

FATAL SOCIAL MALAISE

Like the dog with a bone lusting after the one in its own reflection, they want what others have also. We have a name for this too. It is called greed.

Mulama’s worldview and defence of the indefensible is emblematic of a fatal social malaise that is a recurring theme in this column — the loss of a public moral compass.

Nowhere in his article does Mulama acknowledge wrongdoing by the culprits he defends. He goes as far to suggest that one of the culprits may be justified in conferring himself the fraudulent title. Right and wrong are words that are no longer in our public lexicon.

Of all our moral ethical scourges, corruption of qualifications is in my view the most deleterious. My would be research assistant could have been a medical doctor. We read about rising incidence of medical malpractice but we do not connect the dots.

One of most influential papers in economics is a 1970 one by George Akerlof titled ‘The Market for Lemons’ with a subtitle ‘Quality Uncertainty and the Market Mechanism’. Akerlof (who is also husband to Federal Reserve Governor Janet Yellen) shared the 2001 Economics Nobel Prize for his contribution to the economics of information.

“Lemon” is an American colloquialism for a car that has a factory defect. Akerlof used the analogy to demonstrate the economic cost of dishonesty. Think of a used car bazaar where most cars on sale are reliable but there are a few troublesome ones that have factory defects. Owners know their cars but buyers cannot tell them apart.

Let us say the good ones are worth between Sh750,000 and Sh 1 million and the faulty ones are worth at most Sh500,000. Now, given the risk of ending up with a defective one, buyers are likely to discount the price of any car bought in the bazaar.

For argument’s sake, the discounted market price settles at Sh800,000. At this price, sellers of the best cars will be getting a raw deal, but sellers of faulty ones will be getting a premium. Instead of getting a raw deal, sellers of the best cars are better off withdrawing them from the market.

As good cars are withdrawn, the percentage of defective cars will increase. The risk discount will increase also, bringing the market price down further, driving more quality cars out of the market.

This process will continue until no one brings good cars to the bazaar, causing it to either collapse as a market, or deal only in lemons, hence Akerlof’s conclusion: “The cost of dishonesty, therefore, lies not only in the amount by which the purchaser is cheated; the cost also must include the loss incurred from driving legitimate business out of existence.”

Replace cars with academic qualifications.

SHUN LOCAL GRADUATES

Each year our universities churn out several thousand graduates, many of them have earned their degrees and a small percentage with fraudulent ones, like my would be research assistant. It is costly for prospective employers to determine which ones are genuine, but failing to do so runs the risk of ending up in my situation or worse. What can prospective employers do? There are different strategies.

One is to shun local graduates in favour of ones from reputable foreign universities. Another is to poach proven workers from competitors. This is reflected in employers paying a premium for experience in what are ordinarily entry level jobs, bank clerks for example.

Another strategy is to offer local graduates casual employment at very low pay and observe which ones prove themselves. All these strategies are evident in our labour market (a good thesis topic if you are looking for one)

Education is the bedrock of social justice. The most egalitarian, stable and indeed prosperous societies are those that offer the most equitable access to quality higher education. Our relatively equitable, meritocratic public university education has been doing exactly that. It is the only reason that ordinary kids from the back of beyond like Cabinet Secretary Adan Mohammed (El Wak Secondary— Kangaru School — UoN — PWC/Shell— Havard) and this columnist (Nyahururu High — Kangaru School — UoN —World Bank— Oxford) to be who they are today.

What happens when that system is corrupted? It will be the international school and foreign university educated children of the who-is-who that will be getting the high-flier jobs. And who do you expect them to recruit when they in turn get to the top? Look no further than Uhuru Kenyatta’s appointments. That is how class cultures are created.

Albert Hirschman, economist and moral historian who I have quoted before observed that “Each society learns to live with a certain amount of such dysfunctional or mis-behaviour; but lest the mis-behaviour feed on itself and lead to general decay, society must be able to marshal from within itself forces, which will make as many of the faltering actors as possible revert to the behaviour required for its proper functioning.”

As to the fate of societies that are unable to marshal those forces, read history.

ndii@netsolafrica.com

http://www.nation.co.ke/oped/Opinio...e-norm/-/440808/3212314/-/9usj2w/-/index.html
 
MK254 ondoa ushudu wako humu. Unafikiri nyie ni tofauti sana? Leta humu takwimu za literacy levels na number of students wanaocomplete each level of education!
 

Kilimanjaro is not the second highest mountain in the world. It is NOT even even in the top five, NOT even in the top ten, NOT even in the top hundred. Please Geza Ulole Kimweri MOTOCHINI sir longo etc, is this the high quality form six education you were talking of? Ati Kilimanjaro is the second highest mountain in the world when it is hardly in the top 200? MK254 saadeque look at these jokers.
 

Some mountains differ by > 100 m (330 ft) on different maps, while even very thorough current measurements of Mount Everest range from 8,840 m (29,003 ft) to 8,850 m (29,035 ft). These discrepancies serve to emphasize the uncertainties in the listed heights.

Though some parts of the world, especially the most mountainous parts, have never been thoroughly mapped, it is unlikely that any mountains this high have been overlooked, because synthetic aperture radar can and has been used to measure elevations of most otherwise inaccessible places. Still, heights and/or prominences may be revised, so that the order of the list may change and even "new" mountains could enter the list over time. To be safe, the list has been extended to include all 7,200 m (23,622 ft) peaks.

The highest mountains above sea level are generally not the highest above the surrounding terrain. There is no precise definition of surrounding base, but Denali, Mount Kilimanjaro and Nanga Parbat are possible candidates for the tallest mountain on land by this measure. The bases of mountain islands are below sea level, and given this consideration Mauna Kea (4,207 m (13,802 ft)
 
Actually is the highest first free standing Mt in the World! like that?
 

The knowledge from my six form education thankyou.

Kilimanjaro rises approximately 4,877 metres (16,001 ft) from its southern base in the plains near the municipality of Moshi to its summit height of 5,895 metres (19,341 ft).[2] Kilimanjaro is the highest volcano outside South America.[7]
 

Acha longo longo wee. You said Mt. Kilimanjaro is the second highest in the world when it is NOT even in the top 200. I would have forgiven you if it was in the top five but this? Lol, This is like saying Mwanza is the second largest city in the world. It simply shows your quality of education is pathetic.
 
Little girl, acha kutapatapa - whatever you're posting won't make Kilimanjaro the second highest mountain in the world. Please go do some reading. The 100th highest mountain in the world is 7221m asl, that's 1400m higher than Kilimanjaro - you can guess where Kilimanjaro is now.
 
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