SAM’S SENSE: Education- Cry Kilifi County

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This week in the ongoing series of Elimu Mashinani, Citizen TV hosted Ministry of Education officials and education stakeholders from Kilifi County.
This was a moment to face the reality on the ground, 62
years since independence. The reality is that 72 per cent of KCSE candidates of
the year 2024 scored a D plus and below, a record 10 per cent posting grade E,
way higher than anywhere else in the country.
Only 10 per cent of the class qualified to join
universities, falling way below the national average of 25 per cent. It is
shocking to find that out of 10 children who join Class One, only one would
have the possibility of progressing to the highest level of education as long
as they school in Kilifi.
It is worse when you interpret the data. In every 10
learners who attend school in Kilifi, more than seven face the unenviable
possibility that they cannot directly progress their education to a reasonable
skill-based academic programme, simply because they are likely to score a D
plus and below, unless circumstances change. Even then, enrolment in vocational
training and TVET institutions in Kilifi is so low that there is little
evidence that KCSE graduates who score below C minus proceed to those institutions.
And then comes the reality: the myriad challenges that
threaten the possibility of success in Kilifi’s schools. From cultural
practices to weather conditions, economic hurdles to the situation in schools,
attitudes towards education, the world of work and more.
The unfortunate reality is that out of the 655 junior
schools in Kilifi, there is a teachers’ shortage of 62 per cent. That may sound
like just a number. Let’s break it down. If there are nine learning areas in a
Kilifi junior school, at least five subjects are not covered by TSC-hired
teachers.
Meaning, should the school not find a way to have the
learning areas taught, the children of Kilifi are grossly disadvantaged as they
seek their path to the national stage.
During that session on Tuesday night, Agnes, a Grade Nine
student in one of the schools in Kilifi, posed a question to the Education
Cabinet Secretary. She shared how, in her nine years of schooling, she is yet to
see a science laboratory in her institution. She wondered how, after three
years of junior school, she is expected to transition to senior school, where
she had hoped to pursue a science-based pathway. And yes, the answers from the
panel were a long shot. In the end, Pwani University Vice Chancellor Prof.
James Kahindi offered to facilitate Agnes for a visit and use of laboratories
at the university.
Commendable. But then, how many more like Agnes are
affected? How many have no access to a philanthropic university or institution?
At a time that data shows the fruits of our failure to
invest in the most needy among us; at a time when numbers are showing limited
effort in places like Kilifi; at a time qualitative data is telling us what
challenges exist in the households, communities and towns of Kilifi — we must
be the most inconsiderate generation to ignore.
How are places like Kilifi expected to compete not just at
the national level but also globally? If 62 years of independence should mean
anything, it’s time our decisions are guided by data, information and deep
thought. Blanket employment of teachers may be good because it creates jobs.
However, when such interventions are not responsive to the contextual realities
as explained by Agnes, the parents and the teachers of Kilifi, we will be
shooting in the dark in broad daylight. And that doesn’t sound sensible at all.
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