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    21 February 2017

    Exams now free for private and public students

      Unknown       21 February 2017

    Moi Nyeri Complex primary school candidates sit the KCPE mathematics paper December 4, 2012.

    Moi Nyeri Complex Primary School candidates sit the KCPE Mathematics paper December 4, 2012. Exam fees for both candidates in public and private schools have been waived. 
    Examination candidates in private primary and secondary schools have been exempted from paying for the tests beginning this year.
    They will join their colleagues in public schools who started enjoying the waiver last year in a scheme by the government to ease the financial burden for parents, to make education accessible and affordable.
    The introduction of free primary education and subsidies in secondary schools in 2003 is part of the scheme that has led to increased enrolment and higher transition rates.
    “Education is an equaliser and bridges the gap between the rich and the poor and hence the children must be given an even ground so as to compete equally in the examinations,” said Dr Fred Matiang’i, the Education Cabinet secretary.
    He said, however, that exemption would not be extended to those who re-sit the examinations, non-citizens and self-sponsored candidates.
    Last year, a total of 942,021 candidates registered for the Kenya Certificate of Primary Education (KCPE) examinations while the Kenya certificate of Secondary Education (KCSE) had 577, 253.
    The Kenya National Examinations Council (Knec) is this year targeting to register 600,000 candidates in KCSE and one million in the KCPE.
    By Friday last week, 364,734 had been registered for Standard Eight while 350,967 had been enrolled for Form Four.
    The government is paying Sh800 per candidate for class eight examinations and Sh5,400 for Form Four.
    SET ASIDE SH4BN
    In the next financial year starting July, the National Treasury has set aside Sh4 billion for the examination fees, up from Sh3.2 billion last year.
    It has also increased funding to secondary schools from Sh32 billion to Sh33 billion, while primary schools will get Sh4 billion.
    Dr Matiang’i, who spoke at Chelsa Academy in Bomet during an impromptu visit, said the government was enrolling Form One students to all public national secondary schools regardless of whether they were in public or private schools.
    “It would be very unfair to leave out bright children from private institutions from accessing public national schools yet they have what it takes to be enrolled in these schools,” he said.
    The Kenya Private Schools Association chief executive officer Peter Ndoro praised the government for “implementing what the law demands it to do”.
    “Candidates in private schools have already started to benefit from the payment. We have about 120,000 candidates in class eight and 46,000 in Form Four,” he said, adding that it would have been unfair if the fee exemption had not been extended to private schools.
    Dr Matiang’i, however, warned headteachers against registering ghost candidates with the intention of inflating their candidature to reach the levels that Knec requires of an examination centre.
    Registration for the examinations started on January 17 and will end on February 28, without any extension.
    USE INDEX NUMBERS
    “We are appealing to all candidates to come forward and register. They should not wait until the last minute as it will clog the system,” said Knec acting chief executive Mercy Karogo.
    She added that candidates registering for this year’s national examinations will use index numbers as has been the practice in the previous years as they await the development of the unique identifier system.
    Ms Karogo said the candidates will be given the unique Personal Registration Number when registration is complete.
    Speaking in Kisii later, Dr Matiang’i vowed to continue with the strict management of national examinations, saying those hoping for loopholes in the process to exploit were bound to be disappointed. “We are going to be even stricter in supervising exams this year. Those hoping for a return to the dark days of rampant cheating should prepare for more disappointment this year,” he said and hit out at critics for claiming he was out to frustrate learning institutions in the drive to reform education.
    “As a firm believer in proper management of schools, I must ensure all schools comply with the regulations,” he said.
    Dr Matiang’i said the government would roll out digital literacy programmes in public and private primary schools to enable all children become computer literate without segregation.
    He said the ministry would come up with a common design for the construction of dormitories to be adopted by all schools.
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