Nipate
Forum => Kenya Discussion => Topic started by: Omollo on July 01, 2018, 04:17:10 PM
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This is bad reporting or the TSC County Director has no idea what his job is.
Fifty Early Childhood Development Education centres in Samburu have been upgraded to primary schools to accommodate more pupils.
County director of Education Zachary Mutwiri said on Thursday that enrolment in primary schools has increased by 20.4 per cent in one year. He spoke at AIC Moi Girls Secondary School grounds in Maralal town.
“We have been able to raise enrolment for primary schools from 49,000 to 59,000 from last year to this year,” he said.
Mutwiri said upgrading of ECDE centres to primary schools will reduce distance from one school to another, which will encourage many children to enrol next year.
The Teachers Service Commission director in charge of Samburu, Suleman Odipo said the county is facing teacher shortage.
“I urge leaders, parents and residents to consider employing Board of Management teachers as the government embarks on employing more teachers,” he said.
The TSC boss said crowding in classrooms has contributed to poor handwriting, which hurts performance in the KCPE exam. He urged parents to protect and guard their children’s future by taking them to school.
The TSC director said some teachers walk long distances to and from school, causing fatigue and hurting their own performance.
“A teacher walking for 30 kilometres to and from school cannot deliver as expected. They are always tired and they do not report to school on Fridays, because as normal human beings they find excuses,” Odipo said.
He urged residents to build rental houses near learning institutions to save teachers from long walks.
In February this year, Mutwiri urged primary school head teachers to trace pupils who sat last year’s KCPE exam and ensure they join secondary schools.
He said most Samburu parents do not take their children to school due to the low value placed on education and to harmful cultural believes.
“You will find some parents not taking their daughters to school and asking them to herd goats instead, in the belief that goats herded by girls will always give birth to twins,” he said.
(https://www.the-star.co.ke/sites/default/files/styles/new_full_content/public/articles/2018/06/30/1599460.jpg?itok=yqxwoO0X)
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We need a marshall plan for the entire north. Focus mainly on the basics - schools & hospitals. Sadly they haven't taken advantage of Equisaltion fund. Odhiambo the Budget controller says - out of 11b - they can barely utilize 1B.
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We need a marshall plan for the entire north. Focus mainly on the basics - schools & hospitals. Sadly they haven't taken advantage of Equisaltion fund. Odhiambo the Budget controller says - out of 11b - they can barely utilize 1B.
Reduced absorption capacity is a direct result of having limited (and qualified) personnel. This disease infected Africa when the IMF first came with the Structural Adjustment nonsense. Areas of the North and other marginalized districts lost the few people who had braved the tough conditions to work over there.
There are other factors when it comes to absorption but the key is personnel.
I am told the IMF is back with a new round of layoffs targeting public servants. I think someone should for once show them the middle finger. This nonsense of retrenchment is practised by banks in Kenya to no documented benefit. They fire highly qualified and experienced staff and hire bimbos for their looks and zero anything else.
The same happens with airlines. Yet those same banks (the international money launderers like Barclays) back home keep their staff until the age of retirement.
I would recommend to those counties to hire more qualified staff and in large numbers. Nanok does not have to wait until Turkanas get PhDs to hire staff. He can rescue Pundit from Uganda. He will see the benefits.
Just for theb record: Many county governments have hired a lot of people. They just hired unqualified people.
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What about just wiring money to people via mpesa...create welfare system..that will quickly see absorption and poverty reduction
if building schools is so hard for nanok
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What about just wiring money to people via mpesa...create welfare system..that will quickly see absorption and poverty reduction
if building schools is so hard for nanok
That may cater for cash transfer to beneficiaries. It is usually not a problem.
I refer to county governments that "return money" to the treasury unspent.
This was a disease that bedevilled Kenya in the 70s and 80s. It was corrected briefly when Moi took over but the IMF forced SAPs which caused a reduction in personnel brought by retrenchment and a freeze in hiring.
Most of the unused money is for development programs and projects. I know one county that could not go to tender and when they did had no staff to undertake a technical and financial evaluation of consultants who would then be hired to over see the tendering etc. By the time they got all in place, they could not possibly spend the cash. Government cash must be spent within that budget cycle.
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He isn't worse than the rest of GOK which essentially upgraded all technical colleges to university and created a crisis of graduate unemployment.