I think in a country like ours where corruption is our second nature - you need KCSE or KCPE set & marked as stringently as possible by national examination body. KCSE result are used in lots more places than just universities. So we need something like that and we have to thank Matiangi for restoring the integrity of the exams. Private candidates are allowed to sit for KCSE.
I just don't know how having all sort of exams conducted by all sort of universities in place as rotten as kenyan will be good.
And the bottom-line is we are designing a public schooling system to effectively trains millions of kids every year - some of those nice ideas like creativity & fully-baking our graduate - are secondary - they'll come later as our gdp improves. Teacher qualification remain a problem - most of our teachers are poorly trained for example?
The focus should be on the basics - basic reforms that are easily scalable in places like Turkana or Mandera. First of course is access to education - even if it's under a tree - that we are nearly dealing with - primary level admission are up there at 95% or about - secondary transition edging towards 85% or about - university admission still low at 7-0%? - then quality comes after that.
It's too rigid. They should leave entrance metrics to the individual universities. The entrance tests should be available to anybody who has completed high school at an affordable rate. If you want to study law, the faculties of law will have their own test. Engineering, same thing etc. And people can take the tests when they are ready.
That way lower schools can focus on basic education rather than prepping kids for tests. Part of the Negro's problem stems from the fact that he sees education only in terms of tests and qualifications. Which IMO is what a half-baked graduate is. He sees education as something you leave at school as you get ready to hustle in the real world.