What data do you want when you are quoting every tom, dick and harry that google can help you "fact check". If you don't have facts and figures on your fingertips; then it very very hard to debate; coz I am going to be arguing with all sort of rubbish you can google as you scavenge for any negative information.
If you're looking for credible data - try for instance Global Competitive Index - by WEF. If you read there - kenya is ranked 30 (just 10 place out of OECD countries) in education system -
....
Okay here we go with mr google...kenya education system is ranked highly than my 40 ballpark...and this is not by accident..but by investment in teachers that kenya has done...most of primary teachers now are degree or diploma or even master level graduates.
Further, supporting this innovative potential is an educational system that gets relatively good marks for quality 30th
Really? Are you sure? As usual, you have not actually understood what you have read.
Pay careful attention to the following, because you are about to learn something useful on how to interpret the results of a survey.Part of results and rankings are no more than surveys of
perceptions, and
local perceptions at that, i.e. how the citizens of a country feel about their country. Read that carefully and absorb it. OK, now read it again. That means two things of such parts:
(1) As mere
perceptions, they cannot be taken as objective indicators of quality of whatever.
(2) Because they are
localized, they must not be used to compare countries beyond "people in this country feel better than people in that country on X".
On education here are some specifics that you will find here (using the "drop menu"):
http://reports.weforum.org/global-competitiveness-report-2015-2016/competitiveness-rankings/(a) On 4.09, "quality of primary education", Kenya is at no. 84. Note the survey question:
In your
(b) It is on "5.03. Efficiency enhancers: quality of education" that
Kenya is at no. 36. On that ranking,
South Africa is at no. 138 out of 140, the "worst" of all African countries, except for Egypt at no. 139.
If one does, as you appear to be doing, make the absurd assumption that some external body has gone around measuring the quality of education in 140 countries and then compiled a ranking, then the strange conclusion is that SA has a truly bad system. Really? But nothing of such measuring took place.
The survey question was:
In your country, how well does the education system meet the needs of a competitive economy? (1 = not well at all; 7 = extremely well)
So the ranking does not tell us anything objective about Kenya's education system, whether as a whole or as an "efficiency enhancer". Nor does it even begin to tell us how Kenya's system compares with that of another country. What it tells us, is, for example, that in this regard Kenyans
feel better about their system than South Africans do.
All of the above is probably a bit subtle for you, but spend some brain time on it. I can assure you that you will be rewarded. Once you have got the point you should then reflect on things like this:
http://www.businessdailyafrica.com/Corporate-News/Kenya-suffers-quality-of-education-setback/539550-904732-5ksk3cz/index.html