I captured the fact that you did not expressly address cheating. That is why among other words I have used include insinuation. When you go out of your way to appear to exonerate those who cheat by deflecting blame from cheating and cheats there are very few people who would agree with you that you are not saying anything about cheating.
Yes, I did not explicitly address cheating. That is because the issue I was addressing was one of logical consequence---that of jumping directly from fake As to dodgy doctors without taking into account what happens in the middle. But it is nonsensical to take that as supporting or disregarding cheating. For the record, here it is: I absolutely and thoroughly abhor cheating in any form, and I believe action should be taken to prevent it and to punish those who engage in it. There. And that does not detract from anything I have written.
Either it is the problem I mentioned earlier: obscurum per obscurius or you are fudging reality and hiding behind semantics. Yes you appeared to make such a point. However it was in my opinion (and how it came out) a robust defense of cheating and cheats. You in effect suggested that since these students go through university successfully, then they clearly did not cheat.
You keep insisting on that bizarre interpretation. Let me try one last time: If an incompetent person cheats his way into university, gets a degree in a professional field, goes through the process required to get admitted to practice in the profession, ... then the real problem lies with the universities and the relevant professional bodies---precisely because a key part of their job is to stop such people. That is
not the same as saying, or even implying, that anyone who gets through did not cheat.
I cannot vouch for universities outside Kenya (India for instance) when it comes to their University Admission / Entry Requirements. However the assumption is that they would require something equivalent to KCSE.
Yes, universities will require something like a KCSE; no need to quote any Act on that. But it is bizarre to state, or imply, that because getting a degree requires something like a KCSE, it follows that professional bodies take into account KCSE grades, in the manner you imply. The statement "
All the professional bodies insist on a minimum KCSE grade or equivalent" will get interpreted in a certain way, i.e that the required minimum educations is KCSE (or equivalent), which is certainly not the case: the professional bodies insist on a higher minimum.
You have confused two separate issues. I believe we were talking about Professional institutions.
No I have not. What I have pointed out is that in the "sensitive professions", certain bodies are bound by law tht has something to say on educational matters.
I strongly disagree with you. The foundation of a house is more important than the walls. A person who has a poor foundation and cheats through high school to end up in medical school should by the Grace of God never succeed to end up standing over you in a theatre. I believe character starts forming much earlier than say medical school. Clearly there would be a lot missing from the person - not least character - for him to honestly take the hippocratic oath (may be the hypocrites oath!).
You are confused on this. The real foundation is not the KCSE grades, which, as you have noted, may be obtained by cheating, although those play the obvious role. The proper foundation is how well one is actually prepared, how well they are prepared to study and actually study, etc., and, from there, how well they do in university, how well they perform in post-graduation internships/pupilages/etc. I will take a C at KCSE who does very well in medical school, performs very well in internships, etc. over a genuinely-earned A who barely scrapes through medical school, shows thorough incompetence in internship, etc.
If a person gets into medical school by cheating at KCSE and then manages to graduate, go through internship, and gets admitted into practice by the relevant board, the real problem is not in the KCSE!
MoonKi get serious. These bodies you list (Universities etc) base their admission on grades. Kamau turns up with straight A's and he cannot be denied admission. There would be no legal basis whatever to deny him access to these institutions.
Yes, person with As cannot be denied admission. But is there any basis, legal or otherwise, for insisting or assuming that the universities must pass them and give them degrees? One more time: stop confusing admission into university with what happens at university and after.
In the meantime, I propose vetting past KCSE certificates from 2003
In the meantime, I propose that you come up with a more realistic and practical proposal.