LEST WE FORGET

LEST WE FORGET WHAT EDUCATION DOES TO OUR CHILDREN

Lest we Forget, There are Widening Disparities and Inequalities between Private and Public Schools

Lest we Forget - Ultimate ExcellenceIs the FREE Primary Education, FPE providing results commensurate to the resources invested in the national exams? With the 2018 registering the highest number of candidates in the last decade, did the government increase the resources to cater for this increase? I do not think so.

Almost a 100% of the celebrations are happening in private schools, owned by individuals, partnerships or religious organizations.

Something is wrong with most of our public primary schools ranging from poor and unconcerned management, demotivated and unfocused teachers, absent and ignorant parents…leading to slow learning and poor teaching that cannot give quality nor normal curve performance.

The government spends billions on administration of exams but cannot commit to improvement of infrastructures, supervision and quality assurance, human capital as well as timely disbursement of funds; which are then mismanaged in most cases.

Now with the K.C. P.E out, how many kids from public schools will miss national and extra county schools (I do not intend to mean that other categories don’t perform, this is only for this context). They won’t miss because they cannot make it but because they have been taken up by private school candidates…sasa makosa ya mtoto ni gani? They become victim of circumstances and this in 10 or so years will widen the gap between the rich (relatively) and the poor. You are asking how?

a.Frustration due to difficulties in some harambee secondary school leads to social ills.

b. Performance in KCSE takes the same trend, national schools and top tier extra county schools where most of the students are from private schools end up getting most of their students to public universities. They will not have to pay a lot since the government subsidies will be in place. Those who didn’t manage to go to ‘good’ schools end up with kawaida or so-so grades with few exceptions of the strong ones. They will have to choose between raising money from menial jobs, harambees and relatives to go to college or to miss it…

c. Missing college or technical training will limit their opportunities with them unable to be competitive and sellable. This may lead to social vices or inherited poverty, and the cycle repeats itself with their sons and daughters.’

Lest We Forget, Nothing free is free.

Nowadays, I tend parents meetings in public schools, both primary and secondary and it has stopped being a surprise that a ‘whole’ parent cannot support any initiative from the school administration that requires an addition coin. When the same parent goes to a public hospital, he or she is ready to go and buy drugs as prescribed by the doctor. Parents in both public primary and secondary schools must learn or at least be aware that the government works with a budget and it is not in the business of marketing itself; they do not invest in luxury unless for personal gains. Lest we forget, Parent must avoid ignorance if they want to see the fruits of their children’s education. They ought to uphold objective opinions on various issues regarding the education of their sons or daughters. It is a pity that most for them take the government word as the gospel truth without putting it in a context. Why should parents not go an extra mile to do for their children what the government can’t do for all the children?

Why is it that most, if not all teenage pregnancies (won’t call them early) happened in public primary schools and are now happening in public secondary schools? Are you not worried that we no longer getting the updates as if they only gave birth the first 2 days? Kenya that is sensational and forgets. Lest we forget, teenage pregnancies is a sign of uninformed or misinformed community of teachers, learners and society…where hope is less thus so many hopeless cases. It is a problem of the poor Wanjiku.

If we can rally for 2/3 gender rule as part of affirmative action to help women rise in POLITICAL leadership; we ought to think about affirmative action for public schools or the government makes the situation better and more competitive. Why do they assume all is well? I tend to think it is because their children are beneficiaries of a cooked and crooked system of examination.

Now they are talking of 100% transition to secondary schools and this looks like a good deal to the citizens. Is it? After 4 years in secondary schools, what will the 100% take home? Another 100% to tertiary institutions? Other early pregnancies? Better grades? Disillusionment? Better characters or bigger bodies? Lest we forget, we must rethink if we do things guided by reason or political and streetwise rhetoric.

Is it about Elimu Bora ama Bora Elimu? The government must tell us. Affirmative action must not be applied selectively. We should also not punish the kids from parents who have invested in their children education. An objective and more inclusive way of placement in secondary schools must be thought about before this time bomb explodes.

The failure of the government should not be used to dilute the quality performance of privately owned schools. The education ministry must wake up and see this reality. As John Stossel says in his book ‘No, They Can’t: Why Government Fails-But Individuals Succeed’, the government has the habit of providing the basics ONLY. He has also said that reality teaches us that teachers unions want what’s best for the union. In matters education, the government must now force itself to go the extra mile and give more than the basic. Just having the basic of something is usually not very far from not having it. If it continues doing this, we may end up having a wider gap and this will make schools that are stable and sound be a preserve of the ‘able’ or for the few who strive to PAY for the education. We should not expect the unions to fight for the rights of the children.

By Samuel Kanja
Educationist, Trainer & Life Coach
samuelnkanja@gmail.com

Why Kenyans Might Be Poorer Every Time a Budget is Read

Yes, the budget might actually be the well of poverty! But why kenyans might be poorer?

“The economic Pillar of Vision 2030 targets a 10 percent growth rate per annum that was to be achieved in 2012 and sustained to 2030. However, this target is unlikely to be achieved and poverty reduced unless deliberate measures are taken.”- from Keeping the Promise: Budget Options for 2014/15 and the Medium Term. In Kenya, an ordinary Kenyan happens to be the poor Kenyan.

A common mwananchi adopts the same tag because he is, or he is thought to be poor. Ironically, Kenya has never been ranked amount the top poorest countries, not only in Africa but also in the whole world. If the nation is not poor, in absolute terms, why Why Kenyans Might Be Poorershould its loyal citizens should be trapped in a web of poverty? Are the systems ok? Are the people doing things in the right way? Is the society over-expectant? Is the government over ambitious? Are our priorities misguided? These are questions that every concerned Kenyan thinks about at one particular time.

In most cases, this is a theoretically relative situation but it tends to become absolute in practical sense-people without a meal per day, shelter or basic human needs. Economically, poverty can be quantified using statistics, where it can be defined as anything below per capita of a country. These are people whose salary is capped on the minimum wage, regardless of their productivity. The poor in this statistics are the ones who live in total uncertainty-they don’t know about the next meal or cannot access basic health, education and other essential services. And what really brings poverty that courts attention? On the other hand, poverty has been blamed for insecurity, corruption, illicit alcohol, drug abuse and negative ethnicity. This is a clear indication that poverty has a deep and lasting influence on the well-being of a nation.

Unless there is consistent balance in the rate at which the rich are getting richer and the one the poor are getting poorer, there will always be a wide gap, which will only make ‘the poor, poorer and rich, richer’ status as a commonplace. In real sense, our country will end up becoming like Brazil, which has the highest gap between the rich and the poor. In Africa, South Africa tops the list. This happens because of an ideology called complementary schism genesis. This happens when the poor fear to be poorer and the rich fear to become poorer and for this reason, no one cares for the other-capitalism rules. It becomes survival for the fittest race. When the annual budget is read, it becomes a commissioning for some people to strategize on how to milk the nation.

There are people who don’t know what constitutes a clean deal because their mind has been coated with noise and pollution from corruption factory. The resources, services and goods fail to reach the populace. This is why you should not be surprised that there was bumper harvest in some regions in our country but people (especially in arid areas) are dying of hunger. The media is very keen to focus on these because they make the news more ‘attractive’. A nation that is led by selfish and corrupt people who can’t spell out the word ‘integrity’ won’t be moved forward by big budgets. A budget can only be favourable if its agendas are directly linked to the people or the people charged with the implementation are individuals who are dependable and incorruptible. If a nation does things in the wrong way, there is no way the right results will be realised.

Systems must be made to work. We don’t want to see instances where people are still begging the political class to come to their aid as if it was a privilege. In most instances, it is their responsibility to change your lives for better-not by giving you easy cash when events or disasters occur. The standard of living for a nation can evenly be raised if the systems are in place and in working condition. Most of our systems are already impaired and that is why the ordinary Kenyan is going round complaining and taking every lie from the government of the opposition as a renewed gospel truth. If you think deeply and with openness, you will realise that our security system is not working properly.

For this reason, people have lost jobs from the hospitality industry. The owners don’t want envisage a single drop in profits; the easier precaution is to cut costs. In the process, some people will end up being overworked to cover the workers who have been sacked unceremoniously. Ultimately, they will have to get a house maid who will consume what they were to save. Our education system is not in order either. Our health sector is not in the right shape. The poor tend to be disregarded in most of these places since admission to some of the best public institutions (colleges, hospitals, schools, parastatals) are pegged on what you can put in the envelop. This I have witnessed! How do we expect to the bright and intelligent students from poor backgrounds to reach to the apex, from where they can bring a new face to their families.

There is need to revive our conscience and make sound deliberations as Kenyans before we embark on the budget process which is a continuous one starting with planning to evaluation of results achieved. When the poor (at least who struggle to get the basic needs) are ignorant of their rights, duties and responsibilities, they will end up fighting within themselves along tribal, religious and political affiliations. They end up becoming puppets for the leaders who think only of the next general election rather than the next generation.

The nation cannot develop when there are incubators for hate speech, scandals, misappropriation of funds and neglected accountability. I have never understood how KShs 300 Billion can be lost in one year in the public sector. This is scandalous! Who knows what that amount of money can do to a nation? How many schools, hospitals, colleges, roads, factories or jobs that can be created from such a figure? Anyway, I remember, it was only that the expenditure would not be supported sufficiently. What happened to the report from the committee formed! Kenyans, we are good at letting go and moving on as if nothing had happened. The budget is usually defined as a tool of growth and development but it can never replace the real stuff that needs to be done using the resources it avails.
No matter the size of the budget, the live of a Kenyan will depend on the collective responsibility of the leaders, citizens and our relationship with extended stakeholders. Perpetual complaining will not heal our economy; consistent patriotism and ‘uwajibikaji na uungwana’ will. Doing the right things in the right way for the right reasons is what integrity advocates for. The common good that comes with the national budget will only be unlocked by this. We, Kenyans, must change, improve or step up our way of taking action and co-existing as one nation or else, we will become poorer every time a budget is read.