PRESIDENTIAL WORKING PARTY ON CBC

Education stakeholders have given their views on the  Competence Based Curriculum  (CBC) review with some expressing fears over a looming disaster in the education sector unless it was fixed .

But Prof. Collins Odote,  a  Team leader,Nyanza region, in  the Presidential Working Party on Education Reforms  cautioned respondents not to vilify the curriculum without  providing  solutions.

He urged them to embrace patriotism and sobriety   saying it was  their  constitutional right  and that  the in put even from   the lowest stakeholder rank   mattered.

Odote challenged the respondents to unravel the paradox of the CBC in terms of equity and management of bursaries in the children’s education.

Kisii University vice chancellor, Prof. John Akama criticized the current disharmony by stakeholders in handling the CBC issue which he said was resource intensive.

Akama claimed there was inadequate requisite infrastructure and human resource to implement the curriculum  in most schools recommending that the stakeholders read from the same script if they were to resolve  it.

Moses Kirioba,deputy secretary general,Universities Academic Staff Union(UASU),Kisii University, faulted  stakeholders irrespective of their social status for non -consultation on the new  education system.

According to  unionist this was despite a looming   congestion of about 1.2 million  students at  public universities upon  grade 6 transition to junior secondary schools.

KUPPET  chairman Kisii branch,Laban Ouko  was concerned  over increased  examination workload demanded by the CBC and suggested 40% be internal while the Kenya Examination Council handled the remaining 60%.

A representative of the local community, Charles Nyakundi,claimed CBC  had succeeded in some countries globally and recommended its adoption to among others address skill acquisition  and job market for sustainability.