More than 10,000 new teachers are to be hired starting next week.
Of
these slots, 5,000 teachers will replace those who have left the
service due to retirement, death or other causes, while 5,000 will boost
the numbers of the existing workforce, said Mr Gabriel Lengoiboni, the
secretary of the Teachers Service Commission.
Funds for
the fresh recruitment were set aside in this year’s budget, which
Finance Cabinet Secretary Henry Koskei presented to Parliament in June.
He allocated Sh2.5 billion for the hiring of 5,000 additional teachers.
Mr
Lengoiboni has now asked qualified teachers who are also registered
with the commission to apply to school and district education boards
before August 11. That means prospective candidates have only 11 days
left.
Candidates can apply in any of the 47 counties
where the vacancies exist. Out of the additional teachers, Mr Lengoiboni
said 2,479 would be posted to teach in primary schools, while 2,521
would be sent to secondary schools.
Among the 5,339
teachers who will replace those who have left service, 4,663 would be
sent to primary schools, while 676 will go to secondary schools.
REQUIRED QUALIFICATIONS
“Eligible candidates should be Kenya citizens aged 45 years and below,” Mr Lengoiboni said.
Those
to teach in primary schools must be holders of P1 certificates and
should submit their applications to the teachers commission county
directors.
Teachers seeking to fill secondary school
slots must have a minimum of a diploma in education. Unlike their
primary counterparts, they will be required to apply to the secretaries
of school boards and then submit copies of their applications to the
commission’s county directors.
Preference will be given to applicants who have not been previously employed by the commission.
“Those
who had applied earlier must apply afresh since a new merit list for
the 2014-2015 financial year will be generated,” he said.
Mr Lengoiboni said the Teachers Service Commission will only deal with county selection panels and school boards.
“No individual application to the commission will be considered,” he said.
Recently, some governors and Members of Parliament proposed that they be given a role in the hiring of teachers.
FREE OF CHARGE
Mr
Lengoiboni told prospective applicants that the recruitment will be
free of charge and warned them against falling prey to fraudsters who
might try to extort money from unsuspecting candidates while claiming to
be in a position to secure them jobs.
Any suspected
fraud, he said, should be reported to the nearest police station, county
directors, sub-county staffing officers or to the Teachers Service
Commission headquarters.
Reacting to the announcement,
Kenya National Union of Teachers Secretary-General Wilson Sossion
described the additional teachers as “a drop in the ocean.”
“The
union believes that this is deceiving Kenyans,” he said. “Quality
education is under threat as we cannot achieve it with such a huge
shortage of teachers.”
He said the commission should
have hired a lot more additional teachers. He also proposed that the
Teachers Service Commission make the hiring continuous instead of
waiting for the annual recruitment.
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