As Education Cabinet Secretary Jacob Kaimenyi releases Standard
Eight national examination results on Monday, parents will probably be
more apprehensive than the candidates.
A bad
performance in the Kenya Certificate of Primary Education (KCPE)
examination will mean that an investment worth thousands of shillings
has gone down the drain.
Even with the introduction of
free primary education in public schools a decade ago, parents still
have to contend with miscellaneous costs such as evening tuition, extra
course books and revision books and a camouflaged KCPE levy to cater for
the cost of feeding the examination invigilators. The Kenya National
Association of Parents Secretary-General Musau Ndunda says the cost of
preparing children is high — and continues to rise every year.
“Some
schools charge candidates an extra Sh5,000-Sh10,000 every term to cater
for extra evening tuition for candidates. Parents with children in
schools that do not offer evening tuition sometimes prefer to hire
private tutors for their children to ensure they pass the examination,”
Mr Ndunda said.
UNSUSTAINABLE SYSTEM
Mr
Nathan Barasa of the Kenya Parents/Teachers Association says that the
current system is unsustainable and that the government needs to do more
to lift the financial burden of education from the shoulders of poor
parents who cannot afford it.
“We have a situation
where a parent is spending over Sh30,000 just to put a child through
Standard Eight, excluding school fees. Most of this money goes into
buying books and paying for remedial tuition for the child, as well as
catering for lunch and transport,” he says. He explains that parents who
are unable to afford the extraneous costs often end up with children
who do not perform well enough to be offered a place in a good secondary
school.
“The reason most parents spend so much on
revision books and tuition is that they feel their children are not
getting enough attention from the teachers in class. This is mostly
because the teacher-student ratio is very high. On average, one teacher
is in charge of between 80 and 90 pupils,” he said. He recommends that
the government hire more teachers to bring the ratio down to a more
reasonable 1:45 to allow for one-on-one attention which may eliminate
the need for extra tuition.
EXTRA PAYMENT
A
parent who spoke to the Sunday Nation on condition of anonymity said he
has had to pay an extra Sh2,000 every term for remedial tuition for his
child.
“The government might have banned holiday
tuition but that does not mean it is not still happening in some private
schools. Mostly, it is held in churches or even in parents’ or
teachers’ homes,” he said.
His biggest headache, however, was the cost of textbooks for his child who was a candidate in this year’s KCPE examination.
“Aside
from the usual course book for each of the six subjects, I had to buy
three revision books for each subject, each at an average cost of Sh500.
It is a big burden,” he said.
But the Kenya Publishers
Association defends the price of its books, saying that the exorbitant
cost is as a result of Valued Added Tax slapped on books since 2013.
“We
would like nothing better than to lower the cost of books because we
understand the parents’ burden but VAT has pushed the cost of publishing
up so we are forced to adjust our prices accordingly,” says Mr Lawrence
Njagi, the association’s chairman.
He said the most
expensive books in the education system are those that are used for
preparing both Class Eight and Form Four candidates for the national
examinations.
Unfortunately for parents, an expensive
primary education begets an even more expensive secondary education. The
cost of admission to most secondary schools is becoming increasingly
prohibitive, forcing some to enrol their children in local day schools.
No comments :
Post a Comment