
Education Stakeholders Want Gov’t To Fund Private Schools For Better CBC Implementation.
Stakeholders in the education sector from private institutions are lamenting the mixed signals sent by a section of aspirant presidential aspirants regarding an impending suggestion to scrap the CBC curriculum once they gain power.
The stakeholders, led by ACK Nairobi Archdiocese Bishop Joel Waweru, believe the move will cause confusion just as the curriculum is about to take off.
Waweru said during a 30th anniversary celebration of the Green Cottage School Academy in Kiamumbi that parents and institutions had invested so much in the program that any attempt to outdo it would spell doom for the sector.
The Bishop, on the other hand, slammed politicians in the Kenya Kwanza alliance who are politicizing the CBC system of education sentiments that the Bishop condemned, saying the system is the only one that will nurture talents that are not realized in other children.
Bishop also urged Kenyans to maintain peace and sobriety during the elections.
Judy Muraguri, the school director, urged the government to consider funding private schools, particularly to include them in the process of ensuring that the curriculum is fully implemented in both private and public schools in the same way.
She further said that excluding the private sector was bad leadership because all students were from the same government.
ALSO READ:
As the best students who went to national schools were also present during the celebration, the school had exemplary performances during national examinations.
Nelson Mandera, a former student now attending Alliance High, moved the teachers and parents when he described how he came out on top as the best candidate at the Green Cottage.
Education Stakeholders Want Gov’t To Fund Private Schools For Better CBC Implementation