KCSE – Elimu Pedia https://elimupedia.com Number One portal for matters education, How to, TSC,KUCCPS, HELB,KRA , Top 10 bests,and Parenting. Wed, 02 Aug 2023 03:24:30 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.0.9 KNEC to print national exams locally https://elimupedia.com/knec-to-print-national-exams-locally.html Wed, 02 Aug 2023 03:24:30 +0000 https://elimupedia.com/?p=13391 KNEC to print national exams locally

Kenya may soon start printing its own national examination materials.

This is according to recommendations by the Presidential Working Party on Education Reforms.

In their report, the committee wants the government to develop the internal capacity of the Kenya National Examinations Council to print national examination materials.

Currently, both the Kenya Certificate of Secondary Education(KCSE) and the Kenya Certificate of Primary Education(KCPE) are printed outside the country.

The former Education CS George Magoha had explained that the papers were printed overseas to protect the credibility of the national exams.

The Presidential Working Party of Education Reforms(PWPER) on Tuesday submitted its report to President William Ruto at State House, Nairobi.

Read also:

Implement These CBC reforms immediately, Ruto Orders MOE

List of 21 Key Proposals by CBC Taskforce

Education Task-Force to Table CBC Report at State House

KCSE, KCPE 2023 Papers to be Picked Twice a Day

DPP Roots for Multi-agency Team to Counter Exam Malpractices

Fate of 53 exam irregularity, malpractice cases over last four years Exposed

PWPER also recommended a radical overhaul of the current architecture of quality assurance saying the government should harmonise its mandate.

The panel also wants the Ministry of Education’s quality assurance department handed legal authority to oversee quality assurance and standards function.

”This harmonisation of the quality assurance standard functions should be anchored in law,” the committee said.

]]>
KNEC Advertises Recruitment of Teachers For KCSE Practical, Oral Papers https://elimupedia.com/knec-advertises-recruitment-of-teachers-for-kcse-practical-oral-papers.html Wed, 07 Jun 2023 03:50:22 +0000 https://elimupedia.com/?p=12324 KNEC Advertises Recruitment of Teachers For KCSE Practical, Oral Papers

The Kenya National Examinations Council is recruiting Secondary School teachers and college tutors to assess KCSE oral and practical papers.

The assessment of the Kenya Certificate of Secondary Education will happen between June 6 and July 28.

“The selected professionals will be trained on the job during the assessment of the 2023 KCSE papers,” the commission said in an advertisement.

“Teachers and tutors who are already in the KNEC database of assessors need not apply.”

Recruited professional KCSE examiners will assess papers like Power mechanics, Electricity, Aviation technology, French oral, German oral, Arabic oral, music practical and Kenyan sign language signing practical.

Interested and qualified teachers should be 50 years of age and below, and have a maximum of three years and above experience.

Read also:

TSC Releases Appointment Letters to the First Batch of 13,713 Promoted Teachers

Heads Threaten to Close Schools Due to Capitation Delays

Knut Demands For Public Participation Ahead of 3% Housing Fund Deduction

School Inspections to Intensify as Education Directors Get New Patrol Vehicles

Former Mukumu Principal May Not be Charged, Machogu

Ruto Rejects Teachers’ Plea For Salary Increase, Insists on 3% Housing Levy

Education Reforms Team Reveals Plans to Reduce TSC’s Powers, Collapse all TTCs

We Will Fight in Court Over 3% Housing Levy, Omtata tells Ruto

They should be knowledgeable in the relevant subjects and registered or employed by the Teachers Service Commission or a recognized professional body.

In addition, they should have a diploma or above in education or the relevant area of specialization.

For aviation technology, the applicant must have a diploma in aeronautical engineering.

Applicants have been urged to access the KNEC examiners portal for the application process and more information.

“The slots are limited and only qualified applicants who have presented all the required documents will be shortlisted for the exercise,” reads the advertisement.

]]>
Proposal to Fine Those Leaking Exams in social media ksh. 5M https://elimupedia.com/proposal-to-fine-ksh-5m-to-those-leaking-exams-in-social-media.html Fri, 14 Apr 2023 03:49:53 +0000 https://elimupedia.com/?p=11594 Proposal to Fine ksh. 5M to Those Leaking Exams in social media

You will now pay Sh5 million fine if found sharing national exams on any social media platform.

The Ministry of Education together with the Kenya National Examination Council is in the process of reviewing policies that deal with exam malpractices.

Education CS Ezekiel Machogu decried what he termed as policies that have been overrun by technology.

The team of education stakeholders appeared before the National Assembly Committee on Education and Research.

They were responding to questions surrounding allegations of rampant cheating during the 2022 KCSE exams.

“Knec is in the process of reviewing KNEC Act to update it to current innovations and to strengthen penalties of cheating and malpractice,” Machogu said.

Read also:

Mukumu Girls Boarding Mistress Dies, Raising Death Toll to 4

TSC-Employed Teacher Charged with Forging Documents After 17 Years of Service

Phased Payment of Salaries to Public Servants Looming

TSC Transfer Board Starts Making Online Transfer Approvals

Recruitment of JSS Teacher Trainers in Counties

Teachers’ Slow Adoption of ICT Skills Among Our Biggest Challenges, TSC

National Parents Association Want Inspections Conducted in Schools

This is even as the stakeholders maintained their stand that there was no cheating in the exams.

Knec CEO David Njengere said more techniques have evolved over the years which have been adapted to aid in cheating.

He said during the exams, culprits found were arrested and the cases forwarded to the Directorate of Criminal Investigation.

This is currently done through Whatsapp, Facebook and Telegram to share fake papers and potentially early exposure to exams.

“We had almost 14 mobile phones confiscated and we forwarded the case to the relevant authorities,” Njengere said.

The new proposal to deal with cheating practices perpetrated on social media would include penalties for those found guilty of using technology to cheat.

“A person who before or during an examination negligently or willfully assists or causes any examination paper material or information or any part thereof to be shared on any digital platform, commits an offence and is liable upon conviction to imprisonment for a term not exceeding five years, a fine not exceeding five million shillings or both,” the proposal reads.

Machogu said the existing policy only provides for penalties for possession of unauthorised exam material and sharing with a candidate.

“The new offence as proposed would enable Knec to engage with security agencies and to hold to account those that share or sell fake papers,” he said.

The committee chairperson Julius Melly said as part of the cheating probe, schools will be required to produce mock results.

This, he said, would help in tracking how the students performed in internal exams just before sitting the KCSE exam.

“We want to know what happened to specific cases where schools witnessed positive deviations of more than three,” Melly said.

Lugari MP Nabii Nabwera said the entry behaviour of students in secondary schools should also be monitored.

“We have situations where average day schools where the entry is around 249 marks had a deviation of more than three,” he said.

Marakwet West MP Timothy Torotich said the 2022 KCSE exam results showed an unnatural curve.

“If we have a very abnormal curve then we need to find out what happened. But we will also need to know if schools maintain such kind of performance,” Torotich said.

Luanda MP Dick Maungu said there are examination loopholes that need to be addressed.

He said the holes range from setting exams, administration, and writing marking schemes to the marking process.

“If we have a student who duplicated a marking scheme then it means something was not done correctly in that process,” Maungu said.

Revelations made before the education committee in March proved that indeed there were instances of exam cheating in the 2022 KCSE exams.

Several members of the public including unions, education directors, supervisors and parents admitted to the same.

The members questioned why despite reporting the cases, the affected students still received their results.

Regional head of examinations in Nairobi Gladys Malonza told MPs that on week one of the KCSE exam, a teacher was found in possession of tests on his phone.

“A teacher was arrested sneaking answers for the mid-morning paper having been sent by the school director,” Malonza said.

Upon investigation by the DCI, the teacher was found in possession of undone exam papers for the remaining weeks.

Further, a school in Langata constituency also had a cheating case that involved mobile phones.

“During a computer exam, eight out of the nine students had phones during the theory paper,” she said.

In March, MPs concluded the countrywide probe into alleged exam malpractice in the 2022 KCSE exams.

]]>
Stakeholders Want an Overhaul of KNEC, KCSE Management Systems https://elimupedia.com/stakeholders-want-an-overhaul-of-knec-kcse-management-systems.html Mon, 03 Apr 2023 03:56:54 +0000 https://elimupedia.com/?p=11543 Stakeholders Want an Overhaul of KNEC, KCSE Management Systems

Education Stakeholders have demanded for a total overhaul of KCSE management system, citing widespread cheating.

The stakeholders also demanded for a system through which Kenya National Examinations Council (KNEC) operations could be audited through an independent organization to avoid the present situation in which it is both “player and referee”.

Under the current arrangement, KNEC sets, stores, distributes, administers, marks, appraises and safeguards examinations.

Petitions for remarking and arbitrating on cheating as well as cancellation or retention of results in case of anomalies have all gone on under KNEC’s unchallenged authority and prerogative for years despite emerging issues of integrity.

In separate and independent presentations to Julius Melly, who chairs Education Parliamentary Committee Inquiry into the 2022 KCSE examination cheating, almost all agreed that there was widespread anomaly in the 2022 KCSE.

Read also:

ECDE Tutors Protest Over Deducted Salaries

JSS Workload To be Reduced from 12-10 Subjects

Revealed: Roles Played by TSC, Knec, school heads and police in 2023 KCSE Malpractices

Court Halts Government’s plan to slash ECD teachers’ salaries By 50%

Machogu, Kindiki Ranked Best Performing CSs

KUCCPS on the Spot For Funds Misappropriation

Revealed: Why KUCCPS Has Delayed Calls For Second Revision

It was observed that sudden improvements in mean scores should have been the first red flag, even as exam leakages seemed to have happened months before candidates tackled them.

Most examiners expressed shock at the fact that candidates from some school appeared to reproduce marking schemes in a word for word form, clearly pointing to the fact that some of them had accessed the marking schemes at some point.

John Njoka, an academic from Runyenjes, stressed the need for KNEC to seal all loopholes and expressed fears that if some officers from the examination body could be compromised to trade marking schemes, it was apparent that interference could also happen during the keying in of the marks.

With the examinations done in March and December, Njoka wondered how some schools could end up performing so well in the latest examinations as compared to those done in the month of March.

Despite availability of mechanisms to report cheating, most of the examiners felt intimidated as insinuations ran high that reporting such matters could derail the marking process, or affect examiner’s income, and perhaps future selection as a marker.

It emerged that even when candidates evidently appeared to reproduce marking schemes, little could be done because KNEC remained the custodian of the schemes.

Graders, it was suggested, needed to be empowered legally to have secure and confidential systems of reporting any leakages; otherwise, many would feel being overly vigilant could easily put their work on the line.

It was felt that the government had the capacity to detect trends of cheating, especially through monitoring results of schools headed by particular principals and comparing them to those of their new stations.

“The government can detect and confirm cheating by studying result trends of principals suspected to have a history of cheating vis-a-vis results of new schools they head, especially after delocalization, one contributor suggested.

The assumption that there were some super stars in improving examination results is a dangerous malady as it prejudices other schools, it was suggested.

Some principals also linked leakage and other examination malpractices to change of education Cabinet secretaries just before the examination start, which they termed as disruptive with the transition creating a lull and confusion; a fertile ground for cheating

 

]]>
KNEC Sacks Over 1300 CRE Examiners as KUPPET Faults Decries Inhuman Marking Conditions  https://elimupedia.com/knec-sacks-over-1300-cre-examiners-as-kuppet-faults-decries-inhuman-marking-conditions.html Wed, 11 Jan 2023 02:18:42 +0000 https://elimupedia.com/?p=11093

KNEC Sacks Over 1300 CRE Examiners as KUPPET Faults Decries Inhuman Marking Conditions 

Protests by striking teachers disrupted the marking of Kenya Certificate of Secondary Education (KCSE) examination papers at a centre in Kiambu County yesterday, forcing education bosses to scramble to avert the crisis that could derail the release of the results.

Simmering grievances about conditions at KCSE marking centres boiled over at St Francis Girls High School, Mang’u, yesterday, where examiners boycotted the marking of Christian Religious Education (CRE) Paper One, citing poor pay despite working for long hours.

Following reports of the disturbances at one of the 35 marking centres, Education Cabinet Secretary Ezekiel Machogu led a team of senior officials to mediate the crisis. Basic Education Principal Secretary Belio Kipsang, Kenya National Examinations Council (Knec) boss David Njeng’ere and Teachers Service Commission CEO Nancy Macharia accompanied the CS to the school but protesting examiners remained defiant.

Read also:

KNEC Replaces Chief Examiner, Invites New CRE Examiners

Incapable Primary Schools to be Barred From Admitting Grade 7 Students 

MOE to Asses Primary Schools Ahead of Grade 7 Admission

January 2023 TSC Interview Dates and Venues Per County

300 Additional Teachers to be Recruited in Laikipia this Month

List of Teachers Registered Between October 1st and December 31st 2022

Knec chairman Julius Nyabundi said in a statement yesterday that the centre’s chief examiner had been replaced “as a compromise to ensure a smooth progress of the marking exercise.”
Prof Nyabundi, however, said the council could not revise the marking fee upwards as it could not find an extra budget midway.

“The council, therefore, resolved to allow the examiners who were willing to continue with the marking process to do so uninterrupted,” Prof Nyabundi said.

He assured the country that the marking was proceeding well and results would be released on time.

Teachers were dissatisfied that their grievances had not been met and opted to quit the exercise, forcing Knec to hire replacements.

By yesterday noon, the teachers were clearing to leave the station amid reports that over 1,300 examiners marking CRE Paper One had been ordered to leave.
They said about 500,000 scripts were unmarked and they were expected to complete marking by Friday or Saturday.

“We just want them to pay us well keeping in mind the hard economic times in the country. We wake up at 4 am and sleep at 10 pm,” one of the examiners protested. In a separate briefing, the Kenya Union of Post Primary Education Teachers (Kuppet) said their members had demanded an increase in pay for marking CRE Paper One from Sh55 per script to a minimum of Sh100.

They also wanted an increase in the amount paid for other subjects. The teachers also accused Knec of forcing them to work under very stressful conditions with no freedom whatsoever.
At the school, the education bosses were shouted down by the striking teachers.

Efforts by Njeng’ere to calm them down were futile and in the afternoon, Machogu and Kipsang visited the centre. In another video, Machogu is seen trying to quiet down the teachers but is met with even more resistance.

Journalists were ordered out of the premises on instructions by the education bosses. By yesterday evening, the examiners had been left stranded looking for means to go home.

In Nairobi, Kuppet Secretary-General Akelo Misori said it had become a trend that, during every national examination cycle, Knec fails in its obligations to provide humane working conditions.
“Such practices violate constitutional rights to fair labour practices and access to the highest attainable standard of health as enshrined in Articles 41 and 43,” he noted.

Misori accused Knec of failing to address recurring issues, forcing examiners to employ different methods of protest before their grievances are addressed.

He added that Kuppet was saddened by the crisis at the centre and that the stalemate could end up impacting the credibility of the marking, and the outcome of the process and endanger the health of the examiners.

Kuppet vice chairperson Julius Korir lauded the examiners for fighting for their rights and called on Knec to address the challenges. He said teachers were poorly fed and sleeping in dorms, which he termed unacceptable.

Misori said the union was also receiving complaints from other centres. “Examiners at Moi Forces Nairobi are not allowed to rest during the weekend or go to church,” he added.

]]>
KNEC Replaces Chief Examiner, Invites New CRE Examiners https://elimupedia.com/knec-replaces-chief-examiner-invites-new-cre-examiners.html Tue, 10 Jan 2023 16:58:10 +0000 https://elimupedia.com/?p=11090 KNEC Replaces Chief Examiner, Invites New CRE Examiners

Just hours after disgruntled teachers marking CRE paper 1 downed their tools amid claims of low pay and poor working conditions, the national examiner has moved to dismiss the chief examiner stationed at St Francis Mang’u Girls High School.

Earlier, examiners marking Kenya Certificate of Secondary Education (KCSE) exams at the facility paralysed the exercise while citing poor remuneration and a punitive chief examiner.

The exam marking centre had been closed indefinitely after they went on strike on Monday night.

“We just want them to pay us well while keeping in mind the hard economy times in the country. The working conditions are also very poor. We wake up at 4am and sleep at 10pm,” one of the striking examiners said.

According to the teachers, about 500,000 unmarked scripts are remaining yet they were expected to finish these by Friday or Saturday.

Now, the Kenya National Examinations Council (KNEC) says it has agreed to replace the chief examiner as a compromise to ensure a smooth marking exercise.

However, the body says it cannot review payment terms at this point since they were agreed upon before the marking exercise began.

“Unfortunately, despite responding to their initial demand, a few of the examiners yet again came up with a fresh call that the marking fee be revised upwards. Since the issue of the examiner’s marking fee is an individual contract, and agreed to before reporting to a centre, the Council found it impossible to find an extra budget to revise the rates midway,” KNEC said.

It added: “The Council, therefore, resolved to allow the examiners who were willing to continue with the marking process to do so uninterrupted. Equally, those who wished to exit the marking exercise were allowed to do so without causing further interruptions to the process.”

Read also:

Incapable Primary Schools to be Barred From Admitting Grade 7 Students 

MOE to Asses Primary Schools Ahead of Grade 7 Admission

January 2023 TSC Interview Dates and Venues Per County

300 Additional Teachers to be Recruited in Laikipia this Month

List of Teachers Registered Between October 1st and December 31st 2022

Senior officials from the Ministry of Education led by CS Ezekiel Machogu, PS Belio Kipsang and Teachers Service Commission (TSC) boss Nancy Macharia were at the centre on Tuesday to calm the situation.

]]>
Your Messages Will Be tracked During KCSE, KCPE and KPSEA https://elimupedia.com/your-messages-will-be-tracked-during-kcse-kcpe-and-kpsea.html Wed, 23 Nov 2022 02:53:45 +0000 https://elimupedia.com/?p=10488 Your Messages Will Be tracked During KCSE, KCPE and KPSEA

The government has deployed cybercrime experts as a way of curbing cases of cheating during the forthcoming national examinations.

Education Cabinet Secretary (CS) Ezekiel Machogu said the experts have the ability to track the origin of any message relayed pertaining to the examinations.

“The Government has deployed cybercrime experts across the country to help monitor the exams. This is aimed at promoting sanctity that the national examinations deserve,” said Machogu.

The CS was speaking during a meeting with examination centre managers from Migori and Homa Bay counties at Homa Bay High School Friday. He said the experts will also help cushion parents and students from conmen selling examination material online.

Read also:

18-Year-Old Boy Arrested Wearing a Girls’ Uniform at a Girl School

Usawa: Teachers Should Be Posted to Neighbouring Wards

Teachers Take TSC, Minet  to Court Over Low-Grade Health Services

Munavu Team: Retain Junior Secondary in Primary Schools

List Of Most Selected Junior Secondary Schools Per County

Private Schools Want JSS Hosted in Primary Schools, Claim Secondary Schools Congested

Big War Between KNUT and KUPPET Over Domiciling of Junior Secondary

Proposal Underway to Hike University Fees by 200%

The development comes at a time when learners are preparing for three major national examinations, namely the Kenya Certificate of Primary Education (KCPE), Kenya Certificate of Secondary Education (KCSE) and the Kenya Primary School Education Assessment which is meant for Grade Six pupils under the Competency-Based Curriculum (CBC).

Machogu said those who are found circulating academic materials online in the name of exam leakages will be arrested and punitive action taken against them.

The CS further urged parents, students and teachers to report anybody who circulates such materials to security officials, noting that they had agreed with security officials on how to handle whistleblowers on exam leakages.

Machogu was accompanied by Basic Education Principal Secretary Julius Jwan, Kenya National Examination Council CEO David Njeng’ere, Homa Bay County Commissioner Moses Lilan, and County Education Director Eunice Khaemba.

]]>
KNEC Circular on Hosting of Grade Six KPSEA Exams, KCPE and KCSE https://elimupedia.com/knec-circular-on-hosting-of-grade-six-kpsea-exams-kcpe-and-kcse.html Tue, 23 Aug 2022 02:40:28 +0000 https://elimupedia.com/?p=9609 KNEC Circular on Hosting of Grade Six KPSEA Exams, KCPE and KCSE

KNEC/EAVEWKCPE/KPSEA/KCSE/HOS/CENTRES/2022/015

i)All Heads of Primary and Secondary Schools Presenting Candidates for 2022 KPSEA: KCPE and KCSE examinations

ii)All Sub County Directors of Education

SUBJECT: HOSTING OF 2022 KPSEA: KCPE AND KCSE EXAMINATION CENTRES WITH LESS THAN 30 CANDIDATES

The Kenya National Examinations Council wishes to bring to your attention the following information with regard to hosting of 2022 KPSEA: KCPE and KCSE examination centres with less than 30 candidates:

1.0 All KPSEA, KCPE, and KCSE examinations centres with less than thirty (30) candidates will be hosted during field administration of the 2022 National examinations. This policy will not apply to Special schools for learners with special needs and disabilities. Such schools will be expected to conduct examinations at their centres.

2.0 All KPSEA examination centres will be hosted in the existing KCPE examination centres with a candidature of thirty (30) and above. However, Primary schools with a combined candidature of thirty (30) and above for both KCPE and KPSEA examinations will be allowed to conduct the examination in their premises on condition that they.

Read also:

MOE Releases New Strict Guidelines On Student Transfers-Will Parents Comply?

Updated List of Approved Junior Secondary Schools and How To Select

How to Select Junior Secondary Schools In The KNEC Portal For Grade Seven

Updated List Of Approved Private Junior Secondary Schools Per County

Deputy Principal Allegedly Murdered, Burnt Beyond Recognition by Son

2.1 have a valid registration certificate from County Education Board;

2.2 have adequate examination classrooms that can accommodate twenty (20) candidates per room with a spacing of 1.22 metres on all sides; Sub-County Directors of Education will be expected to inspect such schools to ensure compliance with the above requirements.

3.0 The host school and the hosted school(s) should be located within the same Sub-County and both should be served from the same Distribution Centre (container).

4.0 The host Head-teacher/ PrincipaI will be the one authorised to collect examination materials from the container, coordinate the conduct of the examination and return the answer scripts to the container during each examination day.

5.0 Schools with less than thirty (30) candidates and are more than five (5) kilometers away from the nearest examination centre must seek special approval from KNEC through the Sub County

Director of Education before 2nd September,2022.

All Sub County Directors of Education (SCDEs) are required to submit the list of host and hosted examination centres in an excel format as per the attached template by 2nd September,2022.

Dr.David Njengere,MBS

CHIEF EXECUTIVE OFFICER

]]>
MP Tasks Magoha To Explain Why KNEC Contracted Professionals Have not Been Paid, as Sources Indicate Next Month https://elimupedia.com/mp-tasks-magoha-to-explain-why-knec-contracted-professionals-have-not-been-paid-as-sources-indicate-next-month.html Mon, 06 Jun 2022 03:11:48 +0000 https://elimupedia.com/?p=6847 MP Tasks Magoha To Explain Why KNEC Contracted Professionals Have not Been Paid, as Sources Indicate Next Month

A member of parliament has asked Education Cs George Magoha to give reasons before the Departmental Committee on Education and Research, why the Kenya national examinations council (KNEC), has not paid invigilators, supervisors, examiners and other personnel who rendered services during the administration and marking of the 2021 Kenya Certificate Primary Education (KCPE) and Kenya Certificate Secondary Education (KCSE) examinations.

The petition by Mp for Bomet Central Hon. Ronald Tonui, who doubles up as kenya union of post primary education teachers (kuppet) national vice treasurer, will give a response to what KNEC contracted professionals country wide have been waiting for. After working for KNEC religiously, the contracted professionals are forced to wait for several months before getting their dues, a tradition that replicates annually.

The petition, booked under order number 7, reads in part, “It is notified that, pursuant to the provisions of Standing Order 42A (5), the following Member will ask a question for reply before the specified Committee.”

Read also:

KNEC Explains Delay in Paying Contracted Professionals For KCPE, KCSE 2021

Magoha Tells Education Committee Why KCPE / KCSE Examiners Have Not Been Paid

Payment Dates For CBC Training Revealed

Multiple Choice Exams For Grade 6 KPSEA Ready: KNEC

MOE Reveals Junior Secondary School Placement Criteria For Grade 6 Candidates

List Of Schools That Will Host Junior Secondary Schools Per County Under CBC

Junior Secondary Schools To Have Separate Boards Of Management

KNEC Faces Critics Over Multiple Choice Grade 6 Exams and Eradication of Composition, Insha Tests

The petition by Tanui asks the cs to give reasons for the irking delay in paying contracted professionals.

“Could the Cabinet Secretary explain the inordinate delays by the Kenya National Examination Council in making payments to invigilators, supervisors, examiners and other personnel who rendered services during the administration and marking of the 2021 Kenya Certificate Primary Education (KCPE) and Kenya Certificate Secondary Education (KCSE) examinations?”

It further demands to know when KNEC is intending to pay the contracted professionals.

“When will the officials be paid?” reads the petition.

Already, sources are indicating that the knec examiners and other personnel who offered services during the 2021 KCPE and KCSE exams will be paid in July, once KNEC receives it’s budgetary allocation  for the new financial year.

]]>
2022 KPSEA, KCPE and KCSE Candidates Can Now Confirm Their Registration Status Via SMS- Confirm Yours Now https://elimupedia.com/2022-kpsea-kcpe-and-kcse-candidates-can-now-confirm-their-registration-status-via-sms-confirm-yours-now.html Fri, 27 May 2022 06:22:53 +0000 https://elimupedia.com/?p=6786 2022 KPSEA, KCPE and KCSE Candidates Can Now Confirm Their Registration Status Via SMS- Confirm Yours Now

Grade six, Class eight and form four students who are set to sit their Kenya primary school education assessment (KPSEA), Kenya certificate of primary education (KCPE) and kenya certificate of secondary education (KCSE) respectively in 2022 can now confirm their registration status and details.

The Kenya national examinations council (KNEC) has activated a USSD, which the candidates will send their keyed in details and thereafter receive an sms concerning their registration details. According to KNEC, there have been cases of candidates getting shocked that they have not been registered or registered with wrong details when it’s too late to make any changes. Some male candidates have often found themselves registered as female candidates, some candidates, especially from private schools have always found themselves unregistered, among other cases.

The essence of this USSD therefore is to identify mistakes in registration and inform KNEC in time for timely action.

“Kindly inform all the 2022 KPSEA, KCPE, KCSE and KCSE QUALIFYING TEST Candidates that they can confirm their registration details by sending an SMS to 20076 in the following format, ” reads a memo KNEC from KNEC to the county directors of education, who will in turn pass the information to the heads of institutions.

How to check your KPSEA/ KCPE / KCSE Registration Status

  • In your message filed, TYPE EXAM, followed by your full index number or assessment number ( for grade six candidates )

EXAM [INDEXNUMBER] / ASSESSMENT NUMBER]

Example: KCPE 01011701091

  • Send the message to 20076.

Read also:

KCPE Composition and Insha Markers to Lose Big in knec’s New Saving Plan Under CBC

P1 Teachers Who Took The Upgrading Diploma To Be Favoured In The Upcoming Teacher Recruitment

KUCCPS New Instructions to 2022 University, TVET and TTC Applicants

How to Apply for TTC Diploma in Teacher Education or Early Childhood Education Through KUCCPS

How to Apply for Degree, Diploma and TTC Courses Through KUCCPS

KUCCPS Opens Portal For 2021 KCSE Candidates Qualified For Degree, Diploma and TTC Applications-Apply Here

KUCCPS Courses-Universities, Course Information, Clusters and Minimum qualifications Per course

EXPECTED OUTPUT:

01011701091 M MAISHA SAMSON MAKALU MAT ENG KIS SCI SST CRE KNEC HELPLINE 0800724900

KCSE Candidates are urged to check the subjects they registered for well, especially elective subjects.

Parents/Guardians/Care Givers of Candidates as well as the candidates should be able to check their Gender, Names and the papers they have been registered for from the output.

]]>