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Nairobi School
FRM2011
#21 Posted : Wednesday, January 25, 2017 9:46:37 PM
Rank: Elder


Joined: 11/5/2010
Posts: 2,459
Hi @chirascuro. Not to to scare you but I have just read a very traumatising story about maseno on an FB group( buyer beware Kenya).

An orphan under the equity foundation is in hospital after being sodomozed by three senior boys. Sadly school went flat out to cover up.

Reading through comments on the FB post, upper Hill, lenana and Nairobi school have been mentioned severally as places where the vice is prevalent.
its2013
#22 Posted : Thursday, January 26, 2017 12:24:44 AM
Rank: Member


Joined: 1/4/2013
Posts: 255
hardwood wrote:
willin2learn wrote:
chiaroscuro wrote:
Does any wazuan have a son in Nairobi School?

If yes, what's your view of the school regarding general well-being of the boys?

I'd like to hear from parents, please. Focus AWAY from academics.


I once heard someone who had been sent to pick a Form One boy from that school. On their way home, they had to wind down the windows because the young man was stinking really bad. Apparently, he hadnt showered for weeks!


How do you blame the school for a students poor personal hygiene. It just reflects poor parenting since the boy should have been taught by the parents about such things.


This reminds me of a story I once heard of how a form one student didn't take a shower for a couple of weeks before the mid-term break just to help him lobby his parents to transfer him to a private day school in Nairobi as opposed to the upcountry national boarding school he had been admitted to.
Pretty hurts
Um Sayala
#23 Posted : Thursday, January 26, 2017 12:09:18 PM
Rank: Veteran


Joined: 12/17/2010
Posts: 1,163
Location: Sudan
Sorry for late reply. Yes I have had two of my relatives go thro the school. One completed way back and has since graduated from UoN. During my visitations and guardian's interaction with teachers, I would carry my family to the school. We got so impressed, and that influenced my son to pick it as first choice. He is in Form Four currently and so far I am not complaining.
In short it's a good school.
"Peace is our profession, War is our business" ...Unknown
koscielny
#24 Posted : Friday, January 27, 2017 8:36:31 AM
Rank: New-farer


Joined: 2/19/2016
Posts: 31
Location: Kenya
chiaroscuro wrote:
Does any wazuan have a son in Nairobi School?

If yes, what's your view of the school regarding general well-being of the boys?

I'd like to hear from parents, please. Focus AWAY from academics.


No need to fret. Very good school. But obviously in such a big institution your son will meet all sorts of characters, and it is natural that he will face challenges and temptations. The best decision he will make (with your help of course) is upholding the values you have taught him throughout his life.
The Best is Yet to Come
kaka2za
#25 Posted : Friday, January 27, 2017 10:49:53 AM
Rank: Elder


Joined: 10/3/2008
Posts: 4,057
Location: Gwitu
its2013 wrote:
hardwood wrote:
willin2learn wrote:
chiaroscuro wrote:
Does any wazuan have a son in Nairobi School?

If yes, what's your view of the school regarding general well-being of the boys?

I'd like to hear from parents, please. Focus AWAY from academics.


I once heard someone who had been sent to pick a Form One boy from that school. On their way home, they had to wind down the windows because the young man was stinking really bad. Apparently, he hadnt showered for weeks!


How do you blame the school for a students poor personal hygiene. It just reflects poor parenting since the boy should have been taught by the parents about such things.


This reminds me of a story I once heard of how a form one student didn't take a shower for a couple of weeks before the mid-term break just to help him lobby his parents to transfer him to a private day school in Nairobi as opposed to the upcountry national boarding school he had been admitted to.


I think I showed two times only in my first term in Form One.
Truth forever on the scaffold
Wrong forever on the throne
(James Russell Rowell)
hardwood
#26 Posted : Friday, January 27, 2017 11:11:39 AM
Rank: Elder


Joined: 7/28/2015
Posts: 9,562
Location: Rodi Kopany, Homa Bay
kaka2za wrote:
its2013 wrote:
hardwood wrote:
willin2learn wrote:
chiaroscuro wrote:
Does any wazuan have a son in Nairobi School?

If yes, what's your view of the school regarding general well-being of the boys?

I'd like to hear from parents, please. Focus AWAY from academics.


I once heard someone who had been sent to pick a Form One boy from that school. On their way home, they had to wind down the windows because the young man was stinking really bad. Apparently, he hadnt showered for weeks!


How do you blame the school for a students poor personal hygiene. It just reflects poor parenting since the boy should have been taught by the parents about such things.


This reminds me of a story I once heard of how a form one student didn't take a shower for a couple of weeks before the mid-term break just to help him lobby his parents to transfer him to a private day school in Nairobi as opposed to the upcountry national boarding school he had been admitted to.


I think I showed two times only in my first term in Form One.


Most of the stinking is from the feet and socks since the students have to put on nylon socks which are not changed daily. Also they have one pair of shoes that is put on daily. The shared bathrooms are also a source of fungal infection for the feet.
chiaroscuro
#27 Posted : Thursday, March 02, 2017 10:24:27 AM
Rank: Veteran


Joined: 2/2/2012
Posts: 1,134
Location: Nairobi
hardwood wrote:
Shak wrote:
sitaki.kujulikana wrote:
chiaroscuro wrote:
essyk wrote:
Chiaro,

Any positive reviews? Made up your mind?


Took a leap of faith and dropped my son there on Monday.

hapa kuna watu wa mamirions, you consider nairobi school as a leap of faith. trust me uko poa

Didn't they produce the best KCSE candidate last year? They must be doing something right


Soon, someone will come here asking us if Alliance is a good school.


@hardwood: after reading the horror stories of torture at Alliance in today's Nation, do you now understand why some one would genuinely ask if Alliance is a good school?

Clearly it is NOT good!

Many parents think that National schools produce good exam results because they teach well. That is simply NOT TRUE. What do you expect when you bring together the brightest children in the country in one school?

National schools do not teach any better than the rest: they just have bright students.

Many years ago, I attended A-Levels at a "Top National School". For the whole of form 5, we had not chemistry teacher. The form 6 class ahead of us had no math teacher at form 5.

We learned these subjects on our own and still managed to score As and Bs in KACE. And I can assure you that there was absolutely NO CHEATING!

My son at Nairobi School tells me there is bullying but not to the extent of Alliance. Some seniors (form 3s & 4s) robbed him of some money at the canteen. Another one robbed his spoon at the dining hall.

In this school, I get the feeling that there is a lot of animosity between all classes: f4 hates f3; f3 hates f2 and f2 hates f1. There was a big fight between f4 & f3 last month. The police were even called in to quell the violence. 20 boys were suspended.

A senior KDF officer removed his son from the school after the boy was beaten badly by form fours. he had to be admitted at hospital.

Apart from the psychological pain of leaving in fear, my son has been safe physically.

This is not a healthy environment for learning and it mus be STOPPED! In our days, bullying was only the preserve of form twos. F3 and above would never do it - it was deemed childish! Today, everybody is doing it and is viewed as a heroic act!

It is SHAMEFUL that prefects are allowed to mete out corporal punishment while teachers are barred from doing by the law. It appears that authority was transferred from the teachers and given to the prefects.

Mukiri
#28 Posted : Sunday, January 28, 2018 5:17:23 AM
Rank: Elder


Joined: 7/11/2012
Posts: 5,222
Yes, there was a hardship culture in both my days there and before that, way back to when it was Prince of Wales, or so I hear. A reason why the school excels in rugby. There's a book 'Patch' written by Mucheru Njaga.

Rather than view it as a bad thing, those who've gone through the school consider it necessary training in preparation to an even more cruel after school life. They attribute it to necessary training, to becoming an well rounded adult, as opposed to academic focus only.

I bet your son has by now learned how to carry himself. That, or try teach him how to handle the challenges that school, and life thereafter, throw someone. By sheltering a child, you'd be doing more harm than good, come the time when the child grows up to the complexities of life.

Proverbs 19:21
essyk
#29 Posted : Tuesday, July 09, 2019 1:46:15 AM
Rank: Elder


Joined: 11/15/2011
Posts: 4,518
chiaroscuro wrote:
essyk wrote:
Chiaro,

Any positive reviews? Made up your mind?


Took a leap of faith and dropped my son there on Monday.


Revisiting How is your boy fairing on?
What ails this school?
"The true measure of a man is how he treats someone who can do him absolutely no good.
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