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School Fees - Ndlama & Findeo
chiaroscuro
#1 Posted : Thursday, February 05, 2015 9:41:15 AM
Rank: Veteran

Joined: 2/2/2012
Posts: 1,134
Location: Nairobi
I started watching this "ndlama & findeo" when JJ Kamotho [God rest his soul in peace] was Minister for Education in the 1980s!

The MoE is dishonest to the public. It pretends that there is a maximum limit that schools can charge, yet the truth is that there isn't!

This is what MoE circulars say: "The maximum fees is X, however, if you need to charge more, ask us for permission"!

So Boards of Management call a parents meeting, explain the escalation of prices and ear-marked projects. Parents approve new fees. Minutes of meeting are sent to MoE and voila, the higher fees are approved.

Come February, new form ones are admitted and their [new] parents get the fees note. they are in shock because, being new, the were not in last year's AGM where the fees were approved! [I guess this is the reason Alliance cunningly called the new parents to a meeting on 21 Feb to discuss fees!]

The new parents will make a lot of noise and the Minister will come out pretending to talk tough and issuing threats and warnings to "any head-teacher who doesn't follow the fees guidelines"

Notice the cunning selection of words: "fees guidelines". In other words, any who increased without approval!

Pupils report to school and the noise goes quiet once their parents realise that it is not possible to provide any semblance of quality education with the money that MoE prescribes!

We then wait until next year and the ndlama & findeo repeats!

chiaroscuro
#2 Posted : Thursday, February 05, 2015 11:21:32 AM
Rank: Veteran

Joined: 2/2/2012
Posts: 1,134
Location: Nairobi
There was ndlama yesterday when The Standard published their report. Nation FM tried to call all schools listed and all, except one did not answer! The exception was Mama Ngina High in Mombasa. But on being asked to explain some of the line items on their fee note, the receptionist told the caller to return the fee note for correction!

Of course this was because some of the items had not been approved!

That's the result of a ministry of education that does not want to come out clean and admit that they do not send enough money to schools and the fees they RECOMMEND are also not enough!
Njung'e
#3 Posted : Thursday, February 05, 2015 1:50:13 PM
Rank: Elder

Joined: 2/7/2007
Posts: 11,935
Location: Nairobi
I think secondary school fee remains one of the most thorny and burdening item on Kenyan families.There must be lots of bright kids who miss chances due to the high fees change by our top national schools and as it stands,they will remain a preserve of the rich.Matters are not helped by a clueless ministry of education.BTW,what happened to the recommendations the President received from the education task force?I thought one of the bright spots about it was to tax airtime as a way of making secondary education free.
Nothing great was ever achieved without enthusiasm.
chiaroscuro
#4 Posted : Thursday, February 05, 2015 3:15:28 PM
Rank: Veteran

Joined: 2/2/2012
Posts: 1,134
Location: Nairobi
Njung'e wrote:
I think secondary school fee remains one of the most thorny and burdening item on Kenyan families.There must be lots of bright kids who miss chances due to the high fees change by our top national schools and as it stands,they will remain a preserve of the rich.Matters are not helped by a clueless ministry of education.BTW,what happened to the recommendations the President received from the education task force?I thought one of the bright spots about it was to tax airtime as a way of making secondary education free.


That committee was as clueless as MoE!

What did they mean by suggesting a tax on telephone airtime to fun education? Where did they learn public finance? You don't levy one sector to fund another! When you try do that, the money must go through the "consolidated fund" where it mixes up with all other and becomes impossible to distinguish!

Anyway; my belief is that Nation High school should be made absolutely free of charge. After all, there are just 100 of them. Giving each a fair budget of about sh75m pa, all we need for that is sh7.5bn pa - drop in the ocean that is the sh300bn education budget.

Yes; I know sh75m is enough. I am in the board of a county secondary school that has 1,000 students and our budget hovers around sh45m. I've added the sh30m to really make national schools trully national.

Making them free learning centres of educational excellence would do away with the perennial outcry.
nakujua
#5 Posted : Thursday, February 05, 2015 3:39:37 PM
Rank: Elder

Joined: 12/17/2009
Posts: 3,583
Location: Kenya
Secondary schools are a class thing, its a feel good thing for parents and students and thus just like the iphones and designer labels - in kenya we have designer secondary schools followed by the fanatic followers of the same.

students in day secondary schools pay next to nothing in terms of fees, why we never see this is astounding - secondary education can easily be free and universally accessible if only we put aside our selfish desires.
Swenani
#6 Posted : Thursday, February 05, 2015 3:40:31 PM
Rank: User

Joined: 8/15/2013
Posts: 13,237
Location: Vacuum
Njung'e wrote:
I think secondary school fee remains one of the most horny and burdening item on Kenyan families.There must be lots of bright kids who miss chances due to the high fees change by our top national schools and as it stands,they will remain a preserve of the rich.Matters are not helped by a clueless ministry of education.BTW,what happened to the recommendations the President received from the education task force?I thought one of the bright spots about it was to tax airtime as a way of making secondary education free.


Haiya!
If Obiero did it, Who Am I?
Wakanyugi
#7 Posted : Thursday, February 05, 2015 5:37:15 PM
Rank: Veteran

Joined: 7/3/2007
Posts: 1,635
nakujua wrote:

students in day secondary schools pay next to nothing in terms of fees, why we never see this is astounding - secondary education can easily be free and universally accessible if only we put aside our selfish desires.


This is a great point.

I noted in my travels that countries like Canada, UK, US etc where secondary school is free have very few boarding schools. Children mostly learn from home all through. The few boarding facilities are known and are largely elitist.

This obsession with boarding schools is what is killing our ability to provide quality free education. Yet a dormitory adds nothing but a bed and some relief for stressed parents.
"The opposite of a correct statement is a false statement. But the opposite of a profound truth may well be another profound truth." (Niels Bohr)
chiaroscuro
#8 Posted : Monday, February 09, 2015 12:37:09 PM
Rank: Veteran

Joined: 2/2/2012
Posts: 1,134
Location: Nairobi
Reality has started setting in. The noises are dying out steadily....

Let's wait till next year!
mwenza
#9 Posted : Monday, February 09, 2015 12:40:20 PM
Rank: Elder

Joined: 4/22/2009
Posts: 2,863
chiaroscuro wrote:
Reality has started setting in. The noises are dying out steadily....

Let's wait till next year!


Absence of war doesn't necessarily imply there is peace.
IF YOU EXPECT ME TO POST ANYTHING POSITIVE ABOUT ASENO, YOU MAY AS WELL SIT ON A PIN
chiaroscuro
#10 Posted : Monday, February 09, 2015 12:41:11 PM
Rank: Veteran

Joined: 2/2/2012
Posts: 1,134
Location: Nairobi
Makes you wonder who the boss is?

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