Ministry opens second revision window for Grade 10 placements amid ongoing complaints

Following a first revision phase that drew over 100,000 applications, Kenya's Ministry of Education has announced a second review period for Grade 10 senior school placements from January 6 to 9, 2026. Education CS Julius Ogamba cited legitimate reasons for requests, as schools reopen on January 5.

Building on the initial Grade 10 placements and a first revision window ending December 29, 2025—which saw over 100,000 requests but only about 2,000 approvals—the Ministry of Education is offering a limited second chance for changes. Announced January 2, 2026, by Education Cabinet Secretary Julius Ogamba, this phase runs January 6-9 and requires verifiable grounds like affordability, proximity, or pathway mismatches, addressing persistent parent and stakeholder concerns.

Requests can be submitted via junior schools or directly to preferred senior schools, processed by heads through the placement portal. Joining instructions have been available since December 30, with reporting set for January 12.

Kenya Secondary Schools Heads Association (KESSHA) Chair Willie Kuria criticized the automated system's lack of transparency, noting it provides schools only names without results or backgrounds, unlike the prior equitable model. They advocate a hybrid approach with parental input and ministry oversight.

The ministry emphasized official channels to minimize disruptions for the 2026 academic year start, with Regional and County Directors monitoring compliance.

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Kenyan Grade 10 students boarding a bus for school transfers as announced by Education Secretary Ogamba, with principals and school staff present.
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Government to transfer under-enrolled Grade 10 students to other schools

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Education Cabinet Secretary Julius Ogamba has announced that Grade 10 students in under-enrolled senior schools will be transferred to other institutions starting next week. With 92 percent of learners already reporting to school, the government is ensuring seamless learning despite textbook delays. School principals face dismissal if they refuse admission due to lack of fees or uniforms.

The Ministry of Education has announced reopening the KJSEA placement revision portal from December 23 to allow parents and learners to make changes. This follows widespread dissatisfaction among parents over the criteria for placing their children in senior secondary schools. Education Cabinet Secretary Julius Ogamba stated that the five-day window will help align choices better with interests and performance.

Reported by AI

More than 100,000 grade 10 learners have applied for a review of their senior secondary school placements under the Competency-Based Curriculum (CBC). The Ministry of Education confirmed receiving over 100,000 requests on the first day of a seven-day review window, approving only about 2,000. Parents and learners complain that the automated system overlooked affordability, proximity to home, and family circumstances.

The shift from primary to Grade 10 under Kenya's Competency-Based Curriculum has created major challenges for public secondary schools, with many small ones facing closure risks due to low enrollment. Prestigious national schools are attracting most students, leaving smaller institutions empty. The Ministry of Education has identified 2,700 public schools with fewer than 150 students total.

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As South African schools gear up to reopen on January 14, thousands of learners in Gauteng are still without placements, despite official claims that the situation is managed. The Gauteng Department of Education reported 4,858 unplaced Grade 1 and Grade 8 students on January 6, a reduction from 140,000 nationwide in December 2025. This ongoing issue highlights persistent challenges in education infrastructure and planning.

Official 2025 KCSE results released by Kenya's Ministry of Education show an increase in straight A grades to 1,932 students (0.19% of 993,226 candidates), up from 1,693 (0.18%) in 2024. This follows provisional figures highlighting top national schools like Moi Kabarak.

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As South Africa's 2026 school year begins, provincial education departments face significant hurdles in implementing compulsory Grade R, including unplaced learners and budget constraints from the Bela Act of 2024.

 

 

 

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