KJSEA 2025: Grade 10 placements released

Following the KJSEA 2025 results announced on December 11, the Ministry of Education has released placements for the inaugural cohort of 1,130,459 candidates into grade 10. Parents can check via SMS or the online portal, with students required to report to assigned senior secondary schools on January 12, 2026.

The placements, fully automated, factor in students' school choices, KJSEA performance, psychometric test results, equity considerations, and school capacity. "The top performers in each STEM, social science, and arts track will get priority placement in boarding schools of their choice," the Ministry stated.

Parents can verify placements by sending the KNEC assessment number via SMS to 22263 or via the portal at placements.education.go.ke.

Parents and learners can request one irreversible school change through a formal application via junior school heads, at least two weeks before the reporting date. Senior schools must declare vacancies through county directors of education, with joining instructions issued online only—no printed letters for replacements.

"The officers involved are required to cooperate and ensure a fair and credible selection and placement process for a smooth transition from junior to senior school," the Ministry emphasized.

Related Articles

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

Updating earlier reports of capacity-driven rejections, the Ministry of Education has rejected 143,821 Grade 9 students' applications to transfer to senior secondary schools for Grade 10 under KJSEA 2025, citing unavailable subject combinations or lack of space. Of 355,457 total applications processed by December 29, 211,636 were approved, placing 88% of students per their preferences, Minister Julius Ogamba said.

Following the December 11 release of Kenya Junior School Education Assessment (KJSEA) 2025 results, the Kenya National Examinations Council (KNEC) has cautioned schools against sharing misleading performance analyses with parents. The Competency-Based Curriculum (CBC) assessments do not feature average scores or rankings, emphasizing individual talents instead.

Reported by AI

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.

 

 

 

This website uses cookies

We use cookies for analytics to improve our site. Read our privacy policy for more information.
Decline