Thousands of secondary schools risk closure due to low enrollment

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.

The transition from primary to secondary education has disrupted public schools across Kenya under the new Competency-Based Curriculum. Previously, secondary schools ran four forms from Form One to Four. Now, with only three streams and no new intake since 2024, many institutions operate with just two filled classes, leaving one empty.

Large national schools benefit by enrolling double the usual students, as parents prefer their prestige. This leaves small schools without pupils, accelerating closure risks. Last year, the Ministry of Education flagged 2,700 public schools with under 150 students total as inefficient.

Education Minister Julius Ogamba stated: “There is no benefit in having a school with just 10 children. We need schools with full infrastructure and the right number of students. There is no need for 10 schools where there are 1,000 students while one school has only 100.”

Examples abound. In Turkana County, Philadelphia Mixed Day Secondary, established in 2024, has received no Grade 10 students. Director Julius Atieno sought local leaders' help to re-enroll dropouts from gold mining or those refusing to join. In Trans Nzoia County, St Paul’s Kapchepsir Secondary got only four out of 45 expected students. Director Wycliffe Magero praised President William Ruto's directive allowing enrollment without uniforms or fees to save out-of-school youth.

Similar shortages hit small schools in Baringo, Makueni, Kitui, Machakos, Tana River, Homa Bay, Bomet, Nakuru, Kirinyaga, and Busia counties, often receiving less than half their anticipated intake. Parents and teachers advocate merging schools to cut costs, as government funding ties to enrollment numbers. Government efforts aim for 100% transition, but financial hurdles and bias toward big schools endanger small ones.

Related Articles

Kenyan Grade 10 students boarding a bus for school transfers as announced by Education Secretary Ogamba, with principals and school staff present.
Image generated by AI

Government to transfer under-enrolled Grade 10 students to other schools

Reported by AI Image generated by AI

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.

Questions have emerged about secondary schools' capacity to accommodate new students expected to join the competency-based secondary system next year. Education Minister Julius Ogamba states that schools have extra spaces, but some principals express concerns particularly over STEM infrastructure.

Reported by AI

A new report shows Kenya has achieved a 97% transition rate for students completing Grade 6 in 2025 to Junior Secondary School. The government is addressing challenges in transitioning to Senior Secondary, where 61% of eligible learners have joined. The Ministry of Education has extended registration deadlines to reach 100%.

Following the initial Grade 10 placements released on December 19, the Ministry of Education has processed 183,000 transfer requests from KJSEA 2025 candidates, approving 116,000 while rejecting 66,000 due to limited capacity at top schools. Affected students can submit fresh appeals in early January.

Reported by AI

A recent Infotrak survey reveals that 45% of Kenyans are dissatisfied with the Competency-Based Curriculum's grading framework. Conducted across all 47 counties, the poll highlights regional disparities and broader implementation concerns.

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.

Reported by AI

France's Education Ministry projects a loss of 1.7 million pupils in public and contracted private schools, colleges, and high schools by 2035, a 14.2% drop from 2025 levels. Minister Édouard Geffray describes it as a «seismic wave» requiring a rethink of long-term school provision. The forecasts rely on declining fertility assumptions.

 

 

 

This website uses cookies

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