Multigrade teaching and learning in pro-poor private Schools; Nyeri County challenges and policy implications for pastoralists-Based Schools
Abstract
Attainment of universal primary education envisaged within Dakar framework is becoming elusive in
many countries. Data shows that out
-
of
-
school
children have stagnated at 57 million by 2011 (GMR,
2013/14). Global Monitoring Report (2012) noted that some countries in sub
-
Saharan Africa have
achieved noticeable achievements in levelling education for all targets. However, some countries are
still
lagging behind on NER and GER.
S
ome countries have a net enrolment of less than 70% while
others have NER of above 90%. This means that 30% of school
-
going children are uncounted for. In
many cases, the net enrolment ratio is lower than the gross enrolment
ratio.
In Kenya, the GER has
grown to 113% by 2012, currently estimated at 9.3 million.
Despite the progress made in primary
school enrolments, over 1 million children still remain out of school (GMR 2013/4
despite the free
primary education policy of 2
003
.
As 2015 deadline for EFA approaches, it is important for countries
to re
-
think on what can work, what did not work and what worked. It is important to consider how to
reengineer the momentum and think strategically and innovatively. One way of thinki
ng ahead the
2015 target year would be to critically assess innovative ways of, and engage in multi
-
mode
approach of teaching and learning in regions where learner population is low and where the teacher
shortages has persisted.
This approach has been us
ed by private schools for the poor mainly as a
reaction towards lack of teachers or lack of enough pupils to warrant employment of many teachers.
Since Kenya does not have a policy on multigrade, there is need to have policy considerations to
address the m
ultigrade policy for inclusion in the education sector policy frameworks. This will go a
long way in addressing the needs of excluded marginalized children especially in pastoralists’
communities. Demand for education among pastoralists, including children
and adults actively
involved in pastoral production, is rapidly increasing. Education is seen by impoverished households
as a way out of poverty, and by the households actively involved in this production as a way to
support their production system in an
increasingly globalized world. Pastoralists no longer resist the
idea of formal education, as they commonly did fifteen or twenty years ago. Children and adults now
fully understand the importance of education and are enthusiastic about learning. Despite P
olicy
documentation and budgetary allocations, there is documented regional disparities in access and
participation that hide underneath national achievements over time. The disparities if not addressed
can perpetuate intergenerational inequalities.
This
paper describes how multi
-
grade approach has been used in pro
-
poor private schools, the
challenges, policy implications and lessons learnt
for replication in
pastoralists’
communities
URI
http://cees.uonbi.ac.ke/sites/default/files/cees/education/education/CEES%20conference%20%20AFRICE%202015%20Dr%20Gichuhi.pdfhttp://hdl.handle.net/11295/87752
Citation
Gichuhi, Loise (2015). Multigrade teaching and learning in pro-poor private Schools; Nyeri County challenges and policy implications for pastoralists-Based Schools. Abstracts of the 2nd AFRICE international conference held at Kenya science campus on 18th-23rd. July 2015Publisher
University of Nairobi