Tag Archives: 2020 KCPE results online

2021 form one placement, admission letters and reporting dates; KCPE 2020/2021 candidates to report to form one in June

 

2021 form one placement, admission letters and reporting dates; KCPE 2020/2021 candidates to report to form one in June

2020 KCPE results online, 2020 KCPE candidates admission letters, 2021 form one admission letters, 2021 form ones reporting date, 2021 KCPE results through SMS

2021 Form one placement and reporting dates for KCPE candidates: All Kenya Certificate of Primary Education examination candidates who have just completed writing their Knec national exams will get Form One placement in June, 2021. This is in line with the Kenyan government’s 100 percent transition policy which dictates that all learners move to the next academic level irrespective of the marks or grades attained.

Confirming this news, Dr. Julius Jwan the newly appointed Learning and Basic Education Principal Secretary Dr Julius Jwan assured parents and guardians.

Dr Jwan said admitting all candidates to secondary schools was in line with Article 53(1) (b) of the Kenya Constitution on provision of free and compulsory basic education to every Kenyan child.

2021 form one placement process will be transparent and objective

Speaking in Nakuru where he supervised the opening of examination containers before touring several examination centres in the county, the Principal Secretary said the Education Ministry had developed water-tight criteria to ensure the form-one placement process was objective and transparent.

2021 school fees: principals warned against hiking fees

He further put on notice school heads who disregard the government’s fees guidelines and demand extra money from parents, warning that disciplinary action will be taken against them.

Dr Jwan also called on parents to ensure the safety of candidates amidst Covid-19 pandemic ahead of their expected admission to Form One in June this year.

This year’s KCPE examination were postponed from November last year following prolonged closure of schools ordered by President Uhuru Kenyatta on March 14th after the first case of the deadly coronavirus was reported in the country.

The Principal Secretary said he was impressed by centre managers, invigilators and security personnel who had ensured that the candidates wrote their exam papers under strict health protocols to curb the spread of the virus.

He said no major incidents were reported as the Kenya Certificate of Primary Education exams come to a close across the country. A total of 54,751 candidates in Nakuru wrote the examinations in 1,061 centers.

Dr Jwan said the ongoing heavy rains in some parts of the country had not disrupted the examinations adding that the government had been adequately prepared in the event of event of emergencies.

On Monday, candidates sat their Mathematics test in the morning and English and Composition later in the day. On Tuesday, they took Science, Kiswahili, and Insha before ending with Social and Religious studies on Wednesday. There were strict guidelines to curb cheating.

Invigilators checked candidates’ facemasks following reports that some were planning to use them in cheating.

Dr Jwan said they had recorded eight cases of candidates in Nyamira-Borabu who had not been registered for examination after private institutions they were learning in were closed down.

“We undertook the necessary procedures and ensured that the candidates did not miss out on their examination by having the government pay for their registration as it had done for the rest of the candidates,” he revealed.

He urged teachers and security personnel to get vaccinated against Covid-19 as they were front line workers whose levels of exposure to the deadly virus were higher than the general populace.

He also confirmed that no case of Covid-19 ill candidates had been reported during the exercise. The government had earlier indicated that students who might fall sick with Covid-19 symptoms during the exam period will have to do the test in isolation rooms.

Dr Jwan said the Ministry was adequately prepared to administer Kenya Certificate of Secondary Education (KCSE) examinations whose rehearsals kick off on Thursday.

2020 KCPE results online, 2020 KCPE candidates admission letters, 2021 form one admission letters, 2021 form ones reporting date, 2021 KCPE results through SMS

 

First, KCPE leakage, and now KCSE Exam cheats? Could KCSE and KCPE Cheating rings that were collapsed in 2016 be creeping back to water down Knec Credibility?

 

KCSE & KCPE 2020/2021 Knec News:  First, KCPE leakage, and now KCSE Exam cheats? Could KCSE and KCPE cheating rings that were collapsed in 2016 be creeping back to water down Knec Credibility?

First, KCPE leakage, and now KCSE Exam cheats? Could KCSE and KCPE Cheating rings that were collapsed in 2016 be creeping back to water down Knec Credibility?

Latest updates on the recently concluded KCPE 2020  and the ongoing KCSE 2020  Knec national exams demonstrate a worrying trend in as far as cheating cartels that were collapsed four years ago are concerned.

It seems that the national exams cheating cartels are slowly making their come-back, threatening to hinder the continuous implementation of major reforms rolled out by former Education CS Dr. Matiang’i  in 2016 to  safeguard the credibility of the national tests.

Early Exposure of KCPE, KCSE questions papers to candidates

The new cheating circle has invented a new way that is now targeting early exposure of the knec question papers to candidates once the scripts leave the safety of the installed knec  containers at the sub-county offices.

The current Education Cabinet Secretary Professor George Magoha recently noted that the daring cartels do sneak out question papers which they disseminate to varsity students for mass circulation.

List of schools on Magoha’s watchlist for KCSE 2020/2021 exam irregularities, cheating

According to Magiha, at least 30 schools across the country are currently under thorough investigation in connection with the new examination leakage plans.

This piece of information has caused jitters among candidates, leaving others who will be obviously disadvantaged disillusioned.

The reports indicate a greater magnitude of the vice, cheating in exams barely three days into the Kenya Certificate of Secondary Examination tests.

Counties on CS Magoha’s watchlist over Cheating in this year’s KCSE Knec Exams

Magoha said among these are three schools in Nyamira County and other three in Banisa, Mandera County.

He also said that a known school in Kakamega is being investigated for alleged examination irregularities.

Schools in Isebania and Migori have also been put under watch.

Yesterday, the CS said an invigilator was arrested at a centre in Migori County after sharing some of the questions that had been sneaked out before the scheduled time.

“The invigilator is now in the custody of police officers and will be in court to face criminal charges,” said Magoha.

The CS said that security operatives are already pursuing the persons behind the ring and cautioned schools that those found culpable will have their results cancelled.

The tough-talking Magoha seemed to be pointing at a well-planned scheme keen to dent the credibility of the tests, eroding the gains registered since 2017 when the old Kenya National Examination (Knec) board was disbanded.

“Nobody should ever imagine that in this day and age, you will do what you used to do many years ago.

“We shall ensure that the sanctity of these examinations is restored,” said Magoha.

The new threat to cheat by sneaking out examination questions however points at a collusion between government officials entrusted with the papers.

From the containers, each principal is handed the question papers, and each vehicle manned by a security officer.

The early exposure scheme means that principals, security officers, drivers, and examination officials who accompany the examination papers from the containers to the schools must be working together to facilitate the vice.

“Those trying so hard to corrupt the examination system have a choice.

“But we shall have no mercy whether you are a teacher or a security agent,” said Magoha.

The use of university students and teachers to cheat was unearthed in 2018 when the examinations were being sneaked and done in special rooms by university students and teachers who are subject experts.

In some schools, the examination centres converted staff houses, classrooms, or offices into command centres.