Tag Archives: Latest Knec News 2021-2022

TSC Breaking News Today on the Ongoing Internship Recruitment 2021-2022; TSC Warns Principals Against Discrimination during TSC Internship Recruitment Interviews, Check out Why

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TSC Breaking News Today on the Ongoing Internship Recruitment 2021-2022; TSC Warns Principals Against Discrimination during TSC Internship Recruitment Interviews, Check out Why

Latest TSC News 2021: TSC Cautions Principals against locking out applicants in the ongoing Internship Recruitment

Check out the Latest TSC Internship News 2021-2022 Here by Following the Link Below

Latest TSC News 2021-2022

 

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The Teachers Service Commission (TSC) is expected to uphold high levels of integrity and fairness to all Shortlisted teachers seeking available and advertised TSC Internship vacancies each year.

Unfortunately, complaints have been raised in the past and worse still, some TSC quality assurance officers who should be on the forefront in the fight against corruption and upholding the highest integrity levels have been captured live through audio clips discouraging “foreign applicants” against attending TSC interviews in favour of natives.

The good news reaching us at newspro.co.ke this afternoon now indicate that the teachers’ employer, Teachers Service Commission, TSC, has issued a stern warning against locking out applicants in the ongoing TSC Internship Recruitment 2021.

This is a clear indication that the Commission has heard the cries of teachers and is now advocating for a free and fair Internship Recruitment Exercise this year.

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According to the Commission, no applicant should be favoured at any given circumstance lest they risk Disciplinary action.

This warning comes a few days after it emerged that some applicants who had been shortlisted in the TSC Merit Lists per county failed to receive formal invitations to attend the ongoing TSC Internship interviews in October.

School Heads Accused of Discrimination in the Ongoing TSC Internship Recruitment

Some teachers seeking the 4200 TSC Internship teaching posts have accused school heads of inviting less than five applicants to interviews yet the Constitution spells out penalties for any individual who unfairly locks out job applicants in Kenya.

Do not be left behind, get the latest TSC Internship Recruitment News and TSC Merit Lists 2021 Here by following the following links

 

TSC  Breaking News

 

TSC Internship News- Latest,

 

TSC Internship Recruitment Merit Lists per County and School,

 

Latest Education News 2021-2022,

 

Latest Knec News 2021-2022,

 

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Shortlisted applicants therefore have a right to attend the interviews whether they will get the job or not since we have had cases where some applicants who were ranked last being contacted to fill a teaching vacancy simply because the best candidates’ documents have got discrepancies.

Some school heads whose identity we will not reveal for obvious reasons have invited only five applicants out of the total 20 listed in the TSC merit Lists sent to the regional directors of education in preparation for the upcoming TSC Internship interviews.

In some cases, the TSC merit Lists of Shortlisted Applicants for some schools are conspicuously missing.

” It has come to our attention that some school heads, in collaboration with some regional directors have converted the whole process of recruitment into personal business. The commission has received complaints from applicants for not accessing the merit lists for some schools, ” reads a note from the Commission.

The Teachers Service Commission has therefore ordered immediate release of the 2021 TSC Merit Lists for all the schools and counties to the public for fairness during the upcoming TSC Internship interviews.

The Commission has at the same time ordered principals and heads to ensure that all Shortlisted teachers get invited to attend the upcoming TSC Internship Recruitment Interviews scheduled for this week.

Do not be left behind, get the latest TSC Internship Recruitment News and TSC Merit Lists 2021 Here by following the following links

 

TSC  Breaking News

 

TSC Internship News- Latest,

 

TSC Internship Recruitment Merit Lists per County and School,

 

Latest Education News 2021-2022,

 

Latest Knec News 2021-2022,

KCPE, KCSE 2021- 2022 Examinations: 8-4-4 learners to sit four exams as CBC pioneers enter key grade

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KCPE, KCSE 2021- 2022 Examinations: 8-4-4 learners to sit four exams as CBC pioneers enter key grade

 

In a nutshell: Tension High as Knec prepares to conduct four key Examinations: two KCPE and two KCSE national exams. Check out the 2022 academic calendar and examination dates below

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Two separate sets of national examinations will be administered this year as the country embraces new education reforms ahead of next year’s transition.

One group of candidates under the 8-4-4 education system will be striving to get the most of the 100 per cent marks during the national tests to be administered in March and December.

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And the other group of candidates, the pioneer Grade Six under the 2-6-3-3-3 education system, will be seeking to top up 40 per cent of the marks during their December tests.

The rest of the marks – 60 per cent – for the CBC pioneer class will have been awarded by teachers through school-based assessments administered at grades Four, Five and Six.

 

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The 8-4-4 candidates will sit the Kenya Certificate of Primary Education (KCPE) and the Kenya Certificate of Secondary Education (KCSE) in March and December.

The first 2021 KCPE examinations will be done between March 7 and 10, while the Form Four candidates will sit theirs from March 11 to April 1 this year.

In December, Class Eight candidates will again sit this year’s national examinations between November 28 and December 1. The second set of KCSE exams will be administered from December 1 to December 23.

The Competency-Based Curriculum (CBC) pioneer class, now in Grade Five, will move to Grade Six in April, the final primary education study year before transiting to junior high schools.

According to the revised calendar, the ongoing third term ends on March 4.

This year’s academic year starts on April 25, with the first term running until July 1.

Second term will resume on July 11 and will run until September 16, while the final term will run between September 26 and November 25.

The Kenya National Examination Council (Knec) is yet to release the examination timetable for the Grade Six candidates.

Education Cabinet Secretary George Magoha, however, announced that the tests will be done in December this year.

Under CBC, teachers are expected to conduct classroom and school-based assessments from grades One to Three.

At Grade Three, Knec is expected to develop standardised assessment tools to be administered, scored and feedback given to individual learners by teachers in their respective schools.

The schools will then submit the results for each learner in a designated format to Knec to facilitate analysis of achievement of competencies at national level.

The report from the national examiner will guide the teachers receiving the transition Grade Four and advise the Teachers Service Commission in developing content for continuous professional development.

Across the school assessments, teachers use tools such as written tests, observation schedules, assessment rubrics, project portfolios, checklists, questionnaires, oral/aural questioning, anecdotal records and journals.

For grades Four, Five and Six, school-based assessments assist in informing mastery of competencies and readiness of learners to transition, and provide feedback to stakeholders such as learners, parents, teachers in subsequent grades and curriculum developers.

Knec Chief Executive David Njengere said the pioneer CBC learners sat school-based assessments, which will be computed to 60 per cent.

“These learners sat assessments at Grade Four and Grade Five each constituting 20 marks. They will also sit another assessment at Grade Six for 20 marks. This cumulatively will be 60 marks,” he said.

The candidates end of primary school tests will only comprise 40 per cent.

This means Grade Six learners will not only sit the school-based assessments this year, but will also write a national examination at the end of their primary school education in December.

The summative assessment is prompted by the need to allow learners from across the country to access schools, which have superior infrastructure and a culture of good performance, thus enhancing equity.

In the Competency Based Assessments framework, teachers will play a key role in administering and scoring the learners.

Knec is only expected provide samples of new assessments, provide assessment tools and related rubrics and monitor the administration and scoring to ensure credibility.

Some educationists have, however, expressed concern over the new powers teachers have been handed to determine the future of children.

They argue that teachers may abuse their powers to propel some schools for commercial gains, or award fictitious marks that may be detrimental on a child’s growth.

“We have seen teachers and even principals working hard to beat the security measures to leak the KCPE and KCSE examinations. If they can do this under the present tight circumstances where they even face jail terms and loss of jobs, what if they are in charge?” said Emmanuel Manyasa, Usawa Agenda executive director.

“How will we trust the teachers to fairly score the learners, given that they will literally determine whether your child passes or fails in the basic stages of learning?”

Njengere, however, said assessment results submitted by teachers have displayed a normal curve.

He said Knec has mechanisms of identifying anomalies on marks awarded by teachers.