Tag Archives: Teachers’ training

Teachers or Cheaters? Shocking Findings Reveal Glaring Weaknesses among Teachers as TSC Plans to Send them Back to Class for Refresher Courses

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TSC to Establish Teachers’ Training Institute to Train all Teachers on Refresher Courses; Read the full Details Below

Teachers or Cheaters? Shocking Findings Reveal Glaring Weaknesses among Teachers as TSC Plans to Send them Back to Class for Refresher Courses

All TSC-employed teachers will soon be obliged to go back to class for refresher courses as the Teachers Service Commission (TSC) plans to set up a school to sharpen all teachers’ skills.

This new move is founded on a recent research by the Commission which shows that the majority of the teachers exhibit glaring weaknesses when it comes to teaching strategies, preparation of professional records and effective classroom management.

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Moreover, others exhibit incompetency in handling learners with special needs and weak assessment and feedback skills.

The buck does not stop with classroom teachers only, as school administrators (Principals and Head Teachers) are not left behind, either.

According to the TSC concept paper, some school heads and principals have poor resource utilisation abilities. Others are not able to analyse books of accounts, communicate effective with teachers and parents.

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It is on these findings that the Commission proposes training sessions for teachers on classroom management, effective teaching approaches and professionalism.

“The over-arching goal of the Institute will be to enhance the quality of education by providing teachers,assisted by the education partners, with a formal structure for professional support and professional development” reads the TSC policy document; in part.

In the new teachers’ appraisal system, teachers will be expected to undergo Teacher Professional Development (TPD) by undertaking refresher courses.

Before the Covid 19 pandemic broke-out, the Commission had already contracted institutions that will be offering the refresher training programme modules. The new institute will be tasked with establishing procedures and criteria for the probation and full recognition of Teacher Professional Development (TPD) service providers.

It will, at the same time, come up with procedures and criteria for the probation and full recognition of Teacher Professional Development (TPD) service providers.

The teachers will be expected to meet the training costs for the modules that will be offered during school holidays. Of importance to note is the fact that the training will be mandatory for practicing teachers.

Already, Kenyatta University, Mount Kenya University, Riara University and Kenya Education Management Institute (KEMI) had been identified to offer the Teacher Professional Development modules.

A teacher will be at liberty to choose an institution of his/ her choice where to take the TPD modules. Teacher Professional Development will continuously update teacher knowledge, skills, attitude and values encourage teachers’ learning communities.

The good news for teachers is that most of the TPD modules will be available online. “Many components of the TSC Teacher Professional Development programme will be available to teachers online and will be accessed through mobile phones said the the Commission, early this year.

The new institute will form strong basis for promotion of teachers through organisation of workshops and conferences and the publication of newsletters, research reports and articles on educational issues.

Other roles to be performed by the institute include to establish school-based support groups that will offer Coaching, mentoring, classroom observations, lesson study/action research, book/journal reviews and collaborative subject mastery development to teachers

 

TEACHERS TO REPORT TO THEIR RESPECTIVE SCHOOLS TWO WEEKS EARLIER FOR TRAINING AHEAD OF THE SEPTEMBER 1, 2020 SCHOOLS’ REOPENING DATE

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TEACHERS TO REPORT TO THEIR RESPECTIVE SCHOOLS TWO WEEKS EARLIER FOR TRAINING AHEAD OF THE SEPTEMBER 1, 2020 SCHOOLS’ REOPENING DATE

All tutors in Kenya will be expected to report to their various work stations 14 days before the official schools’ reopening date on September 1, 2020.

According to CS Magoha, it is pertinent that teachers are taken through rigorous training on the various mitigation measures in the event of Covid-19 within their schools.

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The CS said this on Wednesday as he was inspecting the sewing of masks meant for learners at the Kitui Textile Industry.

“We will need teachers in school two weeks earlier because they need to be trained on Covid-19,” said CS Magoha.

Testing

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The CS also hinted that teachers, who are likely to resume duty in September 2020 may undergo Covid-19 testing to ascertain their status.

This announcement comes even as the education ministry is yet to disclose the fine details of the process especially when it comes to the cost of testing the over 300, 000 tutors currently employed by the TSC, BOM, and Private School teachers.

Employees in other sectors such as the Hotel industry have in the past complained about the high testing cost.

Therefore, the Government needs to clarify on how teachers’ tests will be catered for.

Are Teachers fully covered for Coronavirus by TSC-Contracted MINET-AON insurance?

The next key question that is mindboggling is the safety of teachers in schools even as the ministry plans to reopen schools.

Currently, a teacher in Kenya mans a class of approximately 50-60 learners in primary and secondary schools. If these huge classes are not split as proposed by health experts into clusters of 15-20 learners in a class, then it is obvious that the social distancing rule will not be achieved.

Besides, the CS made it clear in a high-profile summit chaired by His Excellency President Uhuru Kenyatta that it will be unrealistic to expect the government to expand infrastructure within schools to enforce the social distancing rule since it has taken ages to build what is within our vicinity in public schools.

My point is the teachers manning these classes will be exposed to the coronavirus. Therefore, the teachers’ employer, TSC should first liaise with Minet-AON insurance Provider to ensure that teachers are fully covered for Covid-19 before sending them to their “slaughter-houses.”

Risk Allowance

On risk allowance, we saw medics who are tending to coronavirus patients being given extra stipends for putting their lives on the line.

There is no much difference between medics and teachers especially now that they will be trained on how to deal with such positive cases within the classroom set-up.

It is high time the teachers’ unions woke up from their untimely slumber and demand for what rightfully belongs to their faithful adherents, teachers.

KUPPET and KNUT need to bargain for teachers given the risk that they will be exposed to if schools reopen in September.

Aged Teachers

Another elephant in the room is the presence of teachers within the high-risk ages. Most of these teachers are currently serving as senior teachers, senior masters, deputies, headteachers, or principals. They, therefore, play a key role in the management of learning institutions.

According to covid-19 statistics, most victims who succumb to the illness are aged 50 and above given that they are likely to be predisposed to other age-related health conditions such as diabetes that compromise their immune system.

How is the Ministry planning to shield such teachers from the imminent danger likely to be posed by the novel coronavirus?