Tag Archives: THIS IS HOW MOST SCHOOLS PALN TO CHEAT

INTERVIEW DATES FOR 2019 TSC TEACHER INTERNSHIP POSITIONS; MOST CURRENT UPDATES.

Advertisements

 

 

 

Advertisements

INTERVIEW DATES

2019 TSC INTERNSHIP POSITIONS DETAILS-INTERVIEW SCHEDULES, LIST OF SHORTLISTED CANDIDATES, INTERNSHIP SALARIES AND REQUIREMENTS

Finally, there is a sigh of relief to all the qualified teachers who applied for the intern positions because TSC has offered direction on the next course of action!

Advertisements

EXTERNAL LINKS WITH RELATED CONTENT

https://educationnewshub.co.ke/list-of-shortlisted-candidates-for-2019-tsc-teacher-internship-vacancies-nakuru-county-nakuru-north/

https://educationnewshub.co.ke/list-of-recruited-candidates-in-the-2019-tsc-teacher-internship-vacancies-and-reporting-dates-kitui/

All the successful applicants (short-listed) are advised to attend

to interviews at the county TSC offices. It is confirmed that a list of shortlisted applicants has been sent to each county. This is from a memo dated 7th of November 2019 from madam Catherine Lenairoshi of TSC Corporate Communications office. The communique further notified all the shortlisted candidates to carry the following as they attend the interviews on a date that would be communicated in due course:

  • A valid certificate of good conduct
  • A valid personal accident cover
  • An original national ID card.
  • Two passport size photographs
  • KCSE certificate
  • KCPE certificate
  • Disability card where applicable
  • Diploma/degree certificate together with transcripts.
  • The school leaving certificate
  • KRA pin
  • A bank plate

INTERVIEW DATES

The interview dates are being communicated from the county level. The shortlisted teacher interns are receiving messages inviting them for the interviews. These messages include the actual dates of the interviews, time and even the venues. These invitation messages shall be trickling in depending on the dates that the various counties plan to conduct the interviews. For instance, all the shortlisted candidates for KITALE have already received invitations for the interviews. The date is the 16th of November 2019.

ALWAYS KEEP UPDATED ON MATTERS THESE INTERVIEWS BY LOGING ONTO THIS SITE. newspro.co.ke

 

On the 8thof October 2019, the Teachers Service Commission(TSS) advertised for a whooping 10,300 teacher intern positions. These numbers were to take care of both the primary and secondary schools teacher biting shortage. The bigger number(6000) was for secondary schools perhaps in a bid to plug the severe staff shortage following the 100% transition clarion call. The 4,300 posts were reserved for the primary schools. All the applications were to be done online a great departure from the norm where teachers applied for the advertised positions at the school and sub-county education offices.

 

Salaries and deductions

According to the sources from TSC, it is confirmed that primary school teacher interns will pocket 10,000 while their secondary school counterparts will smile all the way to the bank to cash 15,000. It is important to note that these incomes are subject to statutory deductions. This is stuff like NSSF, NHIF among others.

The Grand promise

Tsc has confirmed that the successful interns will be offered permanent jobs. However, this will depend on the usual conditions: availability of funds and the interns’ performance.

Staggering numbers of pupils and students

It is important to note that the ever-swelling numbers of learners in public schools have thrown school managers to panic mode. This is because the resources allocated to schools are not commensurate with the recruitment of teachers and the provision of other essentials in these schools. Survey on the ground indicate that the shortage of teachers in secondary schools stand at a whopping 85,258 this year up from 57,380 last year. In primary the shortage stands at 30,357. This is so bearing in mind that the ministry has to plan for the 10million pupils and about 2.8 million students. This severe shortage has forced the school managers to hire teachers on BOM terms to alleviate the situation. This has created another challenge on matters funds because the government subsidies are not for personal emoluments forcing them to survive on shoestring budgets in a bid to implement learning programmes in schools. The swelling numbers also have strained teachers especially those on duty leading to low morale and possible burnouts.

Subjects with biting shortage.

According to TSC some of the worst-hit subjects in teacher distribution are physics, cre, history, agriculture, English and math. These subjects have fewer teacher trainees even at the teacher training institutions and universities. It is ironical that schools are experiencing these acute shortages yet the country has 328,324 trained but jobless teachers!

TSC TEACHER INTERNSHIP POSSIBLE INTERVIEW QUESTIONS

Advertisements

The Teachers Service Commission is set to hold interviews for teacher interns at the County levels.

consequently, all prospective candidates are thoroughly preparing to excel in the interviews. Here are a few questions and possible guidelines to help you excel.

TIPS ON HOW YOU CAN EXCEL DURING A TSC INTERVIEW

Advertisements

 

  • Can you briefly tell us about yourself?

 

Give you full name, nationality and your personality traits, for example, I am Maina Jefferson. I am a Kenyan.  By nature, I am an outgoing or extroverted person who likes establishing new social relationships. In addition to this, I am a goal-oriented person who is extremely passionate about the teaching profession.

Advertisements

N/B: be brief and avoid giving irrelevant information as this may attract public ridicule.

 

 

  • State your TSC Number 

 

I am a teacher number six hundred and ninety thousand, five hundred and fifty-one.

N/B: Do not give digits such as six, nine, two, seven, one, zero

 

 

  • Who is the Cabinet Secretary of the Ministry of Education, Science and Technology?

 

Professor George Magoha

 

 

  • What are the functions of the Teachers Service Commission?

 

The Teachers Service Commission is an independent commission that was established under Article 237 of The Kenyan Constitution 2010 and tasked with the following functions:

  • Vetting and registering trained teachers
  • Recruiting and employing registered teachers
  • Placing or assigning employed teachers in any public school or institution
  • Promoting and transferring teachers
  • Exercising disciplinary control over teachers.
  • Terminating the employment of teachers
  • Reviewing the standards of education
  • Conducting TSC interviews.
  • Reviewing the demand vis a vis the supply of teachers
  • Conducting in-service training for teachers
  • Advising the national government on matters related to the teaching profession

 

 

  • What is KICD in full?

 

Kenya Institute of Curriculum Development

 

  1. What are the roles of KICD?

The Kenya Institute of Curriculum Development has got the following roles:

 

  • Advising the government on matters related to curriculum development.
  • Evaluating, vetting and approving both local and foreign curricula 
  • Implementing policies related to curriculum development in both basic and tertiary education levels
  • Developing and reviewing curriculum support materials
  • Conducting research aimed at informing curriculum policies, review and development
  • Disseminating curriculum support materials through the mass media, e-learning and distance learning

 

 

  • Who is the Chief Executive Officer (CEO) of the TSC?

 

Dr. Nancy Njeri Macharia

 

 

  • What is SRC in full? 

 

Salaries and remuneration Commission

 

 

  • Who is the Chairperson of the SRC?

 

Lyn Mengich

 

  • What are the functions of the SRC?

 

The SRC is an independent commission established under Article 230 of The Constitution of Kenya 2010 with the full mandate to:

  • Set and review the remuneration and benefits of all state officers.
  • Advise the national and county governments on the remuneration and benefits of all state officers
  • Conduct comparative surveys on the current labour markets and trends in remuneration to determine the salaries of government officers.
  • Give recommendations on matters relating to salary and remuneration.
  • Make recommendations on the review of pensions payable to public officers
  • Determine the salaries and remuneration cycle to guide the parliament so that it can allocate adequate funds for easier implementation.
  1. What is KLB in full?

Kenya Literature Bureau

It is a publishing house and a state corporation in Kenya which was founded in the year 1947.

  1. What are the functions of KLB?

It is tasked with publishing and disseminating learning materials.

 

ALL THE BEST.

TSC AND KNEC SHOULD STOP TREATING TEACHERS WITH CONTEMPT

Advertisements

RELEASE INVIGILATORS AND SUPERVISORS, THEY ARE NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR NATIONAL EXAMINATION IRREGULARITIES!!!

For years on end, Kenyan teachers have been treated with contempt by their employer, Teachers Service Commission.

What is even more enraging is the fact that the Kenya National Examinations Council has also jumped the bandwagon.

Advertisements

KNEC has forgotten that without the teachers volunteering to invigilate the ongoing KCPE and KCSE examinations, no national exams will go on.

LOW PAYMENT

KNEC needs to be reminded that the teachers work for the Kenyan child, not KNEC.

Advertisements

It is about assessment, Kenyan teachers are well trained to assess candidates with or without KCPE and KCSE national exams.

There is no way KNEC can continue subjecting teachers to torture, anxiety and low payment.

What disgusts me most is the pompous headlines which feature in the mainstream media whenever there is something to do with teachers’ salaries or payment.

Such headlines include “Teachers Reap Big in New Salary Deal” or “Teachers to Get Highly Paid for Overseeing the KCPE and KCSE Exams.”

The media should stop misleading the public.

KNEC’s pay does not commensurate the sacrifice teachers make to ensure that the national exams go on smoothly.

Centre managers, for instance, have to wake up as early as 4.00 A.M. to collect the exams. They still have to man the exams at their various centres and escort them back to the container to ensure that they are safe.

Supervisors, on the other hand, have to do all the paperwork and ensure that everything is in order. Besides, they have to report to their work stations as early as 7.00 A.M. to receive the examination.

Invigilators, on the other hand, have to sit for at least 2 hours in the classroom to ensure that no cheating takes place.

They are not allowed to carry any gadgets within an examination centre.

Phones are confiscated immediately they report to their work stations.

Honestly speaking, this is a great sacrifice on the part of the teachers.

 

This is why I am advocating for teachers’ rights. Supervising, and invigilating a national exam does not have to put the teacher’s job on the line!

Why does the TSC and KNEC derive pleasure from sacking or suspending teachers whenever an examination malpractice takes place in an examination centre.

IMPERSONATION

Impersonation, for instance, is a malpractice that only the centre manager can be aware of.

The invigilators and supervisors cannot shoulder the blame since they do not interact with the candidates before rehearsal.

Besides, some imposters have registered themselves as private candidates so there is no way you can tell whether they are impersonating candidates since even the passports match them perfectly.

I am thus appealing to KNEC and TSC to reconsider some of the penalties imposed on invigilators and supervisors.

#Teachers are human beings, not robots.

 

 

 

 

 

 

BREAKING NEWS: FIRE AT MUSINGU BOYS’ DORMITORY AS KCSE GOES ON

Advertisements

A dormitory has been reduced to ashes at Musingu Boys High School in Kakamega.

The fire broke out on Saturday morning.

According to sources within the school, the fire was caused by an electric fault.

Advertisements

Confirming the incident, Mr Benson Lukunyi the school’s principal said a welding machine which was being used to repair the dormitory’s windows had exploded causing the fire.

The machine exploded at around 9.30 A.M. setting the dormitory on fire.
Madaraka Taifa Dormitory was being used to store books, lockers, mattresses and other student property.

He further added that the 354 candidates who are currently going on with the Kenya Certificate of Secondary Education KCSE are safe.

Advertisements

They have been directed to remain calm as the school’s management handles the situation.

Madaraka Taifa Dormitory is home to form one and three students who are currently at home for the November/ December holidays.

Nothing was saved from the dormitory.

YET ANOTHER DORMITORY
This incident comes barely two months after another dormitory was set ablaze affecting more than 120 students.

The first incident of fire was caused by an electric fault too.

Joseph Chesire, Kakamega Sub County Police Commander said investigations have been launched.
Kakamega Senator Boni Khalwale who is an alumnus and a neighbour of the affected school has urged parents to remain calm since the situation is under control.
He pointed a finger at the contractors who had been hired to do wiring at the dormitory.

KCSE NEWS

Advertisements

I think it is time the Kenya National Examinations Council renamed Chemistry Paper Three.

If I had the chance of being consulted on its new name, I would go for “Humiliation” since it perfectly suits the scenario.

This year, I happened to invigilate the KCSE exams in a third world school, somewhere in Kuresoi North and much as the Kenyan Government insists on the 100% transition, not all students are well suited to sit for some papers.

Advertisements

Chemistry Paper Three is one of the “grey” areas for such kind of candidates.

BROKEN APPARATUS
Within the first 30 minutes, 70 % of the students had broken 2 to 3 test tubes.
I do not know whether to associate the broken test tubes with fear or ignorance.

This means that the candidates were literary stuck knowing how “well-equipped” such schools are.

Advertisements

Others could not simply measure Liquid X using a burette!

FIRE
The ability to follow instructions is crucial if a student has to excel in exams, Practicals included.

The situation usually becomes fatal if students cannot follow instructions well.

One of the instructions required the students to ignite a particular solid.

Instead of passing it quickly through fire, some were overheating the glass directly.

I was perplexed when a student’s solid was set ablaze and the glass broke.

The boy kept on running from one point to another wondering what to do.

He finally dipped the glass containing the solid in water and what followed next…I think your guess is as good as mine.

THE PAIN OF EXACT AMOUNTS OF REAGENTS
In a bid to curb cheating in KCSE examinations, KNEC has come up with a new mechanism-delivering the exact amounts of reagents used in all Practicals.

Due to tension, almost 15 candidates had spilt the reagents needed for the Practical within the first 20 minutes.

This means that they could not carry out the Practical since there were no reagents to be used.

We helplessly sat watching the candidates score nothing since the reagents could not be locally prepared by their teacher.

Take note of the fact that the student needs to follow the instructions given to mix the reagents, make observations, record them and infer.

PHYSICALLY- CHALLENGED CANDIDATES
One of the invigilators manning the examination centre was also forced to hold the apparatus for a physically- challenged girl whose right hand was dysfunctional.

I did wonder if this was necessary.

Why can’t KNEC do away with Practicals for the physically challenged candidates?

Why subject them to such humiliation which reminds them of who they are?
I am appealing to the Kenya National Examinations Council to reconsider the issue of Practicals.

KCSE should not be a matter of life and death!