I had a very insightful conversation with a teacher during a recent private schools expo.
Part of it
was on the government’s intention of launching a new curriculum for its 8-4-4 system. There have been endless
debates on whether 8-4-4 should be discarded and replaced with something else
with most Kenyans (I know) of the opinion that imports like IGCSE and GCE should be considered. I may not agree with them, but that
doesn’t mean that I disagree with them either.
I am a
product of 8-4-4 and a government
school. Growing up, nine in ten of us went to schools within the neighborhoods
we lived in and schools were indeed free.
We were issued with free books,
rulers and pencils all branded Kenya School
Equipment Scheme. The icing on the cake was ‘free’ milk thanks to the benevolent (or so our young minds
thought) Prezzo Moi. The schools
that were not government, were religious-institution-based schools; most of
which had the prefix ‘Saint’ or ‘Our Lady’ or community-sponsored schools
– Arya Samaj, Agha Khan, Guru Nanak
etc.
The 8-4-4 was
a good system methinks. Was. It has
potential to be good again. We studied twelve
subjects examined as seven test
papers with a possible maximum of seven hundred. Half the
subjects were the normal run of the mill
– Math, English, Religious Studies, Geography, Science, Swahili etc - quite
boring for an ordinary young mind but the practical subjects were fun –
Agriculture, Home Science, Music, Art
& Craft. By the time I completed
my primary school I had ‘cultivated my
plot’ and grown sukuma wiki,
spinach and potatoes. And harvested.
I had sewn a handkerchief, a table
cloth, a pair of pajamas (though this
remains my toughest task to date), could bake a cake, make a pretty decent
beef stew & white rice thanks to Mrs.
Mwangi’s Home Science class. I had painted, made a drum, a tin lamp, a book
stand, a wandindi, a sisal mat. All
these by the time I was thirteen! In high school it was pretty much the same –
art & design, technical drawing and woodwork alongside the major subjects. Add some sport & theater/drama.
Learning seemed more important than the final grade. And we turned out pretty
decent young folk.
Then some
government technocrats decided that the workload was too much and was a
deterrent to making young minds score straight A’s in ‘core’ subjects and discarded all creative subjects.
Off went Art
& Craft, Home Science and Music!
Someone saw
these as a waste of time (and resources) and accorded Sciences more airtime. In
an attempt to streamline 8-4-4, someone denied kids as young as six an
opportunity to be kids and have fun while learning. They have since been indoctrinated to believe that life is
all about Math and Science. To complicate matters, the Kibaki-Raila led NARC
administration came into power in 2002 declaring free universal primary education for all kids in government
schools. What was meant to be a good thing stretched the limited resources to a
point where these schools almost stopped being centers for learning. Teachers were
overwhelmed. Frustrated. Almost hang out to dry. It became commonplace for
classrooms built to comfortably hold 30-40 pupils having close to a hundred
kids with no increase in teaching staff and resources. With these came a new
fixture – perennial teachers’ strikes! (Long
Story for another day)
This got the
kids (and their parents) caught between a rock and a bloody hard place. With
the quality of government education highly compromised, some entrepreneurs saw
the opportunity and there has been an influx of private schools all over the
place. This means the competition for pupils is very high – and it’s not
because anyone cares for our kids’ quality education but of the cumulative
figures commanded as tuition fees. Schools have become obsessed with (science
& math) inspired mean scores that they go to ridiculous lengths to attain the highest. It is no wonder
that there are numerous documented cases of exam officials (and teachers)
selling/leaking exams to pupils so that their institutions score highly and are
perceived to be among the best. So as to attract more kids (read tuition).
The irony of
this all is that like is typical around here, the curriculum developers and ministry officials who come up with these policies don’t have their
kids in these government outfits. Their offspring attend proper (mainly
international) private schools where learning is holistic and not just about mean grades. Sometimes I
wonder. No, I wonder all the time, do these folk really believe they are doing
the best they can for Kenyan kids?
Primary
school education is supposed to be free yet am sitting here racking my brain trying
to figure out if there’s any of my friends or family whose kids attend a free
school. None. Yes! None. Why? Because we all know this education
system is messed up big time! Twisted curriculum. Ill equipped institutions.
Badly remunerated tutors. Pedestrian Instruction. And perennial teachers’
strikes/go slows. Who shall save us? Who shall save our kids who’re being referred
to as the digital kids for all the wrong reasons? Teenagers who know how operate
the latest gadget without reading manuals/instructions and to X-box online yet
can’t sew a button onto their shirts/blouses. Those who think the internet is Facebook,
Instagram and Facetime.
I am not a ‘specialist’ in matters education and
curriculum development but I know when am being taken for a ride. I don’t know what
the government has up its sleeve but it can start by bringing the mojo back to
the system. I want my little people to continue being little ones. I want them
to study Art. And Music - to be able to play a musical instrument. And sew
their initials on their school jumper just like I used to. I want them to study
Science too. And hopefully they enjoy it in school like they do enjoy Richard Hammond’s “Science of Stupid” and Jason
Silva’s “Brain Games” on TV. I’d
like their school principal to be less obsessed with this ‘Mean Score’ and let them learn without the pressure of being an
Aeronautical Engineer or Actuarial Scientist (for the record, I have got nothing against these professions & I’d
prolly be proud if one of my little one became either).
A lot of
research have come up with findings that these creative subjects play an
integral part in early childhood development - How
art enhances creativity, imagination and self-esteem. How it encourages cognition
and critical thinking. How reading and playing music ignites a child’s intellectual,
emotional, motor and literacy development. How sport and outdoor activities impact
on the physical and mental wellbeing and are the biggest deterrent to obesity.
Our
current education system places too much emphasis on academic excellence while
ignoring all these. It is
ruthless in that thirteen year olds who do not attain a certain ‘pass mark’ are discarded from the
system. Where do they go from here? There are so many grownups discussing kids’
affairs and they’re not getting it right. That’s probably why 8 in 10 news
articles in Kenya pertaining to kids are not so nice – drugs, alcohol, sex, truancy.
Because school is not fun anymore! Coincidentally, it’s mainly the
government/free education/8-4-4 axis. We’re more obsessed with corporal
punishment and holiday tuition that we forget why we send kids to school in the
first place. Meanwhile, the biggest stakeholder in education – the parents, seem
either clueless, too intimidated or too busy/detached to be seriously involved
in making decisions regarding their offspring. Strangely, there’s a Kenya National Association of Parents
whose only evidence of existence is their office location (somewhere in Gikomba Market ) online. No mission or vision. No membership.
We’re treated to their shenanigans on TV every once in a while whenever
teachers announce a strike. Most recently in regard to hiked school fees. Shame!
I don’t know
whose door I have to knock on but if anyone is listening, “Please bring back
Art to schools. Not as a club after lessons, but as a lesson itself.” Otherwise,
we shall all continue struggling to put our kids in high cost private institutions
we can barely afford yet in the eyes of our government, education is indeed free!