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Semi Autonomous Government Agencies in Directorate of Youth; the youth fund, Uwezo fund, President’s award

There are Agencies in the Directorate of Youth that play a key role in matters youths. These are initiatives meant for youth empowerment such as YEDF, WEF, AGPO and UWEZO funds.

1). Youth Enterprise Development Fund (YEDF)

This is a catalytic fund which was established in order to address youth un-employment through access to credit for business start-up that does not require collateral. It is disbursed to youth in registered youth groups or individual youth. YEDF provides guarantee credit for youth suppliers to government entities and also secures employment abroad for youth with technical skills.

2). Uwezo Fund

This is a catalytic fund targeting youth, women and persons with disabilities. It was established in order to address youth un-employment through access to credit for business start-up that does not require collateral. It is disbursed to youth in registered youth groups or individual youth

3). Access to Government Procurement Opportunities (AGPO)

Enhancement of youth employment is addressed through reservation of 30% of government procurement opportunities to youth, women and persons with disabilities.

4). National Youth Council (NYC)

The National Youth Council Act, 2009 provides a representation forum on delegation basis in line with Constitution of Kenya 2010. NYC champions for youth interest.

5). International Congress for Great Lakes Region (ICGLR)

This youth forum comprises countries in the Great Lakes Region namely; Angola, Burundi, Central African Republic, Democratic Republic of Congo, Republic of Congo, Republic of Kenya, Republic of Rwanda, the United Republic of Tanzania, the Republic of Uganda, Republic of South Sudan, the Republic Soudan and the Republic of Zambia.

The main purpose of ICGLR is to fight against youth unemployment through infrastructures development and investment.

The ICGLR Secretariat is hosted in Nairobi. Kenya played host to the Regional Multifunctional Youth Forum was held from 20th to 21st July 2014, in Nairobi.

6). President’s Award

The President’s Award-Kenya (PA-K) is an exciting self-development and character building programme available to all young people countrywide equipping them with positive life skills to make a difference for themselves, their communities, country and the world. The Award is open to all young people between the ages of 14 and 24, irrespective of gender, creed, race, social or physical status.

It has trained adult volunteer helpers who inspire and support the young people in their pursuance of the programme activities. The Programme grants the young people with the opportunity to discover and nurture potential leadership skills as well as motivation to serve the community.
It provides holistic development by addressing the following thematic areas:

a). Improved Educational attainment
b). Improved employability and sustainable livelihoods
c). Improved health and well-being
d). Increased participation in civic life
e). Social Inclusion
f). The Environment
Gender, equality and the empowerment of women
g). Reduction and prevention of violence, conflict resolution and peace building
h). Reduced re-offending (recidivism) rates

PA-K operates in across the 47 counties of the republic. So far over 350,000 young people have directly benefited through the Award and many more have benefited from the activities. As a result, some now in their adult lives are actively engaged in the socio-economic development of our country.

Shocker for 2019 form ones admitted directly as Ministry bans such admissions

The Ministry of Education has said only students admitted to form one via the National Education Management Information System, NEMIS, will be recognized and get the government fees subsidy. While Addressing Ministry officials, including Field Officers (Regional Coordinators of Education and County directors of Education), the Education Principal Secretary, Dr. Belio Kipsang, warned principals against issuing direct admission letters. The Principal Secretary warned that letters that would have not been downloaded from the Ministry’s portal will be deemed illegal and thus should not be used to admit the 2019 form ones.

“Only letters that have been downloaded from the admissions website are valid,” Dr, Kipsang warned. Parents to 2019 form ones are expected to log into the Ministry of Education’s website to download their admission letters for National, Extra county and County schools as per the set regulations. Read more details here:How to download and process the 2019 form one admission letter

Highlighting on the same issue at the Kenya Institute of Curriculum Development, yesterday, Education Cabinet secretary (Dr Amina Mohammed) warned principals against admitting form ones directly saying all students’ details must be uploaded to the NEMIS portal. “Schools must admit students only through the NEMIS (portal), no school should violate the ministry guidelines,” Dr Amina cautioned. Read more here: How schools will handle transfer requests and admissions for the 2019 form ones

The Cabinet Secretary who enlightening Regional Coordinators and County Directors of Education noted that students whose details would not be uploaded into the NEMIS system will be deemed not to have joined form one and hence will not be eligible for disbursement of Free Secondary Education funds. Dr Amina directed the principals to admit the form ones by using the NEMIS system; when they report to school next week. This directive will affect both public and private schools. This directive will have a big toll on parents and form ones who have collected letters directly from schools different from the ones in which they were placed. This will leave such parents and learners at cross roads since it is only the ministry that was to sanction any transfers of the form ones.

“Students without Unique Personal Identifier (UPI) numbers will be expected to issued with the same as soon as possible and not later than one month (from now). Since enrollment data is from the system, schools are informed that the process should not be circumvented at all,” Dr Amina added. To get the UPI learners are expected to have birth certificates and details of their parents and/ or guardians.

By using the NEMIS system, the Ministry will be able to track all learners as they report to school between 7th and 11th January, 2019. This is in a bid to ensure that all learners who sat for the Kenya Certificate of Primary Education, KCPE, exams last year (2018) transit to secondary schools as per the Government’s policy on hundred percent transition. Learners who will fail to report to school by 11th January, 2019 are expected to face the full force of the Law as Chiefs and their assistants are under instructions to push them to nearby schools.

Read the related content, below:

The Ministry of Education Kenya; Latest News

The Ministry of Education derives its mandate from the Constitution of Kenya, Chapter Four Articles 43, 53, 54, 55, 56, 57, and 59 which  provides for children’s right to free and compulsory basic education, including quality services, and to access education institutions and facilities for persons with disabilities.

There are also provisions on access for youth to relevant education and training; access to employment; participation and representation of minorities and marginalized groups in governance and other spheres of life, special opportunities in educational and economic fields, and special opportunities for access to employment.

The Fourth Schedule of the Constitution of Kenya Articles 185(2), 186(1) and 187(2) distributes functions between the national and county governments. The National Government undertakes; education policy, standards, curriculum, examinations, granting of university charters, universities, tertiary educational institutions, institutions of research, higher learning, primary schools, special education, secondary schools, special education institutions and promotion of sports and sports education. While the County Government in relation to education are: pre-primary education, village polytechnics, home-craft centres, farmers training centres and childcare facilities.

In addition, Parliament, over the years has enacted a series of Acts on various dimensions of education whose objects and goals the Ministry is expected to implement to give effect to the Constitutional provisions pertaining to education and training.

Under the Executive Order No. 1 of 2022 (Revised) on the Organization of the Government of the Republic of Kenya, the Ministry is headed by a Cabinet Secretary, assisted by three  Principal Secretaries, each heading a State Department. The three State Departments are: the State department Basic Education; the State department for Vocational Education and Technical Training and; the State department for University Education and Research.

Raila wades into the TSC versus KNUT squabble

Former Prime Minister Raila Odinga has wedged into the long standing dispute between the Teachers Service Commission, TSC, and the Kenya National Union of Teachers, KNUT.

On his part, Raila says that what started a dispute between the Teachers Service Commission and the Kenya National Union of Teachers has increasingly degenerated into a major misunderstanding that is threatening to kill an organization long seen as the face of organized Labour in Kenya and a symbol of the country’s commitment to International Labour Organization Convention 98 on the right to organise and collective bargaining.

Through a series of intentional actions, the TSC has disabled and is now en route to killing KNUT.

As at today, membership of KNUT has shrunk from a high of 187,000 to 23,000. Its income has dwindled from Ksh144 million to Ksh15 million against a salary portfolio of Ksh80 million for over 600 workers spread across the country.

The teachers may have been subdued and gone silent as a monumental movement they built from scratch since 1957, and which they took pride in, is brought to its knees. But they are certainly not happy.

An unusual school year has started under circumstance made difficult by a raging pandemic, erratic syllabus coverage and upcoming national exams. All these require full dedication of the teachers.

Raila says the courts and the Parliamentary Committee on Education have pronounced themselves in concurrence loudly and clearly on this dispute, especially in the Petition Number 151 of 2018 in which the TSC was the petitioner against KNUT.

Yet as the school year begins, the old grievances remain. There is no indication that TSC will undertake a full implementation of the 2017-2021 Collective Bargaining Agreement as demanded by KNUT and sanctioned by the courts and Parliament.

There are also no indications that TSC intends to pay the dues that have been denied members of KNUT.

There is equally no indication the TSC will restore KNUT’s membership register to its June 2019 status. TSC has shown no indication to gazette aagency fee for KNUT in liaison with the Ministry of Labour.

This stand-off benefits no one in the long chain of education stakeholders. It does not benefit the teachers, the TSC, the pupils or even parents. In the long run, the absence of a strong and credible teachers’ union will be extremely costly to the country, making the current efforts against KNUT deeply short sighted.

In the spirit of the difficult times the country finds itself in against the background of increasing expectation of increased surveillance in our schools and quality learning, KNUT and TSC must return to the table, go through the rulings of the court and resolutions of Parliament and begin a fresh journey of good faith that benefits all.

It is increasingly clear that honesty is the missing link in the search for a solution to this dispute. The parties don’t need to be permanently in court or at war. In fact, the courts have asked the two parties to negotiate.

Related news

On its part, TSC must appreciate its responsibility to support and protect teacher professionalism, teacher rights that include the right to belong to unions of their choice and teachers right to organize in order to check administrative power.

Earlier National Assembly Speaker Justine Muturi had told the education committee to keep off the KNUT versus TSC squabbles.

The Commission has advertised 13,000 teachers promotion slots that will be based on career progression guidelines (CPG) which has been subject of contention between the employer and Kenya National Union of Teachers (Knut). The latter’s spirited opposition against CPG has seen thousands of teachers quit the union to benefit from the Sh54 billion 2017-2021 collective bargaining agreement (CBA).

Raila’s latest statement comes in the back drop of financial turbulence at the former teachers’ giant union. The cash strapped union is finding itself between a rock and a hard place even as it prepares for elections in the coming month. It remains to be seen if Raila’s interjection will solve the feud between the two sides that have recently taken hard line stands.

Advertised PSC Jobs for Degree, Higher National Diploma and Diploma holders

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Public Service Commission (PSC) has today invited applicants who are Degree, Higher National Diploma and Diploma holders to apply for 1,300 positions of Vocational and Technical Trainers available in 220 TVET institutions. Details of the posts and mode of application can be accessed on the PSC website:

www.publicservice.go.ke

The applications should reach the respective Boards/Councils on or before 17th April 2023 (Latest 5.00pm East Africa Time).

NOTE: Successful candidates will be required to apply for licensing and registration by the TVET Authority.

Here are the advertised jobs:

2019 East Africa School Games, FEASSSA, Latest results

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The 2019 edition of the East Africa School games entered day three on Sunday 18th August, 2019 in Arusha Tanzania. The games brings together teams from hosts Tanzania, Kenya, Uganda, Rwanda, Zanzibar and Malawi.

Here are the latest results;

Collated Results

🏀Basketball Boys

1). LDK (Rw) 95 vs 22 Galanos(Tz)
2). Don Bosco(Tz) 34 vs 65 Laiser Hill (Ke)
3). Seroma CH(Ug) 93 vs 42 Lord Baden Powell(Tz)
4). College Marie Reine(Rw) 49 vs 77 Buddo SS(Ug)

🏀Basketball Girls

1). LDK(Rw) 49 vs 32 Juhudi(Tz)
2). Machame(Tz) 16 vs 78 St. Noa(Ug)
3). Kaya Tiwi(Ke) 58 vs 66 St. Mary’s Kitende(Ug)
4). Nabisunsa (Ug) 68 vs 36 Joseph & Mary(Tz)

⚽Soccer Boys

✅Ruwuiko(Tz) 1 vs 1 Dagoretti High (Ke)

🏐Boys Volleyball

✅ Milambo(Tz) 0 vs 3 Mogonga(Ke) {18 vs 25, 17 vs 25, 18 vs 25}
✅Don Bosco Gatenga (Rw) 3 vs 1 Lelmokwo (Ke) [25 vs 20, 15 vs 25, 25 vs 15, 25 vs 21]

🏑Hockey Boys

1). St. Antony’s (Ke) 01 vs 00 Meru School(Ke)
2). Namilyango College(Ug) 01 vs 03 Ntare School(Ug)
3). St. Mary’s Kisubi(Ug) 05 vs 01 Kawempe Muslim(Ug)

🏑Hockey Girls

1). Namagunga(Ug) 00 vs 03 Kakungulu Memorial(Ug)
2). St. John’s Kaloleni(Ke) 05 vs 00 Juhudi (Tz)
3). Nyamira Girls (Ke) 05 vs 00 Lindi (Tz)
4). Bweranyange(Ug) 00 vs 02 St. Cecilia Misikhu (Ke)

🤾‍♂Handball Boys

1). Mwanakwerekwe(Zan) 21 vs 24 Kakungulu (Ug)

Kimilili(Ke) 33 vs 12 Vwawa (Tz)

Gombe SS(Ug) 21 vs 33 Es Kigoma (Rw)

Kilombero SS (Tz) 15 vs 40 Adegi (Rw)

College Gisenyi (Rw) 36 vs 21 St. Lucia (Ug)

Vwawa (Tz) 20 vs 16 Mwanakwerekwe (Zn)

🤾‍♀Handball Girls

  1. Kibuli SS (Ug) 26 vs 14 Kizuka (Tz)
  2. Es Kiziguro (Rw) 15 vs 21 Kamusinga (Ke)
  3. Mbogo (Ug) 27 vs 23 Kawanda (Ug)
  4. Kilole (Tz) 15 vs 29 Kirandich (Ke)

🏈Rugby 15’s

1). Namilyango College (Ug) 62 vs 00 Okeeswa(Tz)
2). Ntare School(Ug) 03 vs 31 St. Mary’s Kisubi (Ug)
3).Kangaru (Ke) 05 vs 32 Dagoretti (Ke)

⚽Soccer Boys; Primary

✅Mhiana (Tz) 01 vs 01 Coast(Ke)

🏓Table Tennis Boys
1). Haile Selassie (Zn) 3 vs 2 Morogoro (Tz)
2). Kenya 1- 3 vs 0 Kenya 2
3). G.S Rilima 2 (Rw) 0 vs 3 G.S Rilima 1(Rw)

🏓Table Tennis Girls
1). Goba Mpakani(Tz) 3 vs 2 Haile Selassie (Zn)
2). Mbogo College (Ug) 2 vs 3 St. Michael International School(Ug)

@FEASSSA2019

Day 2: Saturday 17th August, 2019

Collated Results

🏀Basketball

Girls
1.St.Mary’s kitende (Ug) 71 vs 48 Nabisunsa(Ug)
2.St.bernedette(Rw) 37 vs 42 Kaya Tiwi
3.Juhudi(Tz) 44 vs 46 Machame(Tz)
4.Buruburu(Ke) 45 vs 42
LDK(Rw)

Boys
1.Buddo (Ug)75 vs 61 Seroma(Ug)
2.Galanos (Tz)31 vs 51Donbosco(
3.Kibuli(Ug)44 vs 62
LDK(Rw)

  1. Dagoretti (Ke) 53 vs 49 College Marie Reine (Rw)

Day 2: Saturday 17th August, 2019

Collated results

🏐Volleyball Boys

1). PS Karubanda(Rw) 1 vs 3 Don Bosco Gatenga(Rw) [23 vs 25, 25 vs 21, 23 vs 25, 18 vs 25]
2). Lelmokwo(Ke) 2 vs 3 Twangoma(Tz) [23 vs 25, 25 vs 23, 23 vs 25, 25 vs 19, 14 vs 16]
3). Mogonga(Ke) 3 vs 0 Mbogo Mixed(Ug) [25 vs 16, 25 vs 22, 28 vs 26]
4). IPRC Karongi(Rw) 3 vs 0 Dynamic (Ug) [25 vs 09, 27 vs 25, 25 vs 17]

🏐Volleyball Girls

1). Cheptil(Ke) 3 vs 2 Soweto(Ke) [27 vs 25, 21 vs 25, 25 vs 21, 14 vs 25, 15 vs 12]
2). Trust High(Ug) 1 vs 3 GS Indangaburezi(Rw) [16 vs 25, 25 vs 20, 15 vs 25, 22 vs 25]

Table tennis results
Day 1.

BOYS
1.HAILE SELASSE -(3) (ZANI)VS MOROGORO(TZ)-(2)

GIRLS

  1. GOBA MPAKANI (TZ)-(3) VS HAILE SELASSE (ZANI)-(2)

BOYS
2.KENYA 1-(3) VS KENYA 2-(0)

GIRLS

  1. MBOGO COLLEGE(UG)-(2) VS ST.MICHAEL INT SCH (UG)-(3)

BOYS
4.G.S RILIMA 2(RWA)-(0) VS G.S RILIMA 1 (RWA)-(3)

Country codes
Ke- Kenya
Ug- Uganda
Tz- Tanzania
Zan- Zanzibar
Mal- Malawi