Hope for Unemployed Teachers As Ruto Promises Recruitment of 35,000 Teachers
According to him, a comparable amount has already been hired.
The Teachers Service Commission made the first bulk employment announcement by the Kenya kwanza administration in January.
President William Ruto has stated that the government will hire 35,000 new teachers to help close the teacher shortfall in public schools.
This, according to Ruto, is in line with his vow to close the country’s current shortfall gap.
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We have already employed 35,000 instructors this year to ensure that our students receive the necessary, high-quality education, and that is the largest number we intend to increase the next year, according to Ruto.
The reason for this is that we place a high value on the education of Kenyans and our children.
He spoke at the Limuru Girls Secondary School’s centennial celebration on Saturday.The institution has been in existence for 100 years.
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Cabinet Secretaries for Education Ezekiel Machogu and Vice President Rigathi Gachagua were also present. The Kenya Kwanza administration originally announced the Teachers Service Commission’s mass hiring in January.
It had planned to hire 116,000 new instructors in the first year, but changed its mind due to the state of the economy.
“We know that this coming year, we had promised 116,000 teachers,” said Ezekiel Machogu, cabinet secretary for education, “but because of the nature of the economy, we are going to do it gradually.”
Hope for Unemployed Teachers As Ruto Promises Recruitment of 35,000 Teachers
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In 1922, Arnold Butler McDonnell, a pioneering tea planter in the country, established Limuru Girls’ School for Evelyn Mitchell and three of his other daughters, as well as locals who joined his estate. It’s classified as a national school.
The Anglican Church of Kenya now oversees the junior school, which was previously known as Hill Preparatory School.
At the same time, Ruto claimed that his administration had more than doubled Tvet and higher education financing. At the same time, Ruto claimed that his administration had more than doubled Tvet and higher education financing.
He stated that they had increased the funds from Sh5.2 billion to Sh10 billion in the last 15 years.
Our tertiary institutions have floundered because we lacked the fortitude to confront the challenges they faced.