The Standard Sports

Learning institutions, student numbers surge amid quality fears

Education
By Mike Kihaki | May 12, 2025
AMP
Education Cabinet Secretary Julius Migos Ogamba during the commissioning of new classrooms at Mabwaita Comprehensive School in Sotik, Bomet County, on January 13, 2025. [File, Standard]

The education sector has experienced a surge in new learning institutions and a sharp increase in student enrolments across all levels.

According to the 2025 Economic Survey by the Kenya National Bureau of Statistics (KNBS), the number of basic learning institutions rose by 38.8 per cent, jumping from 93,281 in 2023 to 129,463 in 2024.

A key driver of this growth was the integration of junior secondary schools into the basic education system. These new institutions alone made up 24.7 per cent of the total, reshaping the country’s foundational learning infrastructure.

“The massive jump in institutions reflects ongoing efforts to fully implement the Competency-Based Curriculum,” noted the KNBS report.

Other sectors also experienced steady growth was Pre-primary schools which increased by 1.8 per cent to 47,760, while primary schools grew 9.6 per cent to 38,997. Secondary schools saw only a marginal rise of three institutions, from 10,752 to 10,755. The number of children in pre-primary education inched up to 2.91 million, with boys’ enrolment growing faster (1.5 percent) than girls’ (0.5 percent). The number of learners in ECDE teacher training slightly declined by 0.1 per cent to 2.65 million.

Following the phase-out of the Kenya Certificate of Primary Education (KCPE) exams, and replaced by the CBC’s Kenya Primary School Education Assessment (KPSEA), 1.31 million Grade 6 pupils registered in 2024—a 2.5 per cent increase from the previous year. According to the report, candidates who actually sat for the papers grew by 5.5 per cent, but only three subjects saw more than 10 per cent of learners exceeding expectations.

This is a worrying trend with education experts noting that learners are passed to the next level without considering of quality of education earned. “The performance gaps and uneven growth in technical education underscore the need for targeted policy support,” said Henry Embeywa. 

Share this story
Black Friday Kenya's football fans will want to quickly forget
Harambee Stars had the chance to bury the match, but they didn’t. They were inexcusable for some blunt finishes for most of the evening in this quarter-final tie.
Lions of Teranga roar past Cranes
Senegal knocks Uganda out after a 1-0 win, sets up a semi-final face-off with Morocco to be played on Tuesday, August 26, at the Nelson Mandela Stadium, Kampala.
Man City's old problems rear their head as Tottenham ease to victory
Manchester City's troubles from last season were exposed once more in a humbling 2-0 home defeat to Tottenham on Saturday.
Kenyans win big as East Africa school games end
St Luke’s Kimilili and Moi Girls Kamusinga end six-year handball trophy drought. Kenyan sides Cheptil and Kwanthanze reclaim volleyball titles.
Musingu wins silver as Ugandans triumph
Musingu High School from Kakamega are the 2025 Federation of East Africa Secondary Schools Sports Associations football boys silver medalists.
.
RECOMMENDED NEWS