Kenya: International cooperation to achieve the education for all
1. International Cooperation to
Achieve the Education for All Goals
October 8th, 2013
Suguru Mizunoya
Assistant Professor,
Faculty of Social Science, CUHK
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- Strategies and Challenges for UNICEF
and its Partners in Kenya -
2. Topics
1. Introduction:
• EFA goals and Education Situation in Kenya
2. Partnership:
• How we work together
• Corruption and SWAP
3. Who is left behind
4. Approach: Are projects right answers? What should
be done under human rights approach
5. What I did not know about education development
6. What should we do? Post 2015 agenda
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3. Located in Eastern Africa.
Bordered with Somalia,
Ethiopia, South Sudan,
Uganda and Tanzania.
Population: 42.7 million
GDP Per Capita: US1,776
(PPP)
1. Introduction
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Arid and Semi-Arid
Land (ASAL)
4. EFA Goals
• Goal 1: Universal access to learning
• Goal 2: A focus on equity;
• Goal 3: Emphasis on learning outcomes;
• Goal 4: Broadening the means and the scope of basic education.
• Goal 5: Enhancing the environment for learning
• Goal 6: Strengthening partnerships by 2000
• ECDE & Primary education, Learning outcomes, Equity, Youth,
and Partnership
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5. 2. How Education Development Policies are
implemented: Partnership Structure at Edu Sector Level
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EDPCG
UNESCO JICA CIDA DFID WB, NGO, etc
MOE
Emergency
Cluster
GPE
6. Strategic Arrangement
• Constitution of Kenya 2010
• Government Strategic Paper – VISION 2030
• Education related Acts
– Basic Education Act 2013
– University Act 2013
– Teacher Service Commission Act 2013
– Sports Act 2013
– Kenya Institute of Curriculum Development Act 2013
• Education Policies
– Nomadic Education Policy
– Alternative Provision of Basic Education Policy
– Gender and Education Policy
– Special Needs Education Policy
• Sessional Paper (policy paper)
• Strategic Plan: Kenya Education Sector Support Plan (KESSEP 2013-2017)
• Programs, activities, monitoring
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Sector Level Matters
SWAP
7. SWAP, Politics, and Education
• GoK
– Pressure groups: MPs, Civil Society, People, sometimes DPs
– Deal with DPs, embassies (Israel), companies (PCs, milk - innovation or mare
business?)
• DPs
– Multilateral – some are driven by HQ
– Bilateral – driven by the politics of home country. e.g., DFID spends money for
Non-public actors, Impact evaluation.
• In order to access to FTI money, the former education sector plan KESSIP
was developed by the WB.
– Free Primary Education was the most critical political commitment of National
Rainbow Coalition which won the Presidential Election in 2002
– Joint Financial Agreement (WB, DFID, CIDA and UNICEF).
– “Corruption” in 2008 (46 million USD).
– Joint WB, CIDA, DFID vs MOE (UNICEF was floating around quietly).
– Relationship has not been fully recovered. DPs are seen as enemy by the MOE
officials (c.f., UNESCO, UNICEF, USAID).
• GPE changed its philosophy from FIT.
– Fund implementation plan
– Inclusive discussion
– “Seed” Money
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8. 3. Who is left behind?
• Abolition of School Fee:
– Free Primary School Policy in 2003.
– Free Day Secondary School Policy 2007.
– Provision of capitation to Pre-schools, partially started in 2012.
• ECDE National Policy
– Education, Health, Nutrition
• Nomadic Education Policy
• Alternative Provision of Basic Education
• Gender in Education Policy
• Special Needs Education Policy
• Refugee Education Policy (on-going)
• Sports Act (Talent Academy)
• But who is really left out?
– ECDE
– Nomadic Populations
– Children with disabilities
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9. ECDE and Devolution
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• NER of ECDE is 42% in 2009. Why so low?
• Became a part of compulsory basic education
under Basic Education Act 2013.
0% 10% 20% 30% 40%
• ECDE and Youth Polythec
were devolved in 2012.
• Issues: Capacity, finance,
guideline, coordination
10. Nomadic Education
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• Huge Regional Disparity, masked by national
average
• Mobile School
• Low Cost Boarding School
• County Level SWAP
• NoKET
• NACONEC
• Partners :DFID & CIDA (over 11 million USD in
3 years)
11. …and children with disability
• There is a policy: SNE policy
• Constitutional commitment: Disability representatives at county and
national levels
• Organizational commitment (AusAID, UNICEF, DFID, GPE, WB etc etc)
• The 2012 4W (who, what, where, when) of EDPCG has no organization
implementing any disability related program.
• Assuming 3% of children have disabilities, and 50% of them are out-of
school, 1.5% of school-going age children are not attending school.
• Negligible? 96% NER=4% of OOSC. 1.5/4=38% of OOSC have disability?
• OOSCI: Only 1 report have in-depth analysis of disability
• Why systematically neglected?
– Least developing countries?
– Countries like Kenya?
• Critical issue: DATA!!
(http://www.thelancet.com/journals/langlo/article/PIIS2214-
109X(13)70016-0/fulltext)
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12. 12
4. Human Rights and Education: Issues of
program Approach
Rights stipulated
in the CRC/COK
Not
OK
OK OK
Not
OK
Programme/Investments
Education Sector Related Rights
- Are all the rights monitored regularly?
- Do we know the situation at county
level?
- Are the set of indicators that monitor
rights agreed among stakeholders?
- Are we consistent in measuring rights
over years?
Sector
Review
Priority
Programme approach has a limitation in
terms of monitoring all the rights
13. UNICEF and MOE’s efforts towards establishing
Rights Based Monitoring System
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Meriting Tool
Establishment of
Education
Standards and
Quality Assurance
Council (ESQAC)
NIEMIS/SMS
systems
Standards
Setting
Data
collection
Accountability
Meriting Tool + Changes the education sector into
Child-Friendly Education System
ESQAC + Data Collection =
14. CoK
Education Act 2013
Policies
•ECDE policy
•Nomadic education policy
•APBE policy
•SNE policy
•Etc
MOE
implementation of
policies
(NESSP)
Family tree of human rights in
education sector in Kenya
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Convention of
the Right of the
Child
Meriting Tool
Annual
CRC
report
National and County Level Analysis to
make informed decisions
15. • Chinese Philosopher
• Human nature has an innate
tendency towards goodness, but
moral rightness cannot be
instructed down to the last
detail. This is why merely
external controls always fail in
improving society.
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Mèng Zǐ (B.C.372-298)
BC: Hindu, Babylonian Code, the Bible, Quran,
great philosophers
BC. 0
1945: End of WWII. Establishment of UN
1989: Convention of the Rights of the Child
2010: Constitution of Kenya
2013: Education Act
Today
English Bill of Rights (1689)
It took a few thousands years to establish human rights as a
modern legal system.
Human being had to go through Colonization, the World Wars to
establish the rights-based international organization.
It is only 1989 when Convention of Rights of the Child developed
and ratified.
It is only last 3 years, Kenya promulgated CoK and enacted the
Basic Education Bill.
It is, to my best knowledge, the first time in the human history
that Education Sector is (will be) equipped with the tool and the
national systems to monitor all the human rights to actualize all
the rights for children.
I call it a true innovation in the scale of human history.
16. The Key Partner: Head Teacher’s
Association: KEPSHA
• Highly recommended, please visit these sites.
• http://www.kepsha.com/#!home/mainPage
• http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cK1_UQC
Pzso
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17. 5. What I did not know before I went to Kenya
• Development is a second name of Peace
• Emergency is a part of daily life in Kenya.
– 2008 Post Election Violence
– 2011 Horn of Africa Drought
– 2012-13 Inter-community conflicts
– Election
– Periodical floods and Droughts
– Frequent Terror attackS
• Imagine how much education is disrupted.
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18. Disaster Risk Reduction
Structure of UNICEF KCO DRR in Education
Strategy
DRR and
Education
School Level
Curriculum
Child Friendly
School
Peace Education
National and Sub-
national Level
Emergency Preparedness and Response
Plan (EPRP)
Education Cluster Capacity
Development
Youth life skills
and livelihood
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UNICEF Trained all
the curriculum
developers of Kenya
Institute of
Education in 2012
19. DRR is essential for…
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Development
Communities
Humanitarian
Communities
Development
Communities
Humanitarian
Communities
DRR
For Sustainable Development
20. My Recommendation for
Post 2015 Agenda
• Disability
• DRR
• Peace
– Nomadic education
– Second chance in education
– Youth vocational training
– Life skills
• Mainstreaming human rights in the education
system (standards, accountability, capacity)
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22. Quality
• Massive increase in number of children in
primary school during last decade.
• The children are attending school but very little
learning is taking place.
• only three out 10 children in Class Three can read
a Class Two story [in English], while slightly more
than half of them can read a paragraph (UWEZO).
• http://www.uwezo.net/wp-
content/uploads/2012/10/KE_2012_AnnualAsses
sMentReport_PolicyBrief.pdf
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Hinweis der Redaktion
CurriculumThe development of DRR curriculum involves the Ministry of Education and Kenya Institute of Education in incorporating the disaster-related issues into the existing subjects, such as natural disasters, health and nutrition-related risks, hygiene malpractice, accidents and safe commuting, violence at home and school, and armed conflicts and insecurity. It aims to build disaster awareness, preparedness and mitigation skills for the learners – both teachers and students. CFS:Safety / Management: The school management is responsible for ensuring that schools are safe by developing and implementing the DRR mitigation plan (i.e. school contingency plan, evacuation plan, early warning system, etc) against a wide range of school-related disasters which include landslides, lightening, strong wind, floods, drought, fire, and poisonous chemical emissions. In addition, teachers and students can be trained by conducting regular emergency drills – which should be appropriate to both sudden-onset disasters and early warning situations. CFS: Action research: Action research helps teachers to better understand the nature of the school issue. It helps them to assess school needs, plan and make informed decisions to implement possible means of dealing with the risks, reflect the result of the action, and document the steps. It involves teachers, students, support stuff, administrators, and parents. Peace education is an integrated approach that encompasses a component of life skills trainings and awareness-raising activities which enable learners and communities to positively change their behaviours and attitudes to promote peace and prevent conflict. The introduction of peace education in school is intended to instil a sense of peace among the children and youth and embed peaceful and non-violence culture in their communities, no matter their circumstances, gender, location, religion, language, ethnicity or socio-economic background.Emergency Preparedness and Response Plan (EPRP)EPRP has a clear guide to promote preparedness, response and recovery, and create and maintain a safe learning environment, and protect access to education during emergency. It also encourages community- and school-level activities to enhance the overall awareness and capacity to withstand disasters. In addition, EPRP is a central component of DRR in education, which is one of the government priorities to address the chronic vulnerability to disasters. EPRP is therefore a critical framework to strengthen preparedness and risk mitigation, and integrate education in emergencies in the line Ministries.Cluster coordination The emergency cluster approach plays a key role in enhancing the promptness and effectiveness of collective response in the humanitarian context by ensuring greater coverage, accountability and partnership. It is a coordinated effort by the international humanitarian agencies to reach more beneficiaries, with more comprehensive needs-based relief and protection, in a more effective and timely manner.