KCPE 2023 Placement

By | December 18, 2023

2024 Form one placement schools; Here are all the must-know details.

KCPE 2023 PLACEMENT

The 2024 Form One Selection and Placement exercise was undertaken to ensure a smooth transition from primary to secondary schooling for the 2023 KCPE Examination candidates.

This process has been carried out in a way that ensures fairness in the placement of KCPE Examination candidates of 2024. The placement was based on choice, merit and availability of places.

The 2023 KCPE Examination candidates constitute the 7th and last cohort of learners under the 8-4-4 system to be admitted to secondary schools under the Government’s policy of 100% transition.

The Ministry of Education is committed to ensuring that parents/guardians with learners joining Form One are not overburdened with unnecessary requirements.

Principals should exercise caution while listing the requirements so that the cost of education is reduced as much as possible. Principals should ensure that no student is sent away from school over illegal levies.

Focus on the placement of 2023 KCPE candidates.

The Ministry has placed all eligible candidates appropriately in secondary schools in keeping with the 100% transition policy. This selection process was strictly guided by the principles of merit, choice, equity and availability of space in placing candidates.

This was conducted as follows:

S.NOCATEGORYFEMALEMALETOTAL
1County107,46191,566199,027
2Extra County111,105117,055228,160
3National18,79420,17838,972
4SNE8719481,819
5Sub County372,459387,203762,610
Total610,690616,9501,230,588

In the placement, all candidates who scored 400 marks and above were placed in the National or Extra County schools of their choice. The Special Needs Education candidates were also placed in the regular schools of their preference, while others were placed in special schools based on their disability categories on merit and choice.

Affirmative Action in Slums

The Ministry has applied affirmative action to achieve equity for children from the slum areas. In this year’s selection, 270 students from slum areas were placed in national and extra-county schools of their choice.

This is in addition to those placed through merit and other criteria. This intervention is in line with the government policy to achieve parity in education by considering the needy and vulnerable children in informal settlements in urban areas.

Placement of Refugees

For the first time, the Ministry placed 9,019 learners from primary schools located in the refugee camps in public secondary schools. This is in line with the 2017 Djibouti declaration on Regional Refugee Education that stipulates the need to enhance the capacity of IGAD member states to implement commitments to quality education and learning for refugees and host communities.

Counties with limited capacities

The following Counties had inadequate capacities according to their candidature as indicated in the table.

 S.N O COUNTYNO. OF SCHOOLS CAPACITYKCPECANDIDATURE DEFICIT
 1 Nairobi 109 27,145 72,232 45,087
 2 Kilifi 164 31,258 41,470 10,212
 3 Mombasa 56 12,801 22,360 9,559
 4 Kajiado 95 20,640 25,605 4,965
 5 Turkana 63 12,096 16,796 4,700
 6 Garissa 41 7,273 9,908 2,635
 7 Kwale 104 22,633 24,442 1,809
 8Taita Taveta 54 6,768 8,477 1,709
 9 Kitui 449 41,184 42,262 1,078
 10 Narok 171 33,360 34,262 902
 11Tana River 38 5,232 6,035 803
 12 Baringo 176 18,144 18,757 613
 13West Pokot 185 16,178 16,687 509
 14 Lamu 27 3,264 3,760 496

To mitigate the shortfall, candidates were placed in other counties with sufficient capacities.

The above scenario can be considered an eye-opener to an underlying problem that calls for serious early redress in the wake of CBC.

It is against this background that the Education CS will take a personal initiative to consult with leadership from these areas to address this perennial deficit in capacity.