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Mackatiani, Caleb; Imbovah, Mercy; Imbova, Navin; Gakungai, D. K. – Journal of Education and Practice, 2016
This paper provides a critical appraisal of development of education system in Kenya. Education of any country is an important tool for the developmental process of that particular nation. There are various factors that influence national systems of education. They range from social, economical, technological to political influences. In this…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Educational Development, Politics of Education, Educational Policy
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Vavrus, Frances – European Education, 2018
This article uses a comparative historical approach to examine the Teachers for East Africa (TEA) and the Teacher Education in East Africa (TEEA) programs, an influential educational development effort that involved U.S. and British college graduates in East African schools and colleges during the decade of 1961-1971. Drawing on postcolonial…
Descriptors: Educational History, Educational Development, College Graduates, International Educational Exchange
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Omwami, Edith Mukudi – Journal of Educational Administration and History, 2014
This paper examines the agentive role of the colonial administration in accessing formal education for Africans in North Nyanza, Kenya from 1890 to 1920. It demonstrates the complexities of the colonial experience in which the ultimate application of policy and practice was shaped by the overriding principle of protection of the economic and…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Educational History, Administrator Role, Foreign Policy
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Wainaina, Paul K.; Arnot, Madeleine; Chege, Fatuma – Educational Research, 2011
Background: Youth citizenship is now on the international agenda with African countries increasingly interrogating their national perspectives on citizenship and citizenship education. In this emergent field of research, African scholars are beginning to challenge the prevailing (Western) theories of citizenship and democracy. Purpose: The aim of…
Descriptors: Citizenship, Citizenship Education, Foreign Countries, Political Influences
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Somerset, Anthony – Journal of Education Policy, 2011
Throughout Kenya's history, tensions between two goals have characterised the educational policy debate: first, the expansion of access; second, the containment of costs. During the colonial period, cost-containment predominated, leading to severe restrictions on access and massive unmet social demand. Then, during post-Independence years,…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Public Policy, Educational Policy, Educational Development
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Somerset, Anthony – Comparative Education, 2009
Since Independence in 1963, Kenya has launched three Free Primary Education programmes: the first in 1974, the second in 1979 and the most recent in 2003. Using historical data, this paper first outlines each initiative in turn, and discusses why, in the case of the earlier initiatives, impressive initial gains in improved access proved difficult…
Descriptors: Elementary Education, Foreign Countries, Educational History, Educational Change
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Oketch, Moses; Rolleston, Caine – Review of Research in Education, 2007
This article reviews the evolution of education policies in the East African region in a historical context. The focus is on the formulation of policies for access to primary and secondary education in Kenya, Uganda, and Tanzania since their independence in the 1960s. The three countries have common characteristics and historical backgrounds. For…
Descriptors: Elementary Secondary Education, Educational Change, Foreign Countries, Access to Education
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Whitehead, Clive – History of Education, 1993
Rejects Kilemi Mwiria's contention that the primary goal of the educational system in colonial Kenya was to deliberately prepare Africans for subjugation and subordination. Contends that the British government did not have the funds to support expansion or improvement of the African educational system. (CFR)
Descriptors: Capitalism, Colonialism, Educational Finance, Educational History