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Tom Mboya University who should go to Germany were being trained by The 20X Entrepreneur in Homa Bay County. More than 700 students who should go for German jobs have been trained on financial management and entrepreneurship to cushion them from extravagance. [James Omoro, Standard]
Questions linger whether the government will open applications to universities this week for over 246,000 candidates who sat 2024 KCSE, amid a court battle over the higher education funding model.
Education Cabinet Secretary Julius Ogamba promised the candidates that the portal would be open this week, but government sources told The Standard it is not clear whether the Kenya Universities and Colleges Central Placement Service (KUCCPS) woule open the portal, yet.
Last week, KUCCPS said they had already collected necessary data and ready to open the portal. An appeal lodged by the Ministry of Education on the university funding model, will be heard today, even as growing uncertainty on courses application process throws the admissions process into quandary.
Even as the government plans to open the course selection portal, the process remains tied to the contested funding model, creating anxiety among students, parents, and institutions.
The uncertainty surrounding funding remains a pressing concern with the students set to join university in September.
With admissions set for later this year, the next five months are critical in determining how new students will pay for their education.
Universities are also facing budgetary uncertainty, as they rely heavily on government capitation and student fees for their operations.
On Tuesday, the University and academic staff union (UASU) warned that lack of student funding affects the entire university eco-system and operations.
UASU organising secretary Onesmus Mutio said lack of government funding could see the institutions struggle to pay staff salaries, bills and honour other obligations.
“The universities are already in a dire situation and extended under funding will be detrimental to the operations and could see more cases like that of Moi University or Technical University of Kenya,” Mutio told The Standard.
The new funding model, which the court overturned, was designed to allocate financial aid based on students’ financial need rather than the previous system of uniform state funding for all university students.
The universities were also given the autonomy to set their own tuition fees, leading to significant variations in pricing.
The 2024 KCSE cohort would be the third group under the now-nullified funding model, which allocated financial support based on students’ financial need.