Education is entering a very brutal phase and many parents are not ready for the cost that is coming.
The old system where a child is given homework, disappears to the house, copies answers from ChatGPT, submits neat work the next morning and everyone pretends learning has happened is slowly becoming useless.
Schools must now become very practical.
A serious school of the future will not just ask a child to write an essay about coding or submit an assignment that was clearly done by AI, it will put that child in front of a teacher and ask them to solve the problem live, explain the thinking, make mistakes in public, correct the mistakes and prove that the skill is inside their head.
That means live coding, live presentations, live debates, live experiments, live business pitching, live writing, live mathematics, live problem solving and teachers who are sharp enough to know when a child understands something and when a child is just carrying polished nonsense from the internet.
This kind of education will be expensive because it needs better teachers, smaller classes, proper labs, real equipment, serious internet, project rooms, cameras, computers and teachers who are not just marking papers but watching children perform actual skills.
Personally, I would rather take my child to a school where they do fewer fake assignments and more real work, because the world is no longer rewarding children who can copy answers, it is rewarding people who can stand somewhere under pressure and actually do the thing.
@FrankMtetezi Can you use the same comparative in economics of the said countries with Kenya? Can you compare Dubai with Kenya? Poverty index? Money flow? Access to basic services? Wacha kua mjinga
Nick Shirley’s documentary on the fraud case in Minnesota should teach Africans one uncomfortable lesson, White societies do not play around with their resources.
Watch how David, the older researcher who spent years digging into this, approaches the issue. His obsession with facts and the refusal to let sentiment override accountability!!
And this is where we keep failing ourselves. We avoid hard questions because we’re afraid of being labelled xenophobic, intolerant, or politically incorrect.
At some point, it is reasonable to ask, how did you get this rich? How have you managed to own all these apartments??
@ItsMutai Funny.
During my time in college we didnt have theatrics that money has been disbursed. I t was done seamlessly and on time. You crush the system then come to save it? That's some whacko move...
@OpiyoWandayi@KenyaPower So MCAs will launch what?
Instead of launching hydros, solar or wind projects, you busy launching poles and lights.
Grow up and do something that gives you respect.
@EngineersBoard You have sunk ao.low that you share jobs from the govt. We pay annual fee yet you cannot look for placementa for new graduates. All you do ia call for CPDs with zero outcome. Young graduates get to the market and work for as low as 15k, yet they are GE. Style up