A tutor of governance/ Gunners enthusiast/posting
#humor#art#history#cool#motivation#politics#sports
content.
DM for credit -the king of social media is x.
Give security to those in danger ,gladden those in fear.If people oppose you,take what they say to heart,if people have grudges,let them express themselves.
Limuru Girls High School Chief Principal, Susan Kariuki, has overseen a questionable increase in school fees from KSh 53,000 to KSh 98,000. One of the more concerning items is the “Academic Improvement Programme,” for which every parent is required to pay KSh 21,000 annually. With a student population of about 2,500, this amounts to approx KSh 52,500,000 collected each year.
Parents across Kenya are quietly carrying a burden that is getting heavier every term.
School fees in many high schools are rising fast, and for many families, it is becoming harder to keep up.
What worries me most is that this is starting to look like a nationwide pattern.
Look at this:
Moi Girls Nairobi: 53K → nearly 68K
Karima Girls: 53K → 69K
Many Hill Girls: 53K → 137K
For many parents, that is not just an increase. That is the difference between staying in school and being sent home.
And there is another issue I have noted.
Some schools keep the “official” fee at 53K on paper, then add compulsory charges outside the fee structure that push the real cost to 80K or more.
So the number on paper looks acceptable.
But the reality parents face is very different.
That raises serious questions about transparency and affordability.
If your child’s school has increased fees or introduced extra mandatory charges, send me the fee structure.
I am compiling the evidence and will raise it with the Ministry of Education (Kenya).
And to be fair, schools also need support.
Schools don’t raise fees in a vacuum. They are trying to stay operational.
But if government funding is falling short, parents should not be left to absorb the entire cost.
Education should not become a privilege for those who can afford it.
"I am a male teacher at Alliance Girls High School. The news that the Chief Principal Miss Margret Njeru will face disciplinary action has come as a great relief to many of us.
Over the past few months, we have been working under an atmosphere of fear and intimidation. Colleagues—particularly those who are not from the same ethnic background as the Principal—have been subjected to processes that feel unfair, biased, and, at times, predetermined.
A very recent case illustrates this concern. A male teacher (name withheld), who has served at the school for seven years, raised an issue regarding the newly introduced phone booths. He proposed that their management be placed under staff welfare rather than the administration. His reasoning was simple: many students still rely on teachers to help them communicate with their families, yet the current system is restrictive and expensive, charging KSh 20 per minute and not allowing reverse calls. It appears structured more to maximize profits—reportedly running into millions monthly—than to support students’ needs.
Shortly after this discussion gained momentum, he was issued with a show-cause letter alleging inappropriate conduct with a student, specifically that he had hugged a student, and faced possible interdiction. To many of us, the timing of these allegations raised serious concerns.
Personally, I raised concerns over a 25 million staff trip to Dubai, and immediately started getting mistreatment. If anyone is in doubt, they can confirm if this item appeared in the budget.
There is also growing unease about the role of the Deputy Principal, Dr. Cecilia, who joined the school about four months ago. Many staff members feel that she has contributed to an environment where intimidation is used to silence dissenting voices, sometimes through unorthodox means.
For now, the news of disciplinary action offers a sense of hope. While we understand that the situation may evolve, we hope it leads to more fairness, openness, and consideration in leadership.
We are going through a difficult period, and we appeal to the ministry to listen to these concerns and take action that restores trust and protects the welfare of both staff and students."
🚨⚠️ Declan Rice: “Eberechi Eze’s one is a clear penalty. I don’t know how that’s not been given”.
“I think the fans provoked the decision and changed the referee’s mind”.
Limuru Girls High School Chief Principal, Susan Kariuki, has also overseen a questionable increase in school fees from KSh 53,000 to KSh 98,000.
One of the more concerning items is the “Academic Improvement Programme,” for which every parent is required to pay KSh 21,000…
Alliance Girls High School Principal Margaret Njeru is set to face a harsh disciplinary action after implementing a shocking, unauthorized fee hike from the approved Sh53,558 to a staggering Sh120,179. Is this even normal?
This is South African men and women, stripping and beating up a Nigerian women. Is this not enough for other African countries to arise and kick South Africa out ?
@CyrilRamaphosa enabled this and even called other Africans criminals.
@baroswahjr Same should happen to Buru buru a teacher covers 2 topics during december paid online tution, when school resumes he refuses to repeat for those who didn't attend tution as a form of https://t.co/m9lTGVcxe4 holiday tution mandatory?
Before sending her that money, ask yourself How many men in her phone contacts have been asked the same question before she thinks of you? You'll delete her contact immediately.
🗣️Ally McCoist: “I am telling you if that foul takes place in the #Arsenal box and gets given as a penalty, when it goes to VAR it stays a penalty.” 💯
Ally is 100% right. This is an absolute disgrace.