Commission for University Education Chairman Henry Thairu shortly after press briefing at Serena Hotel on September 4, 2015. The Commission for University Education (CUE) is on the spot over the recent suspension of degree courses by professional bodies. PHOTO | JAMES EKWAM | NATION MEDIA GROUP
degree courses by professional bodies. PHOTO | JAMES EKWAM | NATION MEDIA GROUP
In Summary
- Law, engineering, medicine and pharmacy courses offered by a number of universities have been affected due to concerns about the quality of their graduates.
- Moi, Egerton, Maseno and Masinde Muliro universities have been affected. So has been the Technical University of Kenya, Catholic University and the University of Nairobi, Kenya’s oldest institution of higher learning.
- At Maseno University, Pharmaceutical Science and Medicine degree courses have admitted students despite failing to get the approval of relevant professional bodies.
- CUE chairman Prof Henry Thairu blames poor working relations between the commission and professional bodies which, he says, has created instability in the higher education sector.
Law,
engineering, medicine and pharmacy courses offered by a number of
universities have been affected due to concerns about the quality of
their graduates.
Moi, Egerton, Maseno and Masinde
Muliro universities have been affected. So has been the Technical
University of Kenya, Catholic University and the University of Nairobi,
Kenya’s oldest institution of higher learning.
The courses are supposed have been approved by the Commission for University Education before being rolled out.
There are 19 professional bodies in Kenya whose courses are offered at the university level.
However, universities seem to have ignored quality regulations as they focus on revenue generated by self-sponsored students.
According
to the Universities Standards and Guidelines 2014, CUE is required to
only approve professional courses when it has confirmed that the
physical facilities, equipment and lecturers are adequate and that the
legislated relevant professional body had okayed the programme.
UNQUALIFIED LECTURERS
During this year’s university admissions, Kenya Universities and Colleges Central Placement (KUCCPS) admitted as low as 18 government-sponsored students for one course in one university due to lack of space.
During this year’s university admissions, Kenya Universities and Colleges Central Placement (KUCCPS) admitted as low as 18 government-sponsored students for one course in one university due to lack of space.
However, the same university admitted more than 100 students in the same course under the self-sponsored programme.
Lack
of qualified lecturers is another big problem. Documents filed in court
by Engineers Board of Kenya (EBK) in response to a suit by engineering
graduates it has refused to grant practising certificates, revealed that
Masinde Muliro University hired a home science graduate to teach public
health engineering — one of the degree courses that EBK has refused to
recognise.
The board also claims the institution hired
seven ‘‘quacks’’ masquerading as engineers to teach in the faculty while
a geologist was engaged to teach geotechnical engineering.
The EBK also claims it found agricultural engineers teaching other engineering disciplines at Egerton University.
Despite
having about 1,500 students taking law, Moi University does not have
enough infrastructure; a library, moot court, seminar rooms and
lecturers. The lecturer-to-student ratio is 1:60 against the
requirement of 1:15.
At Maseno University,
Pharmaceutical Science and Medicine degree courses have admitted
students despite failing to get the approval of relevant professional
bodies.
At the Technical University of Kenya, about
3,000 engineering students are at home following the suspension of the
course after failing to get accreditation.
Lecturers from Technical University of Mombasa
go on strike over the new NHIF rates on July 3, 2015. Lack of qualified
lecturers is another big problem. PHOTO | LABAN WALLOGA | NATION MEDIA
GROUP
PROGRAMME EVALUATION
Currently, government-sponsored students pay Sh26,000 per year while those in parallel programmes pay about Sh160,000 per year in arts courses and more than Sh200,000 in science courses.
Currently, government-sponsored students pay Sh26,000 per year while those in parallel programmes pay about Sh160,000 per year in arts courses and more than Sh200,000 in science courses.
According to
the regulations and standards, for a university to be set up it must
have, among others, academic resources such as land, physical
facilities, finances, staff, library services and
equipment appropriate and adequate for the proposed academic
programmes.
The regulations also require universities to submit to the commission all academic programmes for accreditation.
CUE
is supposed to evaluate the proposed programmes to ensure they meet the
various requirements and academic standards prior to the courses being
launched.
The regulations also require each university
to institute its own internal quality assurance policy, system and
mechanisms in line with the commission’s prescribed guidelines.
Kenya
School of Law director Patrick Lumumba admits that the quality of
education at the university level is below the required standards.
“We
have lowered the standards provided you can pay,” Prof Lumumba
observed, who blames the crisis on reduction of funding by the
government.
PEER PRESSURE
Universities, he says, have been compelled to mount programmes for revenue collection lowering standards.
“The
bulk of students who are admitted to the legal profession are not the
very best and we must admit that there are a lot of students going into
this profession because of peer pressure. We must deal with the question
of numbers vis-a-vis the number of facilities going forward,” Prof
Lumumba observed.
Prof Lumumba defended the suspension
of the courses saying the Council for Legal Education had been
interacting with these institutions and making demands to them to
ensure that the standards are met.
On Monday, the council stopped University of Nairobi’s Mombasa and Kisumu campuses from admitting new law students for the current academic year.
On Monday, the council stopped University of Nairobi’s Mombasa and Kisumu campuses from admitting new law students for the current academic year.
It also
rejected Jaramogi Oginga Odinga University’s application for
accreditation while Catholic University of Eastern Africa is facing
closure by November 23.
Council secretary Wanyama Kulundu-Bitonye said Moi University had ignored its advice for more than two years.
“The
university was given two years to address our concern since the number
of students had gone up and the library had totally collapsed. The
school had Library space for 80 students with a population of 1,600 and
there were no books,” Prof Bitonye said.
Kenya School of Law Director
Patrick Lumumba speaks at a past function. Prof Lumumba has urged law
students to work hard. FILE PHOTO | JARED NYATAYA | NATION MEDIA GROUP
There are two professors, five senior lecturers, 11 lectures and 12 assistant lecturers for 1,600 students.
“The
shortage of lectures is the biggest elephant in the room. There has
been growth of law schools but there is no evidence of development of
capacity in terms of human resource,” he said.
KUCCPS, which is a statutory body tasked with placement of students in universities and colleges, absolves itself from blame.
“We
normally get available capacities from individual universities and our
work is to fill them. We expect the universities to ensure that they
meet the requirements of the regulator in courses they offer,” John
Muraguri, KUCCPS Chief Executive officer, said.
Experts
observe that any student who graduates without getting the greenlight
of a professional body wastes their time and money as they will not be
accredited by the same bodies.
Education Cabinet
Secretary Jacob Kaimenyi wants CUE to live up to its expectations. “CUE
should ensure that there is quality as demanded by professional bodies
... they should be consulted and involved while developing any related
programmes,” Prof Kaimenyi sad.
CUE chairman Prof Henry
Thairu blames poor working relations between the commission and
professional bodies which, he says, has created instability in the
higher education sector.
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