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Over 960,000 students will take the KCSE starting on Tuesday.

Exams for more than 960,000 candidates for the Kenya Certificate of Secondary Education (KSCE) will start on Tuesday.

The subjects that will be most popular during the first week of this year’s KCSE exams, which will start at 10,755 exam centers nationwide, are French, German, Sign Language, Arabic, Music, and Home Science.

The first group of students at Kisii’s Kereri Girls High School are about to take an exam, and the administration of the school is optimistic that the more than eight hundred applicants have studied sufficiently.

Education stakeholders, however, are concerned about the state of the road system, which may make it difficult to deliver exam materials on time. Bobasi Professionals chair Dr. Samuel Siringi stated, “The collapse of this bridge in Nyamache may hinder the smooth collection of exam papers, as this bridge has taken more than a year to get reconstructed.”

The arrangements in Murang’a County have been finalized to guarantee that the more than 31,000 candidates in the county take their exams without any disruptions. Unauthorized access to exam centers will be dealt with legally, according to county director of education Ann Kiilu.

At the Kiangunyi Girls High School, she gave a speech on a day dedicated to prayer. “We would like to assure the parents that we will

“We are asking all parents, wherever they may be, to just pray for our candidates and we want to assure them that we will conduct a credible examination,” she stated. “For those who are invigilating exams, take it upon yourselves as if you are invigilating learners who have gone through hell trying to make their future,” stated Collins Oyuu, secretary general of the Kenya National Union of Teachers (KNUT). “Please be so kind as to ensure that everything we do is in line with standard operating procedures for exam invigilation and supervision.” However, KNUT is urging the government to step up security in light of recent incidents in which both teachers and their students have been ambushed while instruction is taking place in areas prone to insecurity.

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