Teachers, parents and students at Samoei Boys Secondary in Nandi Hills constituency and Taachasis Girls in Tinderet have been left in disbelief after the Kenya National Examination Council (KNEC) withheld their 2023 Kenya Certificate of Secondary Examinations (KCSE) results.
Last year, Samoei Boys Secondary School trounced others in the Nandi region as the best-performed school in KCSE results with a mean grade of B+ and a mean score of 9.8, beating well-known performing schools in Nandi county
However, the 2023 KCSE results left teachers, students and parents in a state of disbelief after the results which were to be obtained from the portal for individual students were withheld by KNEC for no apparent reasons
Nandi Hills MP Bernard Kitur, while speaking to members of the press at Samoei Boys Secondary School, said it was so heartbreaking for KNEC to put parents and students in darkness over their results.
“We are really in shock as to why such can happen. How can you release results as education CS or KNEC if you know you haven’t completed your investigation to remove any worries over the performance if that is the case? Samoei Boys has been a great performing school here in Nandi East, it is very unfair for candidates and parents that they had to go through such,” Kitur lamented.
“Last year Samoei Boys posted a mean of 9.8. We celebrated together the sterling performance. The 2023 class dubbed ‘the Legends’ had been prepared well and we knew they would break records and even be the top school not only in the region but nationally. It was a determined class,” the Nandi Hills MP added.
A total of 292 students who sat for KCSE at Samoei Boys are yet to know their fate.
Paul Suge, a parent at Samoei Boys, expressed shock at KNEC’s decision to withhold candidates’ results.
“We sorted fees on time, every now and then we have been here encouraging our students to make us parents proud. We want the KNEC to be human enough to innocent students who did their part fairly,” Suge said
In Taachasis Girls Secondary School in Tinderet, a total of 182 students did not also get their results.
Parents were perplexed over the same developments as they were trying to fetch their children’s results from the KNEC portal.