TSC Announce 6,000 Internship Positions, Check out the application procedure and deadline below
TSC Chief Executive Officer, Nancy Macharia, announced the recruitment drive will seek to fill the positions as schools open for the 2022/2023 academic year, which will also see a lot of transitions to other grades and levels.
Macharia announced that the explained that the interns will be posted to sub county secondary schools which admit the bulk of learners. At the moment, the country has a teacher deficit of 114,581.
To facilitate the hiring process, TSC CEO stated the National Treasury has okayed the release of Ksh1.2 billion for the next academic year.
Click here to apply;
TSC Instructs Teachers To Prepare These Documents Mandatory Before 4th March
February 5, 2022
“I wish to assure the country that the Commission will immediately embark on the exercise to recruit the teachers to ensure that they report to work as soon as possible, to ease the existing teacher-shortage in schools,” TSC CEO stated.
Macharia explained the Commission has so far hired a total of 28,000 since 2019 when the government started funding the recruitment process of interns.
Interested candidates will be directed by TSC on how and where to apply for the positions.
TSC has also announced the training of 60,000 teachers starting April 25 this year. The training will be aimed at sharpening their understanding of the Competency-Based Curriculum (CBC).
Macharia assured the country that the training will help teachers acquire relevant skills and knowledge ahead of the admission of the first lot of Junior Secondary School students.
“The public should be well-assured that all our teachers in secondary schools will have been tooled by January [2023] to welcome the Junior Secondary School students,” Macharia announced.
In addition, 229,292 teachers in primary schools will be trained on CBC.
More opportunities for teachers will further be announced when 1,594 school heads, who were scheduled to retire in either 2020 or 2021 but extended their contracts to avert a leadership crisis as a result of the pandemic, proceed to retirement.