Professors petition Education ministry over scrapping of standalone ECDE diplomas
Principal Secretary for Basic Education Dr Julius Bitok during the 8th Principal Secretaries' Monthly Meeting held at the Kenyatta International Convention Centre on August 5, 2025. PHOTO| COURTESY
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A caucus of professors from various universities in Kenya has
petitioned the Ministry of Education over a recent circular terminating
standalone Early Childhood Development Education (ECDE) diploma programmes.
The directive, issued by Basic Education Principal Secretary
Prof. Julius Bitok, merges early childhood and primary teacher education
programmes into a single course, a move that has sparked concern among
educators, students and county governments, where ECDE is a devolved function.
A circular dated January 19, 2026, has drawn sharp reactions
from a section of university lecturers, who say the decision has left hundreds
of students and parents, many already enrolled in colleges, uncertain about
their future.
The circular announced the merger of the Diploma in Early
Childhood Teacher Education and the Diploma in Primary Teacher Education to
form a new programme, the Diploma in Teacher Education – Pre-Primary and
Primary.
“In teacher training colleges, private, we have a membership
of 500 colleges training ECDE teachers. This circular came on January 19. Our
admission date is in August every year. We have students admitted in August and
the circular discontinues them in January. What do we tell these students?” A
lecturer posed.
The caucus argues that any major change within the education
system should be implemented with a transition period of no less than five
years, noting that teaching methods at the ECDE level differ significantly from
those used in primary schools.
“Primary colleagues are teaching children to do Maths and
English. We are preparing children on emotional control and self-control, and
that is the Science,” said Dr. Rose Opiyo, a lecturer at Maseno University.
Another lecturer, Dr Hudson Ouko of Kenyatta University,
said, “We have made a lot of strides and somebody has come cutting it left
and right without consulting.”
County governments have also raised concerns. Speaking on
behalf of the Council of Governors (CoG), Kericho Governor Dr Eric Mutai said
counties were not consulted on the proposed merger, warning that county bosses could
move to court to block the directive.
“This circular is coming when we have teachers in class. What
happens to those who have been trained? What happens to those we have
employed?” Posed Dr Mutai.
ECDE veteran Ann Njenga added, "County governments can
tell you how many ECDE teachers they have at the certificate level. They are
working, they have children, they cannot leave their homes to go and
train."
However, the Ministry of Education has defended the move.
Speaking to Citizen TV, Basic Education Principal Secretary Prof. Julius Bitok
said the ministry is implementing a presidential directive based on
recommendations by the Presidential Working Party on Education Reforms.
According to Prof. Bitok, the standalone ECDE diploma was
abolished in 2023, but some privately owned colleges have continued to offer
the course fraudulently.


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