A Seamless Future for Grade 10 Selection? Dr. Wanjohi Charts a Bold Path to End Transition Chaos

As digital frustrations continue to plague Kenya’s senior school placement, a visionary education policy expert proposes a revolutionary fix that prioritizes equity, infrastructure, and informed participation.
NAIROBI, Kenya – For many Kenyan parents and Grade 9 learners, the Grade 10 school selection process has become an annual ordeal marked by anxiety, digital disruptions, and deep inequities. Frozen screens, failed OTPs, and system crashes have turned what should be a hopeful milestone into a nationwide stress test. In a country committed to a 100% transition rate, the process ironically leaves thousands on edge — often excluded not by merit, but by connectivity.
But this chaotic status quo could soon be a relic of the past.
A Vision Rooted in Equity and Logic
Education policy expert Dr. Paul Sharp Wanjohi has tabled a game-changing proposal that could transform the Grade 10 selection process from a digital stampede into a calm, coordinated, and inclusive national exercise. His idea is simple in design but powerful in impact: a staggered, county-based digital access schedule.
Instead of unleashing millions of users onto the school selection portal at once, Dr. Wanjohi proposes organizing counties into logical clusters based on population, internet penetration, and infrastructure strength. Access would be rolled out over five to seven days, ensuring smoother traffic, fewer errors, and broader access — followed by an open-access window for any latecomers.
“It’s about more than servers,” says Dr. Wanjohi. “It’s about designing a system that respects diversity, accessibility, and digital realities on the ground.”
More Than Technology: A Human-Centered Model
At the heart of Dr. Wanjohi’s plan is the understanding that real change requires more than just tech tweaks. His vision includes a robust ecosystem of support to empower families and build confidence in the Competency-Based Education (CBE) system:
- Advanced Communication: Parents would receive selection schedules three weeks in advance, shared widely through national media, local radio, school circulars, and even SMS alerts. No more last-minute surprises.
- Hands-On Help: Toll-free helplines and help desks in every county education office would provide immediate assistance for technical issues or application queries.
- Community Empowerment: Through localized CBE sensitization workshops, digital resource hubs, and media outreach, parents will gain not just procedural knowledge but deeper understanding of senior secondary pathways — while teachers serve as on-ground CBE ambassadors.
A Stronger, Smarter Digital Backbone
To support this new structure, Dr. Wanjohi calls for serious upgrades to the digital infrastructure — from server scaling and cloud support to multiple redundancy layers that guard against outages.
He also recommends pre-selection simulations, where users can test the system ahead of time in a controlled environment, reducing pressure and surfacing any bugs before the real deadline.
Finally, he proposes continuous feedback loops and data-driven refinements after every placement cycle, to ensure the system evolves alongside the needs of Kenyan learners and families.
A New Dawn for CBE Transitions
For a nation investing heavily in the CBE model, seamless transition to Grade 10 is non-negotiable. Dr. Wanjohi’s proposal directly addresses the digital, logistical, and emotional pain points that have plagued past placement cycles.
“If we align infrastructure with informed participation,” he says, “we can ensure that every learner has a fair, stress-free opportunity to move forward.”
This is more than an IT fix. It’s a transformative blueprint rooted in equity, planning, and empathy — one that places the learner, not the system, at the center.
The onus now lies with the Ministry of Education to take up this bold yet practical roadmap. Because the future of education isn’t just about curriculum. It’s also about how we help children access it.