Kenya has committed KSh784.5 billion to education in the 2026/27 financial year, reaffirming the sector's position as the country's largest public investment. The allocation underscores the government's commitment to improving access to quality education and equipping learners with the skills needed to drive the country's economic and social transformation. Yet as the country celebrates record investment in the sector, recent national and international assessments point to a persistent challenge that money alone cannot solve: too many Kenyan children are still struggling with mathematics. The International Common Assessment of Numeracy (ICAN) 2025 found that 62 per cent of Kenyan children aged between five and 16 years met the minimum mathematics proficiency level, placing Kenya second among the 11 participating countries, behind only Mexico. However, the findings also reveal that 38 per cent of children did not attain the minimum proficiency benchmark, mean...
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