Abstract
To what extent, if at all, did the introduction of free primary education in Kenya in 2003 have positive equity effects, in terms of both access and achievement. Access is based on the number of candidates sitting the Kenya Certificate of Primary Education (KCPE) examination and the KCPE score is used to measure achievement levels. The study uses data that reflects Kenya’s 47 devolved governance counties. A quantitative measure of poverty in all 47 counties was then entered as an independent variable of regression analysis, and a negative association with KCPE performance noted (high poverty levels associated with low KCPE scores). Also noted was a contrast between counties showing high enrolment impact and improved KCPE scores, and those showing high enrolment impact and lower KCPE scores. Counties in the former group are located almost entirely in arid and semi-arid areas, those in the latter group in the coastal region.
Acknowledgement
This paper is developed from a background paper prepared for Education for All Monitoring Report 2013/14 entitled ‘Evolution of educational outcomes in Kenya’. The author gratefully acknowledges and thanks Maurice Mutisya for exceptional research assistance. For useful comments, the author thanks the anonymous referee. None of those mentioned share responsibility for this paper.