Kisii School

Coordinates: 0°41′20″S 34°47′01″E / 0.6889785°S 34.7837126°E / -0.6889785; 34.7837126

Kisii School
Motto Strive For Excellence
Type Government National Secondary School
Established 1934
Founder Young Kavirondo Association
Principal Mr. Caspar Maina Momanyi
Administrative staff
>100
Students >1500
Location Kisii, Kenya
Colours      dark green,     grey,     gold
Website kisiischool.com

Kisii School Kisii High School is a public National boy’s school, which is a non profit public institution established in 1934 (by the Young Kavirondo Association) to provide secondary education to young pupils.

Immediately after the Colonial Government become interested in education, following the Phelps-Stokes Commission report of 1925, Kisii School started in 1934 as Government African School (GAS). The local Native Council of South Kavirondo raised the funds. It is one of the three 'K' schools which were started by the natives. These schools include; Kisii School, Kakamega Boys School and Kagumo High in central province. They were referred to as government African schools (GAS)

History

1934- Started Artisan courses at Primary School (Std. equivalent to STD 4-6). But when, it was unable to get pupils, the school admitted pupils in the sub standard level (equivalent of standard 2 and 3) with 15 pupils.

1938- Presented the first candidate for Primary School Examinations. By now, the school had 60 pupils in 2 streams of 30 each. The students had to be 50% Kisii and 50% Luo (Kisii 30 Pupils, Luo 30 pupils)

1945- The Secondary School section was started. At that time, this was called the Junior Secondary- equivalent to standard 7 and 8. The population was still 60 per class.

1946 - Presented the first student for Kenya African Preliminary Examination.

1949 - Started the senior secondary (from 3 and 4) These candidates were to be prepared for KASSE (Kenya African Secondary School Examination)

1950 - Presented candidates for KASSE (Kenya African Secondary School Examination)

1953 -The school admitted candidates for a P3 teacher training course which lasted 3 years. It was later shifted to Kabianga Teachers College (present day Kabianga Boys) before later on moving to present day Kericho Teachers Training College.

1956 - The school entered its first candidates for Cambridge School Certificate. A total of 60 students were registered.

1962- The school was among the 6 schools to introduce ‘A’ LEVEL (Art) with a single stream of 30 students.

1963 - Presented its first Higher School Certificate candidates commonly referred to as ‘A’ Level Examination.

1967 - The ‘A’ level science class or science stream was started. By now, the student population was 450 (form 1 to 6)

The school

The school has had a strong connection to the Musa Nyandusi family, a Senior Chief during the colonial era. This was the most powerful position akin to a king answerable only to the colonial authority with minimal supervision.The Land on which the entire school stands was donated by Senior Chief Musa Nyandusi The school has produced the likes of Simeon Nyachae, a son of Musa.

Curriculum

The secondary school curriculum emphasizes job-oriented courses, such as business and technical education.

Kisii School offers a college preparatory program following the Kenya Certificate of Secondary Education curriculum. The curriculum offered at the school covers six areas: Communication, Mathematics and Sciences, Humanities, Applied Education, Physical Education.

Governance

Kisii School is a National Public School and it receives a large amount of public money from the government. The Board of Governors(B.O.G.) and the Parent Teachers Association(P.T.A.) oversee smooth running of the institution. Daily routine business of the school is headed by the Office of the Principal.

Admission

Admission of students is by open competitive K.C.P.E. examination every year.

Procedure

Candidates are judged according to need and parental income and their performance in the national KCPE examinations. Selection is solely based on merit.

Scholarships and financial support

Support comes from Government, organisations, individuals and donors.

Student Life

The school has dormitories, dining hall, classroom block, and Computer and Science laboratories. There are Technical Education workshops fors Woodwork, Metal work, Electricity, Power mechanics, and Agriculture. Students partake in watering of the livestock and vegetables from which meat and greens for meals is outsourced.

Kisii main entrance
Students life

Houses

The school has eight houses. They are:

  1. Sameta      Light blue,
  2. Mara      Light Grey,
  3. Kuja      Navy Blue,
  4. Kiong'anyo      White,
  5. Manga      Yellow,
  6. Homa      Orange,
  7. Ruri      Green,
  8. Wire      Red,

Inter-house competitions

There are activities in which the houses compete - Science congress, athletics, cross-country, ball games, drama and academics.

The school principal, Mr Casper Maina Momanyi usually offers a reward for the top three houses in each field.

Extracurricular activities

Extracurricular activities include drama, choir, publications such as the School Magazine; school leadership through the prefects’ body, Sunday School teaching, Scouting, Debate Club, Wildlife Club, Environmental Club, Journalism Club, Science Club, Computer Club, SDA Society, CU and YCS for the Catholics.

Sports

Choices include basketball, rugby, soccer, track and field, hockey, volleyball, handball, swimming, and lawn tennis. Individuals and teams have won national and regional honours in almost all of them.

Basketball court

Under the leadership of John L. O Kinaro,(1991–1998) a former principal, Kisii school emerged as the best soccer school teams in the 1990s. The record they set can only be rivaled by Kakamega Boys High School. They won three consecutive national championships between 1996 and 1999. Most of the team members have played for the national team, and some are playing professional football in Europe and Asia.

Notable Alumni and Academics

KHOBA

KHOBA (Kisii High Old Boys Association) networks the schools alumni community.

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Sunday, August 16, 2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.