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School riots: Probe finds parents guilty

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Jamhuri High School student leave the institution after it was closed after a strike. The parliamentary education committee says evidence gathered from interested parties shows that parents have failed to impart the relevant cultural values to their children. Photo/FILE 

By CAROLINE WAFULA
Posted  Saturday, October 25  2008 at  21:08

Parents are in the spotlight over child neglect, with a parliamentary committee recommending that they send their children to boarding schools only when they attain 11 years.

The team investigating school unrests notes that some parents take their children to boarding schools at tender ages, thus denying them family comfort and parental care.

“Some parents have neglected their children and relegated their responsibility to teachers, who are also too busy to guide them,” the committee on Education, Research and Technology notes in its findings tabled in Parliament on Thursday.

The concerns have led the team, chaired by Mosop MP David Koech, to recommend that boarding primary schools be limited to the admission of children aged 11 and above.

The role of parents

The team stresses the role of parents in the upbringing of their children: “The way parents handle their children in the formative years will impact on the discipline of children in later years,” it notes.

The committee says evidence gathered from interested parties shows that parents have failed to impart the relevant cultural values to their children.

“Some parents are poor role models to their children; some drinking and fighting in front of their children, in which case, some children extend the same vices to schools,” the team says in its report

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It notes, at the same time, that some parents overprotect their children whenever they make mistakes in schools, adding to student indiscipline.

Also of concern to the investigating team is that some rich parents give too much pocket money to their children and drive them to and from school in expensive cars.

This makes the children display undesirable behaviour later in life, such as drinking, smoking and being rude to everybody.

The committee also accuses moral decay in a society that lacks a value system. “Students are therefore a direct product of the moral decadence in the society,” it says.

Lack of respect

There is lack of respect for seniors by the youth and a complete disregard for taboos and expected norms.

The team blames this state of affairs on politicians as well the religious and professional elite whom it accuses of failing to impart values to the youth, “leaving them to assimilate all that goes on on television and the internet.”

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Add a comment (2 comments so far)

  1. Submitted by gathoni

    Our MPs acted much worse. The Govt. should be accused of Youth neglect.

    Posted  October 26, 2008 03:50 PM  
  2. Submitted by Lawrence_N

    When the parliamentary committee was formed i asked myself what is the need for such, its recommendations are not unique and neither will any of them be implemented infact some of the recommendations cannot be measured and are impractical. Now every Kenyan wants a society in which things are working.This is not the case, a lot of things are broken down. Talk of hope it is gone. The thinking that work hard and u will get the results is no more. we need a new order and we need it now.

    Posted  October 26, 2008 12:37 PM