The Technical and Vocational Education and Training in
the country is undergoing a significant transformation, marked by a sharp rise
in student enrolment and a deliberate shift from theory-heavy instruction to
hands-on, skills-based training. At the centre of this change is TVET PS Esther Muoria, who has championed reforms aimed at making technical education
more practical, accessible and aligned with industry needs.
In a one-on-one interview with the Star, she unpacks how the government has more than doubled enrolment in TVET
institutions, the policies driving the shift towards competency-based training,
and why she believes the sector holds immense untapped potential to tackle
youth unemployment and power Kenya’s economic growth.
How many government-recognised TVET institutions do we
have in Kenya today, and what are the enrolment numbers?
It remains government policy to have a TVET institution
in every constituency—about 290 in total. Currently, 52 are still needed. Of
these, 17 are under construction, leaving 35 yet to begin.
Overall, we have about 260 TVET institutions across the
country, roughly one per constituency, although some constituencies have more
depending on past developments. Of these, 33 are national polytechnics, while
the rest are technical training institutions or vocational colleges.
When this government took over, enrolment stood at about
250,000. Today, it is around 950,000 young people—nearing one million. We are
targeting two million by the end of the year, and we believe we will scale up
to that level.
This year is just about halfway, and you have not met
half your target. What could be the reason?
The biggest challenge has been funding, particularly the
financing model. The President introduced a strong funding framework for
colleges and universities, but as a country, we have not fully funded it or
consistently provided students with scholarships and the Higher Education Loans Board (Helb) loans.
This is not just a TVET issue—it cuts across the entire
education sector. Why have we not reached half our target? Simply put,
resources are limited. We are servicing loans, and other sectors like health
also require substantial funding. As a result, many admitted students come from families that
cannot afford fees, and they end up dropping out. If the funding model were
fully implemented, we would already be close to achieving the two million
target.
There are many parents who still see TVETs as a “second
choice” to university. What advice would you give to such parents?
That perception has changed. Looking at you directly,
TVET is no longer a second option. That may have been the case two or three
years ago, but not any more. Last year, more than 26,000 students who scored C+ and above
chose TVET institutions voluntarily. Admissions are ongoing this year, and I
can confidently say that number will more than double.
We have transformed both the perception and the physical
outlook of our training facilities, and young people are responding positively.
Kenya has invested heavily in TVET infrastructure—how are
you ensuring this investment translates into actual jobs rather than
certificates?
Our focus has been on skills. From the moment I joined
this department, my priority has been ensuring young people acquire practical,
usable skills. For a long time, we have been educating and training, yet
many people remain unemployed despite their qualifications. The missing link
has been hands-on ability—the competence to actually do the work.
That is why our focus is firmly on skilling, not just
certification.
How aligned are current TVET curricula with the needs of
industry, especially in emerging sectors like AI-enabled trades?
We have engaged trainers in workshops to shift from
theory to practical training. Curricula are being restructured to remove
unnecessary theoretical components. For example, communication for engineers is not the same as
for arts students. We have adopted modular training. The first module takes six
months, after which a learner should be able to secure employment.
In some cases, such as in Kibra, learners attend for a
month, acquire a skill and move straight into work. The goal is to ensure young
people leave with skills they can use immediately, either for employment or
self-employment.
What mechanisms exist to hold industry partners
accountable for providing meaningful industrial attachments and
apprenticeships?
We brought industry directly into the training process.
Through sector skills councils, industry players help design how training is
conducted. For example, if we are training journalists, we engage media
houses and ask what skills they need. Training is then aligned to those needs.
Industry partners are also expected to regularly engage with
institutions and monitor training outcomes. We are moving away from purely
exam-based assessment to a portfolio-of-evidence approach.
With youth unemployment still high, what evidence do you
have that TVET graduates are more employable today than before?
Our graduates are in demand. In places like Kiambu, some
students struggle to complete final exams because industries have already
absorbed them. Because training is done in collaboration with industry,
students transition directly into employment. In areas like Thika, trainees in
mechanical auto body are already working in the industry before completing
their courses.
How is the ministry addressing skills mismatch, where
graduates are trained, but industries still claim they lack practical
competence?
We have made a deliberate shift—anyone entering a TVET
institution goes straight to the workshop, not the classroom. We have effectively exited traditional classroom setups.
Training now takes place in workshops and laboratories. By aligning training
with industry needs, we ensure that graduates are ready for the workplace by
the time they complete their courses.
Are you concerned with the recent moves to convert TVET
institutions into universities?
There is a directive to convert Ramogi Institute of
Technology into a university and I must say this is concerning.
We have proposed that it becomes a Polytechnic University
instead. This would allow learners to progress to university level while
maintaining a strong focus on skills-based training.
How are you supporting trainers and instructors to keep
pace with fast-changing technology and modern equipment?
We are partnering with industry players. For instance, we
are in discussions with Toyota to establish dedicated training facilities
within our institutions. This ensures that learners are trained using the latest
industry standards and technologies.
What are you doing differently, especially when it comes
to production and making the institutions self-reliant?
We are leveraging special economic zones supported by the
African Development Bank to equip institutions with modern machinery. In regions like Taita Taveta, we have gemmology equipment
for processing minerals. In Kisumu, we are supporting cotton farming and
textile production.
At Mawego Polytechnic, we have integrated systems for fish
production, from breeding to packaging. The goal is to make institutions
centres of production as well as training.
What can you say is your main struggle currently as a
state department?
Our biggest challenge is fully integrating industry into
TVETs. We want institutions to be production hubs where learners train and
produce simultaneously. We are working towards fully embedding industry within
training institutions.
Your parting shot?
We urge the media and the political class to support us.
While we may not have everything, we have one critical asset—commitment.
We are determined to move young people from where they are
to a place where they can create opportunities for themselves.