Inside TSC’s Tough New Crackdown on Illegal Teaching in Kenya

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TSC launches a tough crackdown on illegal teaching in Kenya, detailing penalties, deregistration rules, and school compliance obligations.

Inside TSC’s Tough New Crackdown on Illegal Teaching in Kenya

The Teachers Service Commission has intensified enforcement against illegal teaching, signaling a new era of strict compliance within Kenya’s education sector. This crackdown targets individuals and institutions undermining professional standards.

Why the Crackdown Is Happening Now

The Commission aims to:

  • Restore public trust

  • Eliminate unqualified teaching

  • Protect learners’ rights

Teaching is now treated as a legally protected profession similar to law or medicine.

What Happens When a Teacher Is Deregistered

Deregistration results in:

  • Immediate loss of teaching status

  • Permanent ban unless reinstated

  • Legal consequences if teaching continues

The message is clear: deregistration is not symbolic.

Impact on Private and Public Schools

All schools must comply equally. Private institutions are no longer exempt and must ensure every classroom is handled by a registered professional.

Long-Term Impact on the Education Sector

This move is expected to:

  • Improve teaching quality

  • Reduce misconduct

  • Professionalize education further

Compliance is now non-negotiable.

FAQs

Can volunteer teachers operate without registration?
No. Teaching in any form requires registration.

Is TSC increasing inspections?
Yes, monitoring has intensified nationwide.