CBC Is Killing The Minds Of Kenyan Children: Why Parents, Students & Workers Must Rise Up & Force A Radical Reset

Kenya is being quietly marched into an intellectual slaughterhouse, and many people are clapping while it happens. Under the Competency-Based Curriculum, a dangerous narrative is being sold to parents, teachers, and policymakers: that the only valid purpose of knowledge is monetisation. We are being told, subtly but persistently, that if learning cannot be immediately converted into money, then it is useless. This framing is not only intellectually lazy, it is also profoundly anti-human, and it threatens to permanently cripple an entire generation of Kenyan children before they even discover who they are.
The CBC philosophy reduces education to a crude transaction: learn only what you can sell. Anything else is labelled a waste of time, money, and effort. Curiosity is treated as an indulgence. Theory is mocked as impractical. Broad thinking is dismissed as academic arrogance. This is not education; it is training. It is the systematic production of narrow, fragile minds that can perform tasks but cannot reason deeply, adapt meaningfully, or question power intelligently.
We are now being told that if a child shows talent in art or sports, then science and mathematics are optional luxuries. That if a child seems inclined toward one path, they should be locked into it early and shielded from “irrelevant” knowledge. This is not progressive thinking; it is intellectual apartheid. It assumes that a child at 10, 12, or 14 years old fully understands their future, the economy, technology, or even themselves. It is an arrogance so extreme it borders on cruelty.
Premature specialisation is the most irreversible educational mistake a society can make. Once you close doors early, you do not merely guide a child; you amputate possibilities. Knowledge is not a menu where you pick one dish and reject the rest. Knowledge is an ecosystem. Remove key elements and the entire system collapses. CBC’s obsession with early competence ignores the basic reality that life is unpredictable, careers change, industries collapse, and skills expire.
Kenya itself is living proof that broad education matters. For decades, universities deliberately resisted early specialisation. Students entering institutions like the University of Nairobi did not immediately lock themselves into narrow tracks. Even within degrees like Bachelor of Commerce, learners spent years studying diverse subjects before specialising. This was not inefficiency; it was wisdom. It was an acknowledgment that understanding systems requires exposure, not tunnel vision.
A marketing student studied accounting not to become an accountant, but to understand how money flows. A finance student studied human resources not to manage payroll, but to understand people. An insurance student studied economics not to quote theories, but to grasp how societies function. These connections mattered. They still matter. CBC dismisses this interconnectedness as waste, yet it is precisely this interconnectedness that makes professionals effective in the real world.
Even at postgraduate levels, this philosophy holds. MBA students do not specialise in isolation. A finance-focused MBA still studies marketing, strategy, operations, and leadership. Why? Because leadership does not exist in silos. Decisions ripple across departments, industries, and societies. CBC’s worldview assumes life is linear. Reality is not.
What CBC proponents fail to understand—or deliberately ignore—is that knowledge often reveals its value years later. Many of the things Kenyans learned in school felt useless at the time, only to become essential later. Critical thinking, writing, statistics, logic, history, and economics do not always pay immediately, but when they do, they pay deeply and repeatedly. They compound.
Many professionals today are thriving in careers completely unrelated to what they studied. This is not a failure of education; it is a triumph of broad intellectual grounding. In a country where jobs are scarce, versatility is not a luxury. It is survival. CBC threatens to remove that versatility and replace it with brittle competence that collapses the moment the market shifts.
Technology is already wiping out careers that were once considered safe. Automation, artificial intelligence, and platform economies are rewriting the rules faster than curricula can keep up. In such a world, narrow skills are dangerous. The future belongs to those who can learn, unlearn, and relearn. CBC does not train adaptive thinkers; it trains obedient performers.
The most alarming aspect of CBC is its silent contempt for theory. Theory is portrayed as abstract and disconnected from reality. This is false. Theory is what allows people to transfer knowledge across contexts. It is what allows an economist to understand agriculture, a marketer to understand politics, and an engineer to understand society. Remove theory, and you produce technicians who cannot innovate, critique, or lead.
Education should not produce robots designed to perform a few tasks efficiently until they are replaced. Education should produce human beings capable of thinking broadly, questioning assumptions, and navigating complexity. A strong theoretical foundation does not limit career options; it multiplies them. It gives learners the freedom to pivot, reinvent themselves, and remain relevant across decades.
CBC also destroys the joy of learning. When children are taught that learning only matters if it makes money, curiosity dies. Wonder dies. Intellectual risk-taking dies. You cannot build innovators, artists, scientists, or leaders in an environment where exploration is treated as waste. Societies that think this way do not advance; they stagnate.
Kenya cannot afford this experiment. We are not a high-income country with safety nets for failed policies. We are a struggling economy with millions of unemployed youth. Locking children into narrow tracks early is not efficiency; it is reckless policy-making with generational consequences.
This is why Kenyans must stop being polite. This is why parents, teachers, students, and workers must come out and protest. Not for politics. Not for parties. But for the future of the Kenyan mind. CBC is not just an education issue; it is a national survival issue.
Silence will not protect your child. Compliance will not save their future. If we allow this system to continue unchallenged, we will look back in twenty years and wonder why we raised a generation that could follow instructions but could not think. Why we produced workers but not leaders. Why we created skills but destroyed wisdom.
The CBC content must be reviewed, challenged, and fundamentally restructured. Education must return to its core purpose: to expand human potential, not shrink it. To open doors, not close them. To prepare learners for life, not just for the next invoice.
This is a call to action. Not tomorrow. Not next year. Now. Kenya must rise, speak, protest, and force a change. Because once a generation is intellectually stunted, no policy, no budget, and no apology can undo the damage.
Read Also: CBC: The Most Expensive Education Scam Ever Sold to Kenyan Parents
About Soko Directory Team
Soko Directory is a Financial and Markets digital portal that tracks brands, listed firms on the NSE, SMEs and trend setters in the markets eco-system.Find us on Facebook: facebook.com/SokoDirectory and on Twitter: twitter.com/SokoDirectory
- January 2026 (217)
- February 2026 (112)
- January 2025 (119)
- February 2025 (191)
- March 2025 (212)
- April 2025 (193)
- May 2025 (161)
- June 2025 (157)
- July 2025 (227)
- August 2025 (211)
- September 2025 (270)
- October 2025 (297)
- November 2025 (230)
- December 2025 (219)
- January 2024 (238)
- February 2024 (227)
- March 2024 (190)
- April 2024 (133)
- May 2024 (157)
- June 2024 (145)
- July 2024 (136)
- August 2024 (154)
- September 2024 (212)
- October 2024 (255)
- November 2024 (196)
- December 2024 (143)
- January 2023 (182)
- February 2023 (203)
- March 2023 (322)
- April 2023 (297)
- May 2023 (267)
- June 2023 (214)
- July 2023 (212)
- August 2023 (257)
- September 2023 (237)
- October 2023 (264)
- November 2023 (286)
- December 2023 (177)
- January 2022 (293)
- February 2022 (329)
- March 2022 (358)
- April 2022 (292)
- May 2022 (271)
- June 2022 (232)
- July 2022 (278)
- August 2022 (253)
- September 2022 (246)
- October 2022 (196)
- November 2022 (232)
- December 2022 (167)
- January 2021 (182)
- February 2021 (227)
- March 2021 (325)
- April 2021 (259)
- May 2021 (285)
- June 2021 (272)
- July 2021 (277)
- August 2021 (232)
- September 2021 (271)
- October 2021 (304)
- November 2021 (364)
- December 2021 (249)
- January 2020 (272)
- February 2020 (310)
- March 2020 (390)
- April 2020 (321)
- May 2020 (335)
- June 2020 (327)
- July 2020 (333)
- August 2020 (276)
- September 2020 (214)
- October 2020 (233)
- November 2020 (242)
- December 2020 (187)
- January 2019 (251)
- February 2019 (215)
- March 2019 (283)
- April 2019 (254)
- May 2019 (269)
- June 2019 (249)
- July 2019 (335)
- August 2019 (293)
- September 2019 (306)
- October 2019 (313)
- November 2019 (362)
- December 2019 (318)
- January 2018 (291)
- February 2018 (213)
- March 2018 (275)
- April 2018 (223)
- May 2018 (235)
- June 2018 (176)
- July 2018 (256)
- August 2018 (247)
- September 2018 (255)
- October 2018 (282)
- November 2018 (282)
- December 2018 (184)
- January 2017 (183)
- February 2017 (194)
- March 2017 (207)
- April 2017 (104)
- May 2017 (169)
- June 2017 (205)
- July 2017 (189)
- August 2017 (195)
- September 2017 (186)
- October 2017 (235)
- November 2017 (253)
- December 2017 (266)
- January 2016 (164)
- February 2016 (165)
- March 2016 (189)
- April 2016 (143)
- May 2016 (245)
- June 2016 (182)
- July 2016 (271)
- August 2016 (247)
- September 2016 (233)
- October 2016 (191)
- November 2016 (243)
- December 2016 (153)
- January 2015 (1)
- February 2015 (4)
- March 2015 (164)
- April 2015 (107)
- May 2015 (116)
- June 2015 (119)
- July 2015 (145)
- August 2015 (157)
- September 2015 (186)
- October 2015 (169)
- November 2015 (173)
- December 2015 (205)
- March 2014 (2)
- March 2013 (10)
- June 2013 (1)
- March 2012 (7)
- April 2012 (15)
- May 2012 (1)
- July 2012 (1)
- August 2012 (4)
- October 2012 (2)
- November 2012 (2)
- December 2012 (1)
