Venue: Kenya Institute of Curriculum Development, Desai Rd, Off Muranga Rd, Nairobi, Kenya. Date: 25th -27th November 2025 Download the program
In a world where education systems are increasingly called upon to cultivate not only academic excellence but also ethical, empathetic, and socially responsible citizens, Values-Based Education (VbE) has emerged as a transformative imperative. Kenya’s ongoing efforts to mainstream VbE through its Competency-Based Curriculum (CBC) offer valuable insights into both the promise and challenges of systemic integration of values into education. Recent findings from a VbE baseline survey conducted across several counties including Isiolo, Tharaka Nithi, Taita Taveta, and Kwale, paint a complex picture. While many learners demonstrated values such as respect and teamwork in daily school life, a majority struggled to define or articulate what values are or how they relate to education. In most schools visited, there was no formal structure for nurturing values. Instead, values-related practices were often informal, fragmented, and dependent on individual teacher initiative or co-curricular activities such as sports and clubs. Despite the clear enthusiasm among educators and stakeholders, the survey exposed a persistent gap in structured VbE implementation. Many schools lacked resources, teacher training, and system-level frameworks to embed values consistently. In some special needs institutions, physical infrastructure challenges and limited inclusivity further complicated efforts to nurture values equitably. Yet amidst these gaps, there are pockets of promise. Some schools demonstrated organic approaches to character formation, teachers modelling values through daily interactions, schools encouraging environmental stewardship and community service, and student clubs fostering responsibility and collaboration. In a few cases, talking walls (visual displays of key moral messages) were used to reinforce school-wide commitment to values like peace, responsibility, and social justice. To address these issues, stakeholders emphasized the importance of adopting the Whole School Approach (WSA), an evidence-based strategy that embeds values across every aspect of school life, from classroom instruction to peer relationships and leadership culture. Regular monitoring, peer learning forums, and investment in visual learning tools like value charts and displays were also recommended to strengthen long-term impact. Officials from the Ministry of Education, KICD staff, Zizi Afrique Foundation staff at the Taita Taveta County TSC Director’s office. These findings highlight a critical opportunity: the need for deliberate, system-wide capacity building to move from incidental to intentional practice of values-based education. This includes equipping teachers, school leaders, and education officials with the tools, frameworks, and pedagogical strategies to integrate values into both academic instruction and school culture meaningfully. Ultimately, the Kenyan experience affirms a core insight familiar to VbE experts worldwide: education systems thrive when values are not only taught but lived. With strategic investment, consistent training, and sustained collaboration, schools can become powerful ecosystems of character formation—shaping the kind of citizens our societies urgently need. Clarifying the CBC-aligned values i.e. respect, responsibility, integrity, love, peace, social justice, and patriotism. This included definitions, indicators, and strategies for integration. Strengthening school-wide practices, such as value-based leadership, positive school climate, and co-curricular programming. Elevating learner agency, encouraging students to model, question, and reflect on moral issues in peer settings. Mobilizing stakeholders, recognizing parents, support staff, and community members as active agents in reinforcing values beyond the classroom. Notably, schools that engaged families and communities in organizing cultural festivals, tree-planting events and service-learning projects created impactful opportunities for learners to embody and experience shared values in real-world contexts. For resources on values-based education, please visit https://kicd.ac.ke/cbc-materials/values-based-education-materials/ @biftukarayu, @enockimani
As part of Kenya’s national Values-Based Education (VbE) initiative, a targeted effort was made to include 16 Special Needs Education (SNE) institutions in a broader baseline survey and capacity-building program, spanning 19 counties. This inclusion reflects a growing recognition that learners with special needs deserve equal opportunities to experience values-based learning environments that foster moral development, character formation, and holistic growth. In the Central and Eastern SNE cluster, over 200 learners across four institutions—Raimu Integrated School (Kirinyaga), Tumu Tumu School for the Hearing Impaired (Nyeri), Isiolo School for the Deaf (Isiolo), and Ikuu Special School (Tharaka Nithi)—participated in the study. These schools provided rich contextual insights into how values are expressed and reinforced among learners with hearing and intellectual disabilities. One of the most striking findings was the critical role of non-teaching staff, including dormitory matrons, caregivers, and patrons, in modelling and nurturing values such as empathy, respect, and responsibility. Learners consistently referenced support staff as central figures in shaping daily behaviour, particularly in unstructured settings or when teachers were not present. This underscores the importance of adopting a Whole School Approach (WSA) that recognizes every adult in the school environment as a values educator. While formal learner-leadership structures and co-curricular activities were present across all schools, the hidden curriculum, transmitted through daily interactions, emerged as the most influential source of values learning. However, gaps remain. Although values are embedded in curriculum frameworks, the intentional practice of values within the classroom and school culture remains limited. Visual cues promoting values were notably absent, and many educators reported that values education tends to be implicit rather than purposefully designed. To address this, a two-day training for 24 educators, heads of institutions, and curriculum support officers was held in Tharaka Nithi County, introducing participants to the WSA as a systemic strategy to embed values across all facets of school life. For many, this was their first exposure to the framework, and it prompted reflection on missed opportunities to model values consistently and meaningfully. A teacher from Tumu Tumu School reflected, “I’ve come to realize how our everyday interactions among staff become models for learners, we are always teaching, even outside the classroom.” A learner at Isiolo School for the Deaf echoed this sentiment: “Support staff shape how we behave every day, especially when teachers are not around.” Learners at Kuja Special School for the Deaf (Migori) draw maps representing population densities during a Social Studies lesson. These insights reinforce the need for a deliberate, inclusive, and system-wide approach to values education in SNE contexts, one that honours the diverse ways in which learners understand and internalize values, and that empowers all members of the school community to participate in the moral development of every child. In Western Kenya, ALiVE and KICD teams visited 4 special needs education institutions across four counties namely: Kuja Special School for the Deaf (Migori), Chekombero Primary and Junior Special School for the Hearing Impaired (Vihiga), St. Oda Primary and Junior Special School (Siaya) and Nalondo CBM Special School for the Physically Handicapped (Bungoma). These visits included classroom observations, focused group discussions with learners, and interviews with teachers and school leaders, to assess the integration of values within the SNE learning environments. While many learners demonstrated awareness of core values such as kindness, respect, and honesty, their ability to articulate or apply these independently remained limited. This was particularly evident among learners with hearing impairments, who often showed hesitation to participate in class discussions, highlighting the need for more inclusive and adaptive pedagogical strategies. Teachers emphasized the importance of patience, empathy, and inclusive communication when delivering values education to learners with disabilities. Practices such as positive reinforcement, role-playing, and experiential learning activities emerged as highly effective in helping learners internalize values. These findings underscore the need for capacity-building approaches that are grounded in both inclusive pedagogy and values integration. In the Coastal region, additional insights were gathered from Christ the King Maktau Special School in Taita Taveta County, where structural barriers—such as poor infrastructure and environmental hazards—further complicate the delivery of quality education. One teacher shared how classes are routinely interrupted by the threat of wild animals crossing the school grounds, putting mobility-impaired learners at risk and forcing staff to prioritize safety over learning. Despite these challenges, staff remain committed to embedding values into daily teaching, even under resource-constrained conditions. The baseline survey and the consequent monitoring established some disparities in communicating with SNE learners. Most of the VbE-focused materials shared to schools had the values written and explained using words. However, it was established that some SNE learners like those with mental and hearing impairments, would benefit more from visual messages like drawings. Similarly, those with visual impairment would also benefit more with braille-typed materials. Customized materials would not only enrich the learners interaction with values, but also reduce the burden of coding the values and their indicators from the shoulders of teachers and caregivers. At the conclusion of the visits, each school developed tailored action plans focused on four key areas: teacher training, mentorship, parental engagement, and community involvement. Participants emphasized the need for ongoing professional development, including peer learning opportunities and the consistent presence of sign language interpreters to ensure inclusive participation in future engagements. This phase of the VbE pilot illustrates a central truth in values education: success depends not only on structured lessons or curriculum design, but on creating inclusive, value-rich environments where every adult in the school community serves as a living model of the values we aim to cultivate in learners. In SNE contexts especially, intentional, inclusive, and context-responsive strategies are essential to ensuring that no learner is left behind in the journey toward holistic development. @walteronyango1, @karani15701, @polo_raynor
At Madaraka Comprehensive School—aptly named after the Kiswahili word for prestige—a vibrant Grade 5 Mathematics class is in full swing. On this warm afternoon, Teacher Joy facilitates an engaging session on fractions. Learners take turns working through problems with confidence and collaboration. The class reflects Kenya’s social diversity, with students from nearby informal settlements learning alongside peers from different nationalities. Despite their varied origins, each learner is equally encouraged to participate, reflect, and demonstrate their understanding. Beyond academic achievement, Madaraka offers a compelling lens into how values are nurtured and expressed in daily school life. Following the Math lesson, a small group of learners—boys and girls—engaged in a focused group discussion led by Nelly Machu of the Kenya Institute of Curriculum Development (KICD). This was part of a three-day baseline study on Values-Based Education (VbE) aimed at assessing learners’ understanding, experiences, and practice of core competencies within the school setting. The insights were both candid and instructive. “It’s hard to help classmates who fight a lot,” one girl shared, drawing from her experience as a prefect. “We try to show them that violence doesn’t solve anything—that dialogue is better. But sometimes, when someone is angry, it’s not easy for them to remember the values we’re taught.” Such reflections offer critical evidence of how deeply learners are engaging with the values embedded in Kenya’s Competency-Based Curriculum (CBC). As the VbE baseline concluded, students not only articulated the values they strive to live by—such as peace, empathy, and responsibility—but also proposed ways to embed these more sustainably in their school culture. These learner voices reaffirm the importance of system-wide efforts to integrate values into everyday teaching and learning. They serve as a powerful reminder that when children are trusted and guided, they not only absorb knowledge—they shape it, live it, and carry it forward. @polo_raynor
At Madaraka Comprehensive School in Nairobi County, a Competency-Based Curriculum (CBC) practical lesson unfolds with rich, experiential learning at its core. In this cookery class, the air is filled with the aroma of grilled chicken and freshly kneaded chapatti, while the setting buzzes with learner-driven activity. Adorned in aprons and hats, some creatively improvised from shopping bags, students prepare meals in teams, showcasing both innovation and resourcefulness. This is more than a cooking lesson; it is a live demonstration of values-based education in action. Learners organize themselves and assign each other roles. Some are preparing ingredients, others are cleaning, while there is someone assigned to track the recipes. They are exhibiting high levels of communication, cooperation, empathy, and respect. In the process, they cultivate essential life skills such as turn-taking, responsibility, and appreciation for diversity in abilities while recognizing each other’s contribution. The moment of shared joy comes when the food is ready. “We don’t often eat chicken or fish at home,” one learner remarks. “But when we all contribute, we get to share and taste something special together.” Another proudly adds, “I didn’t know how to cook chicken before. Now I can, and I’ll be the chef at home this Christmas.” This vignette captures the essence of Kenya’s bold shift toward a more values-driven, learner-centred education system, one that recognizes that personal growth, social-emotional development, and ethical grounding are as essential as academic achievement. It demonstrates how curriculum reform, when intentionally infused with values, creates inclusive spaces for learners to thrive both in and beyond the classroom. @polo_raynor
In recognition of the central role that values play in shaping learners’ character and enabling them to thrive in diverse contexts, the Government of Kenya is institutionalizing Values-Based Education (VbE) across all levels of the education system. Grounded in the principles of competency-based education (CBE), this effort aims to integrate values such as integrity, empathy, responsibility, and respect into formal, informal and non-formal learning spaces. In March 2025, the Kenya Institute of Curriculum Development (KICD), Zizi Afrique Foundation, and the Action for Life Skills and Values in East Africa (ALiVE) initiated a strategic partnership to support the systemic rollout of VbE. This collaboration leverages ALiVE’s expertise in the assessment and progression of life skills and values, alongside KICD’s leadership in curriculum design and implementation. The partnership has co-created a suite of instructional and training materials—including VbE resource books for teachers and school leaders, guides for parents, a training manual, and public-facing communication materials. These resources are designed to support teachers in embedding values meaningfully into daily classroom practice and to equip institutions with tools for character formation. A joint baseline study conducted ahead of the national pilot brought together a wide array of stakeholders, including teachers, learners, parents, curriculum support officers, Ministry of Education officials, the Teachers Service Commission, Kenya National Examinations Council, and civil society partners. The study included classroom observations, focus group discussions, and interviews to assess how values are currently reflected in learning environments. The findings informed the pre-pilot phase, which has so far reached over 1,000 learners in 80 schools, including both regular and special needs institutions across 19 counties. More than 400 teachers have been trained, and over 200 education officials sensitized. These efforts have laid the groundwork for a national pilot targeting Grades 4, 5, and 6 in Term 2, with participating schools receiving tailored VbE resources. This partnership reflects a shared commitment to embedding values at the heart of education reform in Kenya. It also demonstrates how cross-sector collaboration can strengthen the capacity of systems to deliver not just academic outcomes, but also the ethical and social foundations learners need to navigate and contribute to the world meaningfully. I would challenge all of us leaders, parents, teachers, learners and caregivers, to prioritize the values and preach it everywhere we go. Let us show it more in our character and speak about it in every gathering we are part of. Prof. Charles Ong’ondo CEO – KICD @polo_raynor
