President William Ruto has directed Education Cabinet Secretary Julius Ogamba to initiate reforms in the basic education system aimed at integrating informal and religious learning programmes into Kenya’s recognised education framework.
Speaking on Monday, June 1, 2026, during the Madaraka Day celebrations in Wajir, Ruto said the reforms would ensure that learners enrolled in alternative education pathways are formally recognised within the country’s education system.
The President specifically ordered the Education Ministry to develop measures that will integrate madrasa education, Tuksi learning systems, and pastoral instruction programmes into the formal education structure.
According to Ruto, the move is intended to ensure that no child is excluded from education because of geographical location, historical marginalisation, or the lack of recognition of alternative learning methods. “Some children in northern Kenya and other marginalised regions remain outside the formal education system because of certain alternative learning pathways that have not been adequately recognised and accommodated within our education framework,” Ruto stated. He directed the Education CS to engage stakeholders and begin consultations under the Basic Education Act to develop proposals for the formal recognition and integration of these learning pathways.
“Today I direct Education CS to engage all relevant stakeholders and take the necessary measures under the Basic Education Act to consult widely and recommend appropriate measures for the formal integration of the same,” Ruto ordered.

