Lightning doesn’t strike the same tree twice, and Chavakali has proved it and in a big way. Having been in the cold for one year after previous years’ results were nullified the School returned strongly struggling to fight for its place in the top performing school nationally to reclaim its position and prove indeed it is a centre of excellence.
Having suffered a setback in 2014 KCSE results’ nullification, the Vihiga-based national school has curved a nitch for itself and posted a mean grade of 9.8 with 21 A plain, 172 A minus, 202 B plus, 143 B plain, 64 B minus, 21 C plus and 4 C plain. This is contrary to what has been trending online that the breakdown was; 300 A PLAINS, 211 A- MINUS, 99 B+ PLUS and 20 B PLAIN.
The school has however asserted its supremacy in the country as a centre of excellence.
“To those of us whose hard work had become a pipedream, it has now been realised, though delayed, and our school’s gloom has turned to glee,” said Harrison Mbohe, a student whose results were cancelled in 2014 and got an A with 83 points.
It was worth noting that all its 633 students made it to university cut-off points except only four who scored a C plain.
”We have grown to be leaders in the country not only in academics but also in co-curriculum activities. Our school choir was invited for a dinner at state house last year from its perennial prowess in music festival. “Our target was to get all our students qualify to University and that has come to pass,” added Mr Indimuli who promised more to come in this year.
Only last year, the Kenya National Examination Council cancelled its 313 students’ KCSE results, forcing them to repeat their final year. The school was out to prove the examination council wrong.
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