Baringo County-led education initiative to boost ECDE leadership
Education
By
Mike Kihaki
| May 10, 2026
Baringo Governor Benjamin Keboi with Yukabeth Kidenda, CEO Teach for Kenya during the signing ceremony on May 8, 2026. [Mary Imenza, Standard]
Baringo County has unveiled a new education leadership programme dubbed “Lead for Baringo” in a move aimed at strengthening early childhood education and addressing learning challenges in underserved communities.
The initiative, launched in partnership with Teach For Kenya, seeks to build a pipeline of young education leaders who will serve in public Early Childhood Development Education (ECDE) centres across the county while supporting long-term reforms in teaching, learning and education leadership.
Under the programme, the county government will co-finance 50 per cent of the Fellows’ stipends, a move leaders described as a significant investment in locally driven and sustainable education solutions.
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Baringo Governor Benjamin Cheboi said the programme reflects the county’s commitment to improving education outcomes by investing in people and leadership.
“We are committed to strengthening our education system by investing in people,” said Governor Cheboi.
“Lead for Baringo reflects our belief that developing local leaders is key to improving outcomes for our learners.”
Through the initiative, Teach For Kenya will recruit, train and support Fellows who will work in underserved ECDE schools across the county for a period of two years.
The Fellows will focus on improving foundational literacy and numeracy while also leading community-centred projects aimed at tackling barriers to quality education.
The programme comes at a time when counties are under increasing pressure to improve access and quality in ECDE education following the full transfer of the function to devolved governments under Kenya’s 2010 Constitution.
Many counties, especially those in arid and semi-arid areas, continue to face challenges including teacher shortages, poor infrastructure and low literacy levels among learners.
Education stakeholders have increasingly called for innovative partnerships to strengthen ECDE systems, particularly in marginalized communities where learning outcomes remain below the national average.
Teach For Kenya Chief Executive Officer Yukabeth Kidenda said Baringo was setting an important example for counties seeking to develop sustainable education leadership models.
“Baringo County is setting an important precedent for county-led innovation in education,” said Kidenda. “Lead for Baringo demonstrates what is possible when the government invests in building its own leadership pipeline, with a model that can be adapted across counties.”
The first cohort of Fellows is expected to begin teaching in January 2027, with deployment targeting schools serving high-need communities across the county.
County officials said the programme is designed not only to improve classroom learning but also to create long-term systemic change through collaboration between government, educators and communities.
The partnership is also expected to serve as a replicable model for other counties seeking to strengthen foundational learning and educational leadership through shared investment and local ownership.