Nairobi, 11 November, 2025 / 3:04 pm (ACI Africa).
Archbishop Anthony Muheria of the Catholic Archdiocese of Nyeri in Kenya has condemned exam malpractice in schools, warning that dishonesty in education undermines the nation’s future and hinders the potential of young people.
In a reflection published on Sunday, November 9, Archbishop Muheria expressed sadness that some parents and teachers are encouraging students to cheat in the ongoing Kenya Certificate of Secondary Education (KCSE) exams, describing it as a dangerous habit that will harm the very children they claim to help.
“Let us know that we cannot seek a better future for our children through lies and then pretend we are doing well. We, as parents and teachers, still have this bad habit of looking for shortcuts, for dishonest means, so that our children can supposedly pass and get high grades,” Archbishop Muheria said in the report by Catholic Mirror, a publication of the Kenya Conference of Catholic Bishops (KCCB).
The Archbishop highlighted the dangers of exam cheating, noting that it harms not only the student but the entire society, especially in critical fields such as medicine and engineering.
“Beloved ones, it is important to understand that those you are helping now to cheat in order to study medicine or engineering through exam malpractice are the same ones who will treat you later,” the Archbishop said.



