Operation Quality Assurance: TSC Deploys Inspectors to Monitor Teachers’ Classroom Performance
NAIROBI, Kenya — The Teachers Service Commission (TSC) is shifting into high gear to ensure classroom standards are being met across the country.
Starting Monday, May 18, 2026, a massive contingent of TSC officials—including County and Sub-County Directors alongside Curriculum Support Officers (CSOs)—will fan out across all 47 counties for a rigorous, countrywide school inspection.
The exercise is designed to be more than just a “surprise visit.” It is a comprehensive audit of content delivery, policy adherence, and the professional discipline of over 400,000 educators currently on the TSC payroll.
The Mission: Content Delivery and Policy Compliance
The primary focus of the monitoring teams will be the classroom.
Officials will be observing live lessons to assess content delivery and ensuring that schools are strictly adhering to both TSC regulations and broader government education policies.
Heads of Institutions (HOIs) have already been put on high alert.
They are required to have a specific “arsenal” of documentation ready for review the moment the inspection teams step through the school gates.
The HOI Checklist: What School Heads Must Have Ready
To facilitate a smooth quality assurance exercise, HOIs must prepare the following:
Teacher Lesson Attendance Register (TLAR): Tracking who is in class and when.
Institutional Document Checklist: This includes the master/block timetable, approved schemes of work, and learner assessment progress records (including IEP reports).
Performance Tracking: Analysis of teacher lesson attendance and rescheduling timetables for any lessons missed.
Skills Development: Learner skills development target records (staff quarterly targets).
The Teacher’s Portfolio: The Professional Document Checklist
The inspection doesn’t stop at the Principal’s office. Every teacher is expected to maintain an updated portfolio of professional documents.
According to the TSC, these records are essential to facilitate effective curriculum delivery and serve as the basis for teacher appraisals.
Key documents required from teachers include:
Instructional Materials: Current personal timetable, curriculum designs, approved schemes of work, and updated lesson plans and notes.
Assessment Records: Records of work checked weekly, examination and assessment analysis (national and internal), marked learner work, and individualized educational programmes (IEP).
Professional Growth: TPAD records, lesson observation records, and evidence of professional development activities.
Innovation & Community: Evidence of ICT integration in teaching and records of community and stakeholder involvement.
Creative Pedagogy: Preparation of teaching aids using locally available resource materials.
“This checklist is intended to assist teachers to maintain professional documents that can be assessed by supervisors for the purpose of teacher appraisal,” the TSC stated, emphasizing that compliance with these standards is non-negotiable.
The Carrot and the Stick: Linking Inspection to the Wajibika Awards
While the inspection serves as a “check” on performance, it comes at a time when the Commission is also preparing to celebrate excellence.
The exercise coincides with the final stages of the Wajibika Award—a Public Service Commission (PSC) initiative designed to reward ethical and academic brilliance.
Over 14,000 teachers are set to be honored for their outstanding commitment to service.
Currently, the names of 300 teachers per county (split equally between primary and secondary) and two schools per county have been forwarded for the national awards.
By conducting these inspections, the TSC is essentially verifying that the high standards celebrated by the Wajibika Award are being mirrored in every classroom across the Republic.
Tools of the Trade
Inspectors will be utilizing a suite of digital and manual tools to record their findings, including:
- Online Lesson Observation Forms
- TIMEC Tools (Teacher Induction Mentorship and Coaching)
- TMIS Tools (Teacher Management Information System)
- Lesson Recovery Schedules (LRS) to ensure no learner is left behind due to teacher absence.
The Bottom Line: As the teams hit the road this Monday, the message to educators is clear: Professionalism is the priority.
For those meeting the standards, the Wajibika Awards and TSC promotions beckon; for those falling behind, the inspection is a wake-up call to realign with the Commission’s “Wajibika” (Accountability) philosophy.
Do you think these “in-person” inspections are more effective for improving learning outcomes than the digital TPAD system alone?
