Renewable and Authentic Assessment in Higher Education in Kenya: Navigating Possibilities, Confronting Challenges, and Forging Solutions

Renewable and Authentic Assessment in Higher Education in Kenya: Navigating Possibilities, Confronting Challenges, and Forging Solutions

Authors

  • Florence Kamonjo University of Kabianga
  • Margaret Ongek
  • David Ngatia

Keywords:

Renewable Assessment, Authentic Assessment, Higher Education, Kenya, Digital Transformation

Abstract

The global acceleration of digitization and technological innovation is profoundly reshaping educational paradigms, compelling higher education institutions worldwide to re-evaluate traditional assessment methods. Within this transformative context, renewable assessment emphasising iterative refinement, student ownership, and the creation of enduring value beyond the courses. On the other hand authentic assessment is centred on complex, real-world tasks mirroring professional practice. These two assessment approaches are gaining significant traction as pedagogically robust alternatives. This paper critically examines the integration of these innovative assessment models within the unique landscape of Kenyan higher education. It delves into their core theoretical underpinnings, exploring principles of constructivism, situated learning, and sustainable knowledge creation relevant to the Kenyan context. The study specifically investigates the possibilities these approaches offer which are enhancing graduate employability by developing demonstrable skills and competencies, fostering deeper student engagement and meta-cognition, promoting inclusivity through diverse task formats, and aligning assessment with Kenya's broader digital transformation goals and vision for quality education. Concurrently, it confronts the substantial challenges impeding wider adoption, including infrastructural limitations (internet access, devices), large class sizes, faculty capacity development needs, resistance to pedagogical change, concerns about academic integrity in digital environments, and resource constraints. Moving beyond mere identification of hurdles, the paper proposes concrete solutions and recommendations. These include strategies for phased implementation, leveraging appropriate educational technologies affordably, and comprehensive faculty training programs, rethinking institutional assessment policies, and developing context-specific exemplars of renewable and authentic tasks. By synthesizing possibilities, challenges, and actionable solutions, this paper aims to inform policy and practice, advocating for the strategic and sustainable integration of renewable and authentic assessments to enhance learning quality and graduate readiness in Kenya's evolving higher education sector.

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Published

2026-02-24
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