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St. Joseph's School, Rapogi. | |
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Location | |
, | |
Information | |
Type | Provincial, public |
Motto | Sharpening for the Future |
Established | 1961 |
Head teacher | Mr. Erastus Nyagua(2023-present) |
Staff | 86 |
Gender | Boys |
Number of students | 2300 (2023) |
Campus | Rapogi, Migori County |
Website | https://rapogi.mobirisesite.com |
St. Joseph's School Rapogi is a county high school for boys situated in Sare in the Nyanza Province of Western Kenya. [1] It is in Migori County.
The school was founded in 1961 by Roman Catholic missionaries before it was state-owned public school. 800–900 students attend the school each year and it has a teaching staff of 46. The former school director was Mr. Maurice Ndolo, [1] who succeeded Mr. Thomas KOgolla. Principal Kogolla took over from Mr.Awiti, who also succeeded Hon John Pesa, an accomplished educator turned politician who after his term as Migori Teachers College, was elected as an MP of the Migori Constituency. The school director is Mr. Maurice Otunga, [2] who was the former principal of Ringa boys High School. [3] In 2010, the school population was 902 students but by 2015, the population had risen to around 1500.
The student body is headed by the school captain (head boy), together with councillors. In 2010, the school introduced a student council body. There is an Old Boys Association "Rapogi Old Students Association (ROSA)" which is a social gathering of old boys.
The school has 17 dorms with a capacity of 90 students per dorm. The latest development is the completion of a four-storey dormitory that has greatly eased congestion in the school.
The school is a seven-streamed school in form one to three, the current form fours have a five-streamed class, a total of 26 classes. With the Ministry's stipulated enrollment of 45 students per class, the total student population should therefore be 1035. However, the present population is slightly higher due to high demand. The school admits children from various religious and ethnic groups after an eight-year primary cycle ending with the Kenya Certificate of Primary Education (KCPE) examination.
The school is one of the giant school not only in southern Nyanza but also in the whole province. The academic performance of the school is very remarkable. The class of 2004 emerged at position one in Nyanza province, defeating the Maseno School, Maranda High School, Kanga High School and St. Mary's School Yala. Mr. John O Awiti is the principal at Yala. [4] In 2011 results, it followed Maranda High School in Nyanza and was ranked 19th nationally.
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The Suba (Abasuba) are a heterogeneous Bantu group of people in Kenya with an amalgamation of clans drawn from their main tribes Ganda people, Luhya people, and Soga who speak the Suba language that is closely similar to the Ganda language spare some lexical items borrowed from Luo. Their population is estimated at 157,787, with substantial fluent speakers. They migrated to Kenya from Uganda and settled on the two Lake Victoria islands of Rusinga and Mfangano, others also settled on the mainland areas including Gembe, Gwassi, Kaksingri of Suba South and Migori and are believed to be the last tribe to have settled in Kenya. The immigrants to present-day Subaland trace their ancestry among Ganda people, Luhya people, Soga people, and the Luo people. The evidence supporting this is the fact that some Suba groups speak languages similar to Luganda, Lusoga and the Luhya. The Suba groups tracing ancestry among the Kenyan tribes preceded those groups from Uganda in present-day Subaland and are the numerous and influential ones. Those groups from Uganda are mostly concentrated in Rusinga and Mfangano islands with small pockets of them being found in mainland Kenya. Linguistically, the Suba are highly influenced by the neighbouring Luo, to the point of a language shift having taken place among large portions of the mainland Suba. As a result, their own language has been classified as endangered. Despite this language shift, the Suba have kept a distinct ethnic identity. The Rusinga Festival is held in December of every year as a cultural festival to celebrate and preserve Suba culture and language.
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