Robbie

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Robbie

Robbie

@captainRobbie99

Bergabung Ekim 2015
5.2K Mengikuti910 Pengikut
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Anna 🇺🇸
Anna 🇺🇸@realAnn_29·
This man just unlocked carpenter cheat codes. 😂😂🪚
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Gabriel Oguda
Gabriel Oguda@gabrieloguda·
If you're planning to travel to Kenya for the Africa Cup of Nations (AFCON 2027) next year, and been wondering which places to relish your memorable stay; someone has put together a 34min video that will kill you with joy.
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Chauhan
Chauhan@Platypuss_10·
Absolutely Incredible footage of an A380 landing just after an A350 takes off!🥰
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WILLIE OEBA
WILLIE OEBA@WillieOeba·
Kenya Has Been Standing On Business My Guy !!
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voided
voided@voided·
And they say money doesn't buy you happiness
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NO CONTEXT HUMANS
NO CONTEXT HUMANS@HumansNoContext·
He applied for the wrong job
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Caroline
Caroline@carolineagasso1·
@ivymuthe Si amezeeka uzee haijui pesa?
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IVY
IVY@ivymuthe·
What's happening to the son of Jomo Kenyatta Muhoho
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Kevin W.
Kevin W.@Brink_Thinker·
This son bought his dad a truck after his dad’s truck broke down. He’s not a NBA or NFL, DR. or a lawyer, just a regular guy who worked hard to get his dad a truck. This shows his appreciation. The gift just says THANKS DAD... You’re the best!
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Gezegen ve İnsan
Gezegen ve İnsan@gezegenveinsan·
Aniden basan yağmurlara karşı kendi imkanlarıyla raylı çamaşır asma düzeneği kuran bir kadın;
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Ⓝⓖ'ⓞⓡⓞⓡⓘⓔⓣ🐐🇰🇪
We start our day at MOI GIRLS, Eldoret. You should have told me we have another 'Alliance' here in the Rift. A very beautiful school with a rich history. This school was started way back in 1928 as a primary school for Wazungus who had occupied North Rift. It however became a high school in 1954 and renamed HIGHLANDS SCHOOL admitting daughters of the Boers and the British settlers. The school first admitted African students in 1965, the same year in which Daniel Arap Moi was appointed the first African chair of the school BOG. The school was named in his honour in 1978. The school has a current students population of 1,762. As part of the excellent infrastructure the school has a swimming pool which I have noticed has not been in use for the longest time. I am informed the Old Girls are currently raising funds to give it a facelift the way Mzee Moi used to like. I love the culture of the school. Here, girls come with extra shopping just in case their peers who are needy can enjoy the same shopping. Parents also request to pay fees for other students so their daughters can learn in an environment where everyone is taken care of. I like the school menu. The girls take githeri only twice a week. That's on Fridays and Sundays only during lunch. Ugali is every day evening except on Sunday where they enjoy a serving of rice, beef and vegetables. Every day the girls take tea and a quarter bread for breakfast, and during 10 o'clock tea break they enjoy tea and buns. The school keeps dairy cows, pigs and also vegetables. With all these you'd expect the school fees for the premier institution to hit the roof. Right? For the first time you are wrong. Below is the fee structure for 2026. Term 1 - Kshs 34,777 Term 2 - Kshs 20,866 Term 3 - Kshs 13,911 The total fee to keep your girl at MOI GIRLS ELDORET in a year is Kshs 69,554 ONLY. I say only because no other fee is charged on top of this. Development fees, Motivation fee etc, are all covered here. Sorry, I forgot. There is Kshs 1,500 for computers paid ONLY ONCE. The Principal, Mrs Juliana Kirui and the BOM want to make it as affordable as possible for girls from all corners of the country. Does the school perform? Good question. Let's have a look at KCSE 2025 examination results: 33 A 115 A- 123 B+ 94 B 39 B- 28 C+ 9 C 1 C- 432 out of 442 students qualified for Regular University admission. That is 98% university transition. Parents, do you like MOI GIRLS ELDORET, the alliance of North Rift? Would you wish your daughter to join this school?
Ⓝⓖ'ⓞⓡⓞⓡⓘⓔⓣ🐐🇰🇪 tweet media
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😈 Xavier ✞
😈 Xavier ✞@RealXavier011·
This is a super great invention
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Massimo
Massimo@Rainmaker1973·
A race on staircase rice fields.
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Nelson Amenya
Nelson Amenya@amenya_nelson·
Kenya said: Hebu 😂
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Wahome Thuku
Wahome Thuku@wahomethuku·
I ENDED my 4-year term as a parent of Alliance Girls High School in December last year. I may not have the very finest details about the financial manenos raised by the Education Ministry yesterday but I read mischief in the who matter. I know how fast propaganda travels even before the truth and facts have put on shoes. First the Principal Margaret Njeru reported at Alliance Girls in October last year from Masii Girl. She took over from Jedidah Mwangi who retired after heading the school since early 2023. In fact I have only met Ms Njeru once because visits to the school were restricted in the third term. What I can say as a former parent (and certainly I am not the only one) is what I said here several time in 2024 and 2025 amidst controversy. That AGHS has its own financial tradition going back many years and which is negotiated and agreed upon by parents. It has its traditional activities which are financed either by parents or other sources of funds different from the ministry and which give the students and teachers the academic drive and energy. Let's be honest, the President's daughter was a student at the school and left about two years ago. What's this that the President himself as a parent never encountered that is now a subject of such a "scandal"? Alliance Girls has the who-is-who in its community of parents and that has been the case for years. In fact, its thise "mighty" parents who fight to protect the history, the traditions and the dignity of the school for the sake of their daughters. The AGHS parents have a very independent and self regulating ways of raising the money to meet expectations and I can state without fear of contradiction that some of the activities are financed from account run by parents as signatories. I say because I know the details that far. Investigations are good and measures to protect public funds are good too. But what looks like witch hunting should be pointed out at the earliest opportune moment.
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Geeta Patel
Geeta Patel@geetappoo·
कल्पना करके देखिए कितना दिमाग लगाया होगा इसे बनाने में, किसी कंप्यूटर प्रोग्राम से कम नही
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Dera II
Dera II@Neutral_OC·
Bro married a drama queen and got a free copy 😭🤣
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Robbie
Robbie@captainRobbie99·
@Mabonga_254 Ask him if he can donate his car.... Since he is not interested in earthly things....🤣🤣
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Mavin Mabonga
Mavin Mabonga@Mabonga_254·
President Maraga tells me that he built this house in 1984😃, what has been happening is renovations. Recently, when he was installing power in the house, the engineer had refused to install and asked him to built a better house. 😅😅 President Maraga says he told the engineer that the house was his (Maraga’s) & is enough for him. President Maraga says he's not interested in earthly richness. This reminds me of Matthew 5:3 where the bible records; "Blessed are the poor in spirit, for theirs is the kingdom of heaven."
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Unfiltered
Unfiltered@quotesdaily100·
THE WORLD GOES TO SCHOOL DIFFERENTLY: 1. Finland: No major exams until the final year of high school. Teachers are highly educated and respected. Consistently one of the best education systems in the world. 2. Japan: Students clean their own classrooms daily. Respect and responsibility are taught before academics. Character comes first. 3. South Korea: Students study until midnight. The university entrance exam is so critical that flights are rerouted on exam day. Burnout among young people is a serious national crisis. 4. United States: Standardized testing dominates everything. School quality depends on neighborhood wealth. Rich areas get better schools. Poor areas get what is left. 5. Germany: At age 10 students are placed into different school paths. Vocational training is taken as seriously as university. Youth unemployment stays low because of it. 6. India: The system runs on memorization and high-stakes exams. 1.5 million students compete for just 17,000 IIT seats. Pressure begins long before a child is ready. 7. Singapore: Ranked number one globally for math, science, and reading in 2022. Extremely competitive. Even the government admits student pressure has gone too far. 8. France: Philosophy is a required subject and counts toward the national exam. Students are trained to think critically and argue clearly from a young age. 9. Cuba: Education is completely free at every level. Literacy rate sits above 99 percent according to UNESCO. One of the most educated populations in Latin America. 10. Netherlands: Students are assessed at age 12 and placed into paths that suit their strengths. Academic and vocational routes are treated equally. No path is seen as lesser. 11. China: The Gaokao exam determines almost everything about a student's future. Pressure starts in early childhood and is carried by the entire family, not just the student. 12. Kenya: Primary school became free in 2003. Secondary school fees still push many families to breaking point. Dropout rates in rural areas remain high. 13. Russia: Historically strong in mathematics, science, and engineering. The system valued compliance over curiosity. That tension still shapes education today. 14. Brazil: Private schools are well funded and deliver strong results. Public schools are severely underfunded. Where you are born almost entirely determines the education you receive. 15. Denmark: University is free for Danish and EU citizens. Students also receive a monthly government stipend just for attending. Education is treated as a public good, not a personal expense. 16. Canada: Each province runs its own education system independently. Quality varies across the country. Indigenous history inclusion in the curriculum is real but still inconsistent. 17. Australia: Universities are strong and globally respected. Indigenous history is now formally part of the national curriculum. The debate over equal funding between public and private schools remains unresolved. 18. Sweden: No formal grades until age 12 or 13. Early pressure is believed to kill curiosity before it grows. Research consistently supports this approach. 19. New Zealand: Māori language and culture are officially part of the national curriculum. Legally protected but depth of teaching varies greatly between schools. 20. Switzerland: Two thirds of students enter vocational apprenticeships rather than university. Both paths are equally respected. Both lead to strong careers. 21. Norway: Public university is free for everyone including international students. Teachers must hold a master's degree. Teaching is one of the most respected professions in the country. 22. Israel: Schools emphasize critical thinking and entrepreneurship from an early age. Combined with technical military training, this directly feeds one of the most active startup ecosystems in the world.
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