In the media

In the media

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11-20 of 1743 results

  • Newspaper

    Kerala’s childcare boom leaves accountability adrift

    India

    Press

    Sreelakshmi Soman - South First

    The Indian state of Kerala has seen a rapid expansion of crèches, preschools and day care centres, but the sector operates in a regulatory grey zone with no binding framework to ensure standards or safety. A legislative report flagged significant oversight gaps, warning that the lack of monitoring, formal complaint channels and licensing poses risks to children. The committee urged the state to adopt the National ECCE Policy, establish monitoring bodies, introduce formal registration mechanisms and set clear operating and infrastructure regulations.

  • Newspaper

    The growing market for student academic misconduct services

    China

    Press

    Gengyan Tang, Sarah Elaine Eaton, Wei Cai - LibraryLearningSpace

    A new study highlights the expansion of a commercial ecosystem offering “academic misconduct appeal assistance” through social media platforms. Researchers found that these services target students at moments of maximum anxiety. The model has evolved from informal help to a platform-driven business that operates similarly to contract cheating services. Academic integrity is slowly turning into a purchasable good. The authors warn that the phenomenon reflects a growing misalignment between institutional communication strategies and student behaviour.

  • Newspaper

    Professional and higher education institutions will implement mandatory anti-plagiarism policies

    Moldova R

    Press

    - IPN

    Academic integrity becomes a mandatory criterion in the evaluation of educational institutions in Moldova. The new regulations impose the establishment of strict policies against plagiarism and academic fraud. The measures apply to all study programs within the institutions of technical vocational education, higher education, and adult education to meet accreditation standards. They include mechanisms for prevention, identification, and sanctioning of deviations, as well as information and training programs for pupils, students, trainees, and teaching staff.

  • Newspaper

    Hawks make sweeping arrests in Mpumalanga education fraud scandal

    South Africa

    Press

    Hope Ntanzi - IOL

    A former acting head of the provincial education department was among 41 suspects arrested for alleged R114 million tender fraud over five years. Police arrested him at his home following investigations dating back to 2018. Several suspects across multiple provinces are expected to appear in court, including at least 10 Government officials and multiple contractors. The case involves suspected bribery, inflated tenders and irregularly awarded maintenance contracts. The education department reaffirmed a zero-tolerance stance on corruption.

  • Newspaper

    Delhi CM Rekha Gupta launches CM Jan Sunwai Portal, e District & EWS platforms

    India

    Press

    - The Impressive Times

    Delhi Chief Minister launched the CM Jan Sunwai Portal and mobile app to improve public services and transparency. Citizens can now register and track complaints related to the Municipal Corporation of Delhi, the Delhi Development Authority and the Delhi Police on a single platform. The Government also launched secure digital platforms, including e-District services and a new digital platform to support disadvantaged groups with fair access to free private education.

  • Newspaper

    Kenya to audit 790 public secondary schools to strengthen financial accountability

    Kenya

    Press

    Kithinji Njeru - Education News Kenya

    The Kenyan government ordered an audit of 790 public secondary schools as part of the 2024/2025 financial review to enhance transparency in the education sector. The audit will examine financial management systems and procurement, with officials required to provide relevant documentation. Authorities aim to strengthen internal controls, ensure compliance with financial rules and safeguard public funds.

  • Newspaper

    Zamfara SUBEB establishes ACTU to combat corruption in basic education sector

    Nigeria

    Press

    - ICPC

    In Nigeria, the Zamfara State Universal Basic Education Board launched an Anti-Corruption and Transparency Unit (ACTU) to strengthen integrity in basic education management. The Independent Corrupt Practices and Other Related Offences Commission officials emphasized that the unit should act as a supportive mechanism, not an adversarial body. ACTU’s responsibilities include reviewing processes, conducting staff sensitisation, enforcing ethical standards, and conducting preliminary investigations.

  • Newspaper

    Kuwait orders all employees to update academic data to combat fraud

    Kuwait

    Press

    Kuna - Kuwait Times

    In its fight against forged certificates and corruption, Kuwait ordered all public and private sector employees to verify their academic certificates via the Sahel e-government app. The Civil Service Commission highlighted penalties of imprisonment and fines for using forged certificates. The move falls within ongoing efforts to combat forged certificates in both the public and private sectors to ensure academic integrity, equality and justice.

  • Newspaper

    Charging for extra lessons is “corruption”, says education Ministry

    Zimbabwe

    Press

    CITE - The Zimbabwean

    The Zimbabwean Ministry of Primary and Secondary Education warned that teachers who charge students for extra lessons face disciplinary consequences, as they are already paid by the Government to teach. He urged parents to report such practices through official complaint channels, starting with the class teacher, then the school head, district, provincial offices, and finally the ministry’s head office or courts. He also condemned schools forcing parents to buy uniforms from them, calling the practice illegal.

  • Newspaper

    Healthcare and education top corruption statistics in Uzbekistan

    Uzbekistan

    Press

    Doniër Tuhsinov - Kun.uz

    Uzbekistan’s Anti-Corruption Agency reported 5,222 corruption-related crimes in 2025, an 8.6% decrease from 5,716 cases in 2024. The healthcare, preschool and secondary education sectors, and local governments had the most offences, with over 300 cases linked to local administrations, mostly involving mayoral assistants. 192 public procurement contracts worth UZS 673.3 billion led to administrative and disciplinary actions. In 2026, authorities are introducing a new anti-corruption system and aim to fully digitize the process to eliminate the human factor.

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