1165. My Time At Nairobi School (Patch) - Joram Mwinamo (The Play House)

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  • Опубліковано 19 вер 2024
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    Joram Mwinamo is a management consultant, coach and Public Speaker, who is passionate about Africa and seeing its people achieve the greatness that is inherent in them while enabling them to have global influence in business, education & life.
    He has top skills in organisation structuring, strategy development, coaching, workshop facilitation, leadership training and Entrepreneurship.
    At SNDBX International, Joram, aside from being the company CEO and Co-Founder, is a leading strategy and entrepreneurship consultant across Africa, with experience in carrying out organisation change programs from the design stage to implementation. He is also the brainchild behind the SNDBX (pronounced Sandbox), an innovative one stop shop for supporting SMEs and the only one of its kind globally. He co-founded, grew and eventually exited Wylde International and remains a board member, leaving it in the hands of a capable successor.
    Joram been involved in various organisation & strategy development projects with large and small organisations in 9 countries across Africa and Asia in both the private, social and public sectors, giving him unique insights into the workings of organisations and the success and sustainability principles across the board. Notable clients include Afrilabs , PSI, Facebook, NCBA Bank, International Trade Centre ITC, Alliance for a Green Revolution in Africa (AGRA), DAI, AMREF Kenya, AMANI Institute, HIVOS East Africa, Open Society and Parapet Group. He is a regular contributor and interviewee for Kenyan media and conference panels on matters Entrepreneurship, SMEs and policy.
    Joram is actively involved in mentoring startups and is a global mentor for the ENPACT startup program in Berlin Germany. He sits on the board of Amnesty International Kenya.
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 27

  • @cta101
    @cta101  2 роки тому +2

    Thank you for your support by helping us create content.
    MPESA TILL (BUY GOODS) - 5236949
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  • @jjazzzz
    @jjazzzz 2 роки тому +6

    In Nairobi School you feared senior students more than teachers.
    A teacher would send you to a senior class(Which you weren't supposed to enter reason being seniority) and you would rather accept punishment from the teacher for disobeying than the consequences of entering a senior class which would be overnight punishment.

  • @pepe2000ful
    @pepe2000ful 2 роки тому +6

    Patch was legendary !!!

  • @brianogwell5061
    @brianogwell5061 2 роки тому +4

    Apatchiee eeeh apatchiee aah! Love how this is so shocking to A star. Lool

  • @PeterKariukireformissionary
    @PeterKariukireformissionary 2 роки тому +2

    These provincial and national high schools that were began during the colonial era seem to have inherited from the colonial system because this sounds like it was a shared experience for those who went to these schools who are in this age set.

  • @Mabundu1
    @Mabundu1 2 роки тому +4

    It's nostalgic..but this is what went on with basically all schools Mr Njau. Monitors>prefects>headboys

    • @bmijjy
      @bmijjy 2 роки тому +1

      All schools had headboys, school captains etc...in patch the title was strictly 'head of school'...this and many other distinctions are what made it unique

    • @one2moja1
      @one2moja1 10 місяців тому

      @@bmijjy Thank you very much. We did not have head boys, Head of School is the right "porto" as we used to call it.

  • @stevenguru4374
    @stevenguru4374 2 роки тому +3

    ‘Breezing’, I had forgotten that term. Yes, bullying traumatised some. Senior School Prefects were the law in my time.

  • @nyamburant
    @nyamburant Рік тому +1

    14:40 as an Alliance Girls High School Alum i can confirm that we were taught we’re different. We attended the best high school South of the Sahara and North of the Limpopo. And there’s nothing anyone can do about it 🤷🏾‍♀️🧘🏾‍♀️🌬️🌊
    21:27 my mind is blown because AGHS was run in the exact same way! Captains (prefects) during my time had more power than any individual teachers! Only the school principal and deputies and a few senior teachers that could tell any captain anything!

  • @dkimani7552
    @dkimani7552 2 роки тому +3

    I don't know how we survived all that.

  • @petermakuthu171
    @petermakuthu171 2 роки тому +2

    Patch is just so very wonderful...

  • @saukkke
    @saukkke 2 роки тому +1

    Ex Changerian (Lenana School) here and yes Patch was THE enemy especially in Rugby!
    The experience was very similar in Lenana. Massive school with prefects running things. The School Captain was a demi god. My first year there he was also the captain of the rugby team so you can imagine the kind of power he wielded. He had a huge office at the top floor of the administration block. He would walk up to the roof which was maybe four or five stories high and watch to see the late comers to class prep especially in the evening after supper. House Captains were also quite powerful. Games Captain too.
    The military like order and discipline was there. Lenana had a shooting range too! And fun fact... the school started in the current State House back in 1949!

    • @ndaisikioko7021
      @ndaisikioko7021 Рік тому +1

      D.H captains, at least in my school, were huge and most violent 😅

  • @bachoabdi2906
    @bachoabdi2906 2 роки тому +2

    Patch yeeee

  • @ndaisikioko7021
    @ndaisikioko7021 Рік тому

    I went to a quakers nursery school in Mombasa... But yes, Luhya land is the stronghold.

  • @beve83
    @beve83 2 роки тому +3

    Shout out to Friends church :)

  • @deemb5284
    @deemb5284 2 роки тому +4

    What?? JORO

  • @jackmutua5308
    @jackmutua5308 Рік тому +1

    Can’t remember any choir in patch 1986 to 1990

    • @one2moja1
      @one2moja1 10 місяців тому

      In the 90s we had a very vibrant music club, I sang in the choir and we won a few national accolades. It was also a great way to hide from the upschool tormentors.

  • @iNro64
    @iNro64 2 роки тому +2

    🔥 🔥 🔥 🔥 🔥

  • @frederickochieng-odhiambo5708
    @frederickochieng-odhiambo5708 Рік тому +1

    Joram, do not condone injustice. What went on in Patch was downright stupid. Do not confuse criminal actions with discipline.

    • @jorammwinamo
      @jorammwinamo 11 місяців тому +1

      It was but the school also had a military tradition which carried on. The only difference is people sign on to military and navy seal type of stuff by opting in. For those who were not traumatised, there's actually those who valued the experience. Today a lot of that stuff is considered injustice but a section of society looks back at it with nostalgia. And if you listened to the whole interview I actually commented on that but I told my story as I experienced it.

  • @paulmwita12
    @paulmwita12 2 роки тому +1

    Dorms washed by workers...Njau bana!!