When the Wine Ages: Reimagining Retirement for Educators in Kenya

Authors

Njeri Kiaritha

Department of Educational Psychology, School of Education Moi University Kenya (Kenya)

Hannah Kiaritha

Kabete National Polytechnic Kenya (Kenya)

Article Information

DOI: 10.47772/IJRISS.2025.91200060

Subject Category: Education

Volume/Issue: 9/12 | Page No: 709-716

Publication Timeline

Submitted: 2025-12-11

Accepted: 2025-12-18

Published: 2025-12-31

Abstract

Retirement among educators in Kenya is a contested terrain. Primary and secondary school teachers retire at 60, while university lecturers may remain in service until 74. These policies reflect colonial legacies, institutional logics, and cultural constructions of age and productivity. This paper employs a mixed-methods design to explore the experiences, perceptions, and implications of retirement across the educational spectrum. Drawing on survey data (quantitative) and interviews (qualitative) educators across different educational levels, it examines the causes and consequences of retirement beyond age, including redundancy, health, burnout, and policy pressures. The metaphor of aging wine, sometimes sweet, sometimes bitter, frames the analysis. The findings reveal both the waste of wisdom through compulsory exits and the risks of stagnation through delayed generational renewal. The paper is a call for a Kenyan philosophy of retirement that reframes it as transformation rather than termination, ensuring that the wisdom of educators is not buried alive but reinvested into mentorship, policy, and institutional renewal.

Keywords

Retirement, Reimagining retirement, Theories of Retirement

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