Margaret Kobia
Margaret Kanyiri Kobia is a Kenyan civil servant who was nominated by President Uhuru Kenyatta as Cabinet Secretary for the Public Service, Youth, and Gender Affairs, on 26 January 2018. Prior to her current position, she served as the chairperson of the Kenya Public Service Commission from December 2012 until January 2018.
Background and education
Kobia was born in Meru County. Her mother was a farmer and housewife and her father was a police officer. She is the first-born in a family of seven siblings, five sisters, and two brothers. Kobia attended Mariinya-A-Ruibi Primary School. She then studied at Alliance Girls High School, which she joined in 1972, for both her O-Level and A-Level education, graduating in 1977.In 1979, she was admitted to the University of Nairobi, graduating with a Bachelor of Education degree. In 1990, she was admitted to Kenyatta University, where she obtained a Master of Education degree, specializing in teacher education, in 1991. Later, in 2003, she graduated with a Doctor of Philosophy degree, in Human Resource
Education and Entrepreneurship, from the University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign, where she studied on scholarship.
Career
Right after her first degree, Kobia started teaching at Ngara Girls' High School in 1981. After six years at Ngara, she joined the Kenya National Examinations Council as a research officer and test developer.In 1992, Kobia was appointed Senior Lecturer in Education at Kenya Science Teachers’ College. Then in 1996, she moved to Kenyatta University as the Acting Deputy Registrar and the Director of the Students’ Welfare Services Board. In 2002, she was appointed Assistant Commission Secretary at the then Commission for Higher Education, now the Commission for University Education. She then returned to teaching, at Strathmore University, as a senior lecturer in management, Entrepreneurship and Research Methodology.
In 2005, Kobia was appointed the director, Kenya Institute of Administration, now the Kenya School of Government, serving in that capacity until 2012, when she was appointed the chairperson of the Kenya Public Service Commission, the first Kenyan woman to serve in that position.