The Open Skills Education (OSE)
A Modest Certification & Licensing Framework for Equitable Skills Development
Founded by Alfred Gitau Mwaura
Purpose
The Open Skills Education (OSE) is a private, independent certification and licensing framework designed to create sustainability, dignity, and equality through skills-based education.
OSE exists to correct a simple imbalance:
skills move economies forward, yet certification systems often exclude the very people who rely on skills to survive.
OSE recognizes practical competence, community impact, and ethical instruction as equal to formal credentials.
Core Philosophy
- Skills before status
- Access before gatekeeping
- Verification without exploitation
- Local relevance, global credibility
OSE is intentionally modest, affordable, and transparent, ensuring that schools, trainers, and learners are empowered—not burdened.
OSE Licensing & Certification Structure
1. Schools License
Annual License Fee: KES 1,360,330
The Schools License authorizes institutions to:
- Operate under the Open Skills Education framework
- Issue OSE-recognized certifications
- Access curriculum validation and ethical standards
- Participate in an open, auditable skills ecosystem
This license supports:
- Quality assurance
- Framework maintenance
- Curriculum integrity
- National and cross-border recognition alignment
2. Certification Conversion Engine (CCE)
Cost per Certification: KES 3,300
Each issued certificate is:
- Digitally converted into a blockchain-secured hash
- Time-stamped and tamper-proof
- Independently verifiable without reliance on the issuing institution
This ensures:
- No fake certificates
- No alteration of records
- Lifelong verification for the holder
The learner owns the proof. The institution owns the credibility.
Why Open Skills Education Matters
OSE is not a mass system.
It is a fair system.
It is built for:
- Trainers working outside elite institutions
- Schools serving grassroots and informal economies
- Learners whose power lies in competence, not connections
OSE does not replace governments or universities.
It complements them—where they cannot reach.
Founding Statement
“Certification should protect skill, not privilege.
Education should liberate, not exclude.”
— Alfred Gitau Mwaura
