He warned that devolving primary and secondary education would fragment teachers' unions, weakening collective bargaining and rights protection.
"Instead of pursuing constitutional changes, Misori urged leaders to address pressing challenges in education, including free schooling at all levels to ease parents' financial burden.
He also called for more funding towards promotion of 130,000 stagnated teachers, employment of over 100,000 new teachers to cover shortages that are facing schools, particularly the Junior Secondary Schools.
Additionally, Kuppet urges for relocation of Junior Secondary Schools to secondary institutions with better infrastructure.
"These are the issues Kenyans want solved, not another referendum that will gobble billions of shillings," he said.
According to KUPPET, the future of education lies not in shifting responsibilities between national and county governments, but in fixing the system already in place.