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I have to hand it to Noynoy.

He is the only presidential candidate that has thought through the problems of education in our country. Even if all the candidates say that they regard the deterioration of public education as the most important and pressing issue to be faced by the new government, none of the others have put forward any kind of education reform program that makes sense. I will present Noynoys 10-point program for educational reform. I may not agree with all of his points, but I respect and salute him for at least bringing these points to the table for public debate. Everyone else appears to be clueless as far as our educational system is concerned. Noynoy begins his discussion of education with this unequivocal statement: Let me lay out the ten most critical things I will focus on to fix this problem of basic education. 1. I will expand basic education in this country from a short 10-year cycle to a globallycomparable 12 years before the end of the next administration (2016). 2. All public school children (and all public schools) will have a full year of pre-schooling as their introduction to formal schooling by 2016. 3. I want a full basic education for ALL Muslim Filipino children anywhere in the country. 4. I will re-introduce technical-vocational education in our public high schools to better link schooling to local industry needs and employment. 5. By the end of the next administration, every child must be a reader by Grade 1. 6. I will rebuild the science and math infrastructure in schools so that we can produce more scientists, engineers, technicians, technologists and teachers in our universities so that this country can be more globally competitive in industry and manufacturing. 7. I will expand the Government Assistance to Students and Teachers in Private Education Program (GASTPE) to a target of 1 million private HS students every year through education service contracting (ESC) while doing away with the wasteful education voucher system (EVS) of this administration. 8. My view on the medium of instruction is larger than just the classroom. We should become tri-lingual as a country: Learn English well and connect to the world. Learn Filipino well and connect to our country. Retain your dialect and connect to your heritage. 9. I will not tolerate poor textbook quality in our schools. Textbooks will be judged by three criteria: quality, better quality, and more quality. 10. I will build more schools in areas where there are no public or private schools in a covenant with LGUs so that we can realize genuine education for all. Let us now take each of these campaign promises one by one.

Noynoy correctly sees that the key problem facing our educational system is its short length. No matter how intelligent our children are, they can never learn in 10 years what children in other countries learn in 12. Anyone who has ever crammed for an exam (and who has not?) knows that cramming never works. We may pass a particular exam, but after the exam is finished, we will remember nothing of what we studied. Similarly, cramming 12 years of learning into 10 years just does not work. Again and again, our children fail international exams, because other children have had more time to absorb the knowledge and skills that we cram into the shortest educational cycle in the world. Therefore, Noynoys promise that he will expand basic education to 12 years, instead of the current 10, is correct and should be lauded. I am in complete agreement with him on this issue, and so are all the educators in all the other countries in the world. Other countries regard us as an educationally backward nation, primarily because we do not educate our children long enough. Noynoys second point is also well taken. Children around the world now go to school earlier, not because basic education starts earlier, but because there are all sorts of schools that prepare them for Grade 1. These schools may be named in various ways (nursery, day care, kindergarten, pre-school, etc.), but the idea is the same: before entering Grade 1, a child should already know how to read. There is no question on the theoretical level that all children should have at least one year of school before elementary school. (Most private schools already require such a year.) In practice, however, public school pupils do not, for the simple reason that the government cannot afford to fund the requirements of a pre-elementary year (school buildings, classrooms, tables and chairs, teachers, instructional materials). Noynoy believes that, once he curbs corruption, the government will have the extra money to fund the extra year. This remains to be seen, but it is clear that Noynoy has his finger on the pulse of international education. With all the advances in teaching strategies nowadays, it is easy to teach pre-school children how to read. Most of our children enter public school at age 6 or 7. In other countries, 5-year-old children typically already know how to read. You can imagine how effective our school system would be if children already knew how to read before they enrol in Grade 1. (To be continued) During his campaign for the presidency, Candidate Noynoy offered a 10-point agenda for education. In his State of the Nation address last Monday, President Benigno Aquino III focused on three of these points, namely, the 12-year basic education cycle, additional classrooms, and GASTPE. Because the SONA was meant merely to outline what he wanted to achieve in the first year of his presidency and not to defend his proposals, Aquino had no time to repeat what he had already explained anyway several times during his campaign. Let us review the details of the three points on education.

First, the addition of two years to our basic education cycle. Aquino said, Mapapalawak natin ang basic education cycle mula sa napakaikling sampung taon tungo sa global standard na labindalawang taon. The official English translation inadequately puts it this way, We will be able to expand our basic education cycle from ten years to the global standard of twelve years. I say the translation is inadequate because it fails to translate the word napakaikli, which is the point of the sentence in Filipino. We have the shortest basic education cycle in the whole world. In all other countries in the world, a student needs to have gone through 12 or more years of formal schooling before being admitted to a university. Because universities around the world (except for ours) expect students to have gone through at least 12 years of formal education and, therefore, to be adults (18 years old or older), they can offer higher level courses immediately. The European first year college, for example, is the equivalent of our third year college in the Philippines (a year consisting of major subjects). Partly because we have only two years of major subjects and the Europeans have three, our college degrees are understandably looked down upon by European universities as substandard. (Our four world-ranked universities make up for the lack of years through excellent research outputs.) Since 10 percent of our population work abroad and need credentials recognized internationally, we have no choice but to raise the standards of both our basic and higher education. By moving some of the subjects taught in the first two years of college to high school, we free at least one year of college for more major courses. Therefore, we not only make our basic education quantitatively equal to that of other countries, but we also make our higher education qualitatively comparable to that of foreign universities. Second, Aquino mentioned classrooms twice during the SONA. The money squandered by the National Food Authority could have built all the classrooms that our country needs, which cost P130 billion, and public-private partnerships will allow the government to build more classrooms. Money that should not be lost and money that can be earned will certainly solve the problem of classrooms. Aquino had no time, however, to mention one of the major financial problems in the construction of classrooms the corruption in DPWH. Senator Franklin Drilon, for one, has built a huge number of classrooms at a fraction of the cost quoted by DPWH. We could build more than three times the number of classrooms envisioned in the current budget of DepEd, if DPWH would just stop overpricing. Speaking of money, Aquino also mentioned the Conditional Cash Transfer (CCT) program funded by the World Bank, part of which is meant to help very poor students to go to school. (The speech writers missed using the Filipino name of the program, Pantawid Pamilyang Pilipino Program, which would have been more in keeping with the rest of the speech.) Third, Aquino mentioned Government Assistance to Students and Teachers in Private Education (GASTPE), a program that funds part of the tuition of poor students in private schools in places where there are no public high schools. GASTPE fits in well with Aquinos overall vision of

public-private partnerships (a logical extension of the People Power that installed both Cory and Noynoy). GASTPE helps both students and private schools; conversely, private schools help the government fulfil its duty to educate everyone. In his 10-point Education Agenda, Aquino promised to replace GASTPEs education voucher system (EVS) with education service contracting (ESC); in the SONA, Aquino thus mentioned ESC. Aquino promised ten educational reforms, and within his first year in office, he can do at least three of them. He can already add one year to basic education (very simply by reengineering the current Prep to become Grade One, thus making a seven-year elementary school; funds for this are already in the budget). He can reallocate CCT and GASTPE to help really poor students. Finally, he can moderate, if not eliminate, the greed of DPWH. The third item in Noynoys 10point program for educational reform concerns Muslim children. Says Noynoy, I want a full basic education for ALL Muslim Filipino children anywhere in the country. There are huge differences in philosophy and objectives, as well as in teaching methods, between the Muslim educational system (madaris) and that of DepEd, despite DepEd Order 51, s. 2004. The problem of integrating one into the other, however, cannot be solved only by the two Education Secretaries (DepEd and ARMM). The bigger problem of the religious, cultural, and political conflict between Christians and Muslims not just in Mindanao but all over the country (including Metro Manila, which now has unacknowledged ghettos) has to be solved first. There is, moreover, another problem with integration. The integration should not be only one way. Just as it is important for Muslim children to know our Christian heroes (Rizal, etc.), it is important for Christian children to know our Muslim heroes (Sultan Kudarat, etc.). Many Muslim children have read the Christian Bible, but how many Christian children have read the Quran? If Noynoy is serious about educating all Muslim children, he must study the teaching strategies of our ancestors. According to the first Christians to reach our shores in the 16th century, we already knew then how to read and write Arabic. Noynoys fourth item in his educational agenda involves tech-voc. He says, I will re-introduce technical-vocational education in our public high schools to better link schooling to local industry needs and employment. About time! In many advanced countries, a high school diploma is enough for someone to find a job. There is no reason for an ordinary office worker to have a college degree. Many of our call centers, in fact, now accept non-college graduates. Our problem today, however, is that public high schools have no time to prepare students for the workplace. Once the two missing years are added to basic education, however, there will be time for the system to give students the skills to find jobs or become entrepreneurs. Noynoy continues with his fifth point: By the end of the next administration, every child must be a reader by Grade 1. Since his plan is to institute universal pre-school, this point is no longer necessary to make. A good pre-school education will make a child a reader at the beginning (not at the end) of Grade 1.

With his sixth point, Noynoy turns his attention to tertiary education. He says, I will rebuild the science and math infrastructure in schools so that we can produce more scientists, engineers, technicians, technologists and teachers in our universities so that this country can be more globally competitive in industry and manufacturing. The Congressional Commission on Science, Technology, and Engineering (COMSTE), in which I sit as part of the Technical Advisory Council, repeatedly makes the same point. We need to increase the pool of college students taking up science and engineering courses. One way to do this is to excite our high school students by teaching them such subjects as Industrial Chemistry, Digital Design, Molecular Biology, and Number Theory. These subjects are now taught, by the way, in our science high schools (as they are in the regular high schools of many advanced countries); the materials are ready and can easily be used in all our public schools. While the problems of the public schools are humongous, private schools have their share of problems, too, primarily financial. Noynoy addresses these financial problems with his seventh point. He says, I will expand the Government Assistance to Students and Teachers in Private Education Program (GASTPE) to a target of 1 million private HS students every year through education service contracting (ESC) while doing away with the wasteful education voucher system (EVS) of this administration. This is such a minor matter that I wonder why Noynoy even bothered to bring it up. Perhaps he just wanted to take a swing at the Arroyo government. It will take a mere DepEd Order to make this come true. If Secretary Mona Valisno is wise, she will issue such an order effective this June and steal the thunder from Noynoy. The eighth point has to do with the thorny issue of the medium of instruction. My stand has always been clear: students should be taught in the language that they use, not in a language that they are still learning. International educational research has established a long time ago that teaching a language in the same language does not work. Local education research has shown in experiment after experiment that Filipino children learn math and science faster and better when they are not taught in English. Therefore, I agree in general with Noynoys stand on the medium of instruction. He says, as his eighth point, My view on the medium of instruction is larger than just the classroom. We should become tri-lingual as a country: Learn English well and connect to the world. Learn Filipino well and connect to our country. Retain your dialect and connect to your heritage. I say in general because Noynoy makes a common mistake. He reveals his ignorance when he uses the word dialect. Bicolano, Cebuano, Hiligaynon, Ilocano, and Tagalog are not dialects. They are languages.

The third item in Noynoys 10-point program for educational reform concerns Muslim children. Says Noynoy, I want a full basic education for ALL Muslim Filipino children anywhere in the country.

There are huge differences in philosophy and objectives, as well as in teaching methods, between the Muslim educational system (madaris) and that of DepEd, despite DepEd Order 51, s. 2004. The problem of integrating one into the other, however, cannot be solved only by the two Education Secretaries (DepEd and ARMM). The bigger problem of the religious, cultural, and political conflict between Christians and Muslims not just in Mindanao but all over the country (including Metro Manila, which now has unacknowledged ghettos) has to be solved first. There is, moreover, another problem with integration. The integration should not be only one way. Just as it is important for Muslim children to know our Christian heroes (Rizal, etc.), it is important for Christian children to know our Muslim heroes (Sultan Kudarat, etc.). Many Muslim children have read the Christian Bible, but how many Christian children have read the Quran? If Noynoy is serious about educating all Muslim children, he must study the teaching strategies of our ancestors. According to the first Christians to reach our shores in the 16th century, we already knew then how to read and write Arabic. Noynoys fourth item in his educational agenda involves tech-voc. He says, I will re-introduce technicalvocational education in our public high schools to better link schooling to local industry needs and employment. About time! In many advanced countries, a high school diploma is enough for someone to find a job. There is no reason for an ordinary office worker to have a college degree. Many of our call centers, in fact, now accept non-college graduates. Our problem today, however, is that public high schools have no time to prepare students for the workplace. Once the two missing years are added to basic education, however, there will be time for the system to give students the skills to find jobs or become entrepreneurs. Noynoy continues with his fifth point: By the end of the next administration, every child must be a reader by Grade 1. Since his plan is to institute universal pre-school, this point is no longer necessary to make. A good preschool education will make a child a reader at the beginning (not at the end) of Grade 1. With his sixth point, Noynoy turns his attention to tertiary education. He says, I will rebuild the science and math infrastructure in schools so that we can produce more scientists, engineers, technicians, technologists and teachers in our universities so that this country can be more globally competitive in industry and manufacturing. The Congressional Commission on Science, Technology, and Engineering (COMSTE), in which I sit as part of the Technical Advisory Council, repeatedly makes the same point. We need to increase the pool of college students taking up science and engineering courses. One way to do this is to excite our high school students by teaching them such subjects as Industrial Chemistry, Digital Design, Molecular Biology, and Number Theory. These subjects are now taught, by the way, in our science high schools (as they are in the regular high schools of many advanced countries); the materials are ready and can easily be used in all our public schools. While the problems of the public schools are humongous, private schools have their share of problems, too, primarily financial. Noynoy addresses these financial problems with his seventh point. He says, I will expand the Government Assistance to Students and Teachers in Private Education Program (GASTPE) to a target of 1 million private HS students every year through education service contracting (ESC) while doing away with the wasteful education voucher system (EVS) of this administration.

This is such a minor matter that I wonder why Noynoy even bothered to bring it up. Perhaps he just wanted to take a swing at the Arroyo government. It will take a mere DepEd Order to make this come true. If Secretary Mona Valisno is wise, she will issue such an order effective this June and steal the thunder from Noynoy. The eighth point has to do with the thorny issue of the medium of instruction. My stand has always been clear: students should be taught in the language that they use, not in a language that they are still learning. International educational research has established a long time ago that teaching a language in the same language does not work. Local education research has shown in experiment after experiment that Filipino children learn math and science faster and better when they are not taught in English. Therefore, I agree in general with Noynoys stand on the medium of instruction. He says, as his eighth point, My view on the medium of instruction is larger than just the classroom. We should become tri-lingual as a country: Learn English well and connect to the world. Learn Filipino well and connect to our country. Retain your dialect and connect to your heritage. I say in general because Noynoy makes a common mistake. He reveals his ignorance when he uses the word dialect. Bicolano, Cebuano, Hiligaynon, Ilocano, and Tagalog are not dialects. They are languages. The ninth point in Noynoys ten-point agenda for educational reform concerns textbooks. I will not tolerate poor textbook quality in our schools, he says. Textbooks will be judged by three criteria: quality, better quality, and more quality. When I was DepEd Usec in 2001, I changed the way the content of the textbooks was evaluated. I asked my friends in universities to sit down with DepEds textbook experts to see if the textbooks then being proposed were good. Since they were nationally and internationally famous scholars and since they themselves had no vested interest in any basic education textbooks, my friends were objective and strict. As a result, none of the textbooks then proposed passed their scrutiny. In my stint at DepEd, I did not approve the use of any textbooks, except those that had already been approved by previous administrations. Since I could do only so much in the time I had, I focused on not allowing bad textbooks to enter the system. Had I stayed longer, I would have started looking at the textbooks already in use, to see what should be removed from the system. There is no question that the textbooks currently used in our public schools leave much to be desired. I am not talking of grammar. I have a standing bet that no one can send me a paragraph written by a Filipino that does not contain a grammatical or structural mistake. (I can say this with confidence because my teacher Fr. Joseph Galdon, S.J., taught me to spot even the tiniest error in sentences written by the great international masters of the English language.) I am talking about content. For example, our English textbooks still do not realize that adverbs can modify nouns. Our Filipino textbooks still teach Tagalog, rather than Filipino. Our Mathematics textbooks do not use what children can see around them, thus defying the ancient now mistakenly called constructivist principle that we learn only from what we already know. Our Science textbooks do not excite children enough to think of pursuing careers in science. Our Social Studies (previously, Makabayan) textbooks do not make our children proud to be Filipino and do not motivate them to stay in our country.

Noynoy cannot fulfill this particular promise even if he had more than six years in the presidency, because all our public schooltextbooks (I repeat, all) are of poor quality. The process of telling publishers what to put in a textbook (involving a textbook call and learning standards or competencies) takes more than a year. Evaluating the content of a proposed textbook will take at least a year. The bidding process will take another year. Printing will take another year. Training teachers to use the new textbook will take more than one year. By that time, Noynoys term will be almost over. We are not even talking of evaluating textbooks already in use. There is a solution, however, which I shall write about in another column. Noynoys tenth and final point is managerial. He says, I will build more schools in areas where there are no public or private schools in a covenant with LGUs so that we can realize genuine education for all. I do not know why Noynoy mentions this point. Perhaps he just wanted to have ten points rather than eight or nine. The LGUs, despite the Local Government Code, are really in practice under the control of the President. There is no need for a covenant. Schools can be built as long as there are funds to build them or, as Noynoys camp never fails to remind us, if the funds do not go into the pockets of corrupt officials. Overall, then, what do I think of Noynoys education policy? Clearly, among the presidential candidates, Noynoy has the best proposals for education. Adding two more years to basic education, requiring pre-school, ensuring that a high school diploma is enough for employment, and strengthening math and science teaching are crucial to improving our educational system. His ideas on madaris and textbooks will remain pipe dreams, no matter who becomes his DepEd Secretary. He need not bother himself with Every child a reader by Grade 1, GASTPE, or the LGUs, since these are proposals that any DepEd Secretary can implement in his or her first month in office. I do not completely agree with his stand on the medium of instruction, although I realize that, this being an emotional rather than a scholarly issue, he is being merely politically safe by championing Filipino, English, and vernacular languages equally. Another candidate who has definite ideas about education is Gibo Teodoro. I will take up his views next week. May I, once again, invite the other candidates to send me their proposed education policies? I will be as objective with them as I have been (I hope) with Noynoy. LANGUAGE VS. DIALECT: The difference between a language and a dialect is simple: a language has several dialects. There are 175 Philippine languages (some have died) and more than a thousand dialects. Tagalog and Cebuano are languages, not dialects. Tagalog has several dialects, such as Batangas Tagalog, Bulacan Tagalog, Laguna Tagalog, and Paraaque Tagalog. The Cebuano dialects spoken in Bohol, Masbate, Palawan, Samar, and Mindanao all belong to the Cebuano language.

10 Ways to Fix Education in the Philippines


A. Increasing the educational cycle to 12 years basic education This is to to give children a chance at succeeding. This starts from school year 2011-2012. Noynoy Aquino believes that by applying the K-12 (Kindergarten to Grade 12) system, which is what our neighbors are using, will help Filipino children achieve the best basic education possible.

B. Universal pre-schooling for all The Aquino campaign proposes the establishment of a real pre-school system that makes the pre-school available to all kids regardless of their parents income. Noynoy Aquino proposes that all public school children will have pre-schooling as introduction to the formal school system by school year, 2016.

C. Madaris Education as a sub-system within educational system Filipino Muslims have asked for an Education System that respects their beliefs and culture that goes side-by-side with the formal educational system. A Madaris Education can be included to help keep Filipino Muslim children in schools.

D. Technical Vocational Education as alternative to high school senior Technical, vocational education must be reintroduced into public high schools with accompanying trade tests and skills so as to provide high school graduates the quickest path to work upon graduation.

E. Every Child a reader by Grade 1 The Aquino Campaign recognizes that the core problem to learning problems is the inability to read. The educational policy of an Aquino Administration aims to make every child a reader by grade one at the end of its tenure in 2015-2016.

F. Science and Math proficiency Noynoy Aquino pledges to bring science and math club movements with elementary and high school science and math fairs. Noynoy Aquino also pledges to build a strong science and math curriculum that begins in Grade 1.

G. Assistance to private schools as essential partners in basic education The Aquino Administration proposes to expand Government Assistance to Students and Teachers in Private Education (GASTPE) to aim for 1 million private HS students every year through education service contracting (ESC). It likewise pledges to remove the wasteful education voucher system of the Arroyo Administration.

H. Medium of Instruction rationalized Noynoy Aquino supports the UNESCO tried and tested formula of mother tongue instruction before moving on to English for higher grades. From Pre-school until grade 3, the Aquino Administrations policy will be an education taught in the mother tongue, with English and Filipino as subjects. As grade level go higher, English will be increasingly used for science, and math while social studies will be in Filipino.

I. Quality Textbooks Text books under an Aquino Administration will be judged by: Quality, better quality, and more quality. J. Covenant with Local Governments to build more schools

In areas where there are no public or private schools, the Aquino Administration will enter into a covenant with local government units to build smaller populations so teachers and students and parents can form a real learning community.

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