Education in Philippines gets slumping grade

MANILA (UCAN): Jesuit Father Jose Ramon Villarin, president of Ateneo de Manila University, the Philippines, decried what he described as the sorry state of education in the country, saying “miseducation is systemic.”

He said the country’s institutions “are weak and they can be bought,” adding that it seems development in education depends on “who’s in power and who has the money.”

Father Villarin, who also heads the Synergeia Foundation, stressed to a gathering of educators in Manila on September 18 the need for the teaching of “good manners and right conduct” in schools, saying it is important to teach children “to be angry at what’s wrong … as children are always on the fringes of adult concerns.”

The Synergeia Foundation is an organisation of individuals and institutions that are working to improve the quality of basic education in the country. 

He called on leaders of educational institutions “to worry about what they are planting today; to worry about their future.”

“We know as leaders that these children are ours. They belong to us. In faith, they belong to God. Let us not mistreat them and shoo them away,” he said.

Gabriel Demombynes, programme leader for human development of the World Bank, told the gathering that the Philippines has a “learning crisis.” He noted that among the country’s limitations is malnutrition that has caused children to leave school at an early age.

The World Bank also reported that one in three Filipino children has stunted growth.

Demombynes also noted that overcrowded schools and a lack of learning materials are common concerns that must be addressed.

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“Schooling is not the same as learning,” he said. “It is not enough to get children to school, but to ensure that they are learning,” he stressed.

A report released early this year by advocacy group, Philippine Business for Education, noted that while change has come to Philippine education it is “but only passably so.”

The group noted that early childhood comprehension remains poor “with more than a third of Filipino children scoring zero on both reading and listening.”

It added that achievement scores for both elementary and secondary levels “have also stalled at 59 per cent, well below the 77 per cent national target.”

Ramon del Rosario Jr., chairperson of the group, said the country has yet to translate its successes in education into actual learning, “the kind that prepares our people for the global economy.”

He said Filipino graduates still “lack the skills demanded by industry and the Philippines has one of the highest rates of youth un-employment” in Asia.

According to the International Labour Organisation, 21.7 per cent of young people in the Philippines were “not in education, employment or training” as of 2017.

The Philippine Statistics Authority released the results of a study in November 2018 noting that Filipino families are “most deprived” in education.

The report said that “six out of 10 families in 2016 and five out of 10 families in 2017 were deprived of basic education.”

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