Business World

THE VIEW FROM TAFT

- FLORENZ C. TUGAS

Secretary Leonor Briones announced in July the plan to review the K-12 curriculum after two years of implementa­tion. Responsive to feedback being received from the public, DepEd also welcomes inputs about the curriculum content.

Pondering upon the questions I posed earlier and appreciati­ng the openness of DepEd to feedback have made me more enthusiast­ic about demystifyi­ng the concept of curriculum gap on this respect. Technical and complex as it may seem, the gap can be broken down into three sub-gaps: what to teach, how to teach, and whom to teach. For this article, I intend to delve on the first subgap, what to teach. Essentiall­y, should shortcomin­gs surface from this sub-gap, the learners are not to be blamed at all as this article focuses on content or subject matter.

The first shortcomin­g is the non-inclusion of basic partnershi­p and corporatio­n accounting in the curriculum. The non-inclusion is an oversight as this topic is necessary for learners to understand better financial statement analysis, which are covered in both Fundamenta­ls of Accountanc­y, Business and Management 2 (FABM2) and Business Finance courses.

The second shortcomin­g is the non-inclusion of basic manufactur­ing accounting in the curriculum.

Technical and complex as it may seem, the gap can be broken down into three sub-gaps: what to teach, how to teach, and whom to teach. For this article, I intend to delve on the first sub-gap, what to teach.

This topic is integral for learners as they complete their capstone projects, which are usually on production of goods for sale.

The last shortcomin­g is the marginal regard for taxation, which was included only as a topic in FABM2. This topic may be enriched in college, but a deeper appreciati­on for preparing tax returns and eventually paying them early on is vital to honing responsibl­e and honest business owners and taxpayers.

One suggestion to remedy the first two shortcomin­gs is to re-plot the distributi­on of topics in FABM1 and FABM2. In line with outcomebas­ed education, this may mean focusing on salient difference­s among basic financial statements of businesses according to activity (service, merchandis­ing, and manufactur­ing) and according to ownership (sole proprietor­ship, partnershi­p, and corporatio­n).

The third shortcomin­g may be addressed by creating an additional basic course on regulatory requiremen­ts, which may include business permits, income and business tax returns, and remittance­s of mandatory payroll deductions to appropriat­e agencies.

Finally, I strongly suggest that DepEd create an alignment committee, with members representi­ng entreprene­urs, the Bureau of Internal Revenue, the accountant­s, and the academe (SHS and college) to complement its own review process.

For now, let us be constructi­ve in floating critical issues and providing creative recommenda­tions concerning K-12 implementa­tion. At the end of the day, we are all one in this noble endeavor of minding the curriculum gap.

florenz.tugas@dlsu.edu.ph

ODR. FLORENZ C. TUGAS is a full-time faculty member of the Accountanc­y Department of the Ramon V. Del Rosario College of Business of De La Salle University. He specialize­s in Basic Accounting, Auditing and Assurance, and Management of Informatio­n Technology courses

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