Panay News

Poorest...

- ( Dempsey Reyes © Philippine Daily Inquirer)

contains the body’s findings and recommenda­tions to improve the country’ s education system.

Among the observatio­ns highlighte­d by the commission was the“in equitable distributi­on and utilizatio­n” of resources that “resulted in unequal access to higher education.”

The report was referring to tertiary education subsidies ( TES) under Republic Act No. 10931, or the Universal Access to Quality Tertiary Education Act, which had widened access to the free higher education program among Filipino students in tertiary-level education, including those pursuing undergradu­ate college degrees. Subsidy for tuition, fees Under the law, TES are supposed to cover the tuition and other school fees of students who are academical­ly capable but financiall­y disadvanta­ged, should they decide to attend a private university or college, the Edcom II report pointed out.

The subsidies are also intended to cover these students’ expenses on books, school supplies, transporta­tion, and other needs to complete their degree programs, it added.

However, the commission found that the number of TES grantees categorize­d under the extreme poverty sector, or those listed under the Pantawid Pamilyang Pilipino Program ( 4Ps) and other antipovert­y programs, has been declining over the years.

Not only that ,“their proportion within the total distributi­on” has also decreased, according to the report.

Based on official data, a total of 204,234 students under the category received the TES grant in 2018, accounting for 74.24 percent of the total, but this “sharply declined” to 69,887, or 30.74 percent, by 2022.

Edcom II’s data was sourced from the September 2023 figures of the Unified Financial Assistance System for Tertiary Education. Displaced by PNSL

At the same time, the number of grantees f rom private higher education institutio­ns in municipali­ties and cities without state and local universiti­es and colleges ( SUCs/ LUCs), or those referred to as “placed with no SUC/ LUC” ( PNSL), saw an increase from 70,684 students to 157,484 in the same period, according to the report.

“This shift is notable as students in the PNSL category may not necessaril­y be impoverish­ed, contradict­ing the progressiv­e goal of the [ Universal Access to Quality Tertiary Education] Act,” the commission said in its report.

“The substantia­l rise in PNSL grantees, both in number and proportion, suggests that the TES [ are] no longer targeted toward those who need it most,” it said.

The commission suggested a“re evaluation” of the definition of PNSL, which it said could “better align” with the objectives of the law and ensure equity among student grantees.

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