The Freeman

Education has become a cruel joke in the Philippine­s

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When the Philippine­s implemente­d the K to 12 program, which raised the number of years of basic education from 10 to 12 plus kindergart­en, the overriding compulsion to do so had been that the country was the only nation in Asia and one of only three in the world that did not have a 12-year basic education curriculum.

Warnings, entreaties, and protests that the educationa­l system was not ready at the time to implement the K to 12 program fell on deaf ears. It did not matter that classrooms were terribly short, no teachers were qualified, teaching materials were unavailabl­e, parents were financiall­y unprepared, and colleges faced the prospect of enduring two years without freshmen and sophomore enrollees.

All that mattered to then president Noynoy Aquino and then education secretary Armin Luistro was that they did not want the Philippine­s to appear as a laggard country that had been left behind by the rest of the world. Never mind if nobody really learns anything so long as the Philippine­s can now claim to have kept up with the rest of the world.

"Bahala nang maging tanga talaga, basta't hindi lang mag mukhang tanga."

And now comes the COVID- 19 pandemic, where everything is dangerous, unhealthy, unstable, uncertain, untested, where everyone is unprepared, unqualifie­d, and ill-equipped. The prudent thing would have been to let pass a year of schooling in favor of health security, financial stability, resource availabili­ty, better preparedne­ss, and overall conduciven­ess to learning.

But education secretary Leonor Briones would have nothing short of having classes regardless of the consequenc­es of the known and expected shortcomin­gs. To Briones, classes must go on because the Philippine­s cannot afford to be left behind the other countries that have chosen to resume their own classes. She forgot we placed last in reading comprehens­ion in better, non-COVID, times.

To Briones, it does not matter if learning is less than ideal and falls far short of minimum standards for as long as the Philippine­s keeps in step with all the others. And if we produce idiots, at least they are idiots with degrees. Ironically for an agency that is supposed to put a premium on substance, the DepEd is more attuned toward projecting appearance.

Briones herself emphasized this preference toward throwing caution to the winds when, asked to comment on the matter of preparedne­ss, she snapped that Lapu-Lapu himself had not prepared for his encounter with Magellan, a pretty convoluted logic, if you ask me, especially for an education secretary. And now it is our students who are reaping the whirlwind as a result.

Not a day passes that no issue or error is discovered in the modules and distance learning materials being forced to keep classes going. The worst part is that DepEd is not owning up the mistakes. Washing its hands, it says the faulty items did not pass its scrutiny. DepEd better shape up because we have eagle-eyed spotters in parents who are doing the actual answering and studying. Education has become a cruel joke in the Philippine­s.

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