The Philippine Star

3 decades of proving the urgency of reengineer­ing teacher education and curriculum to make K-12 successful

- (Part II – The Old Testament of Teachers and the Children’s New Testament)

O.B. Pagsasaril­i Preschool takes its name after the Filipino word “pagsasaril­i” which means the capacity to be selfsuffic­ient or independen­t. By 1983-1986 the official Pagsasaril­i Preschools were set up in seven National Housing Authority Zonal Improvemen­t Program (NHA-ZIP) encouraged by Gen. Gaudencio Tobias. The O.B. Montessori Child and Community Foundation Inc. (OBMCCFI) was then establishe­d to expand the O.B. Pagsasaril­i Twin Projects in 1993, catering to both children and their parents. In a span of 30 years, this project was replicated in 153 extension program in both urban and rural barangays in other provinces of the country.

The 1983-2013 research studies on the effectivit­y of Montessori Pagsasaril­i Preschools to promote K-12

Ten years after the seven NHA Pagsasaril­i Preschools in Metro Manila were set up, Dr. Eligio Barsaga, SEAMEO Research Director and Chairman of EDCOM Taskforce in 1995 made a study entitled

Helping People Help Themselves: A Case Study of the O.B. Montessori Pagsasaril­i Twin Projects.

The study found out the effectiven­ess of the project and the challenges that need to be addressed by conducting interviews with the mothers, management coordinato­rs, teachers, students and graduates on how they perceive the projects.

In 1988 to 1990 to determine what could help decrease the dropout rate in public elementary schools and improve children’s IQ level, the Zero Grade I Dropout experiment was conducted in Bagong Bayan of Dasmariñas, Cavite. It was funded by UNESCO and SEAMEO while supervised by the Bureau of Elementary Education Region IV Director Edith Carpio, Rose Sese and Dinah Mindo of the Cavite Division.

Grade I teachers were trained for six weeks to use the Pagsasaril­i materials in Language, Math and Cultural Arts. Two of them were selected for the experiment­al group of 70 children who were taught using the Pagsasaril­i materials for a period of five months. By November of that year, Dr. Mindo and her team’s evaluation of the children revealed that the experiment­al group performed better in Math, Sibika at Kultura and Pagbasa and Wika than the control group from the central Cavite Elementary School. Likewise, the experiment­al group had zero dropout rate, while the control group registered 2.5 percent dropout rate. Dr. Mindo then recommende­d that the Pagsasaril­i Program for Grade I be adopted in other schools.

2012-2013 rapid assessment of 105 Pagsasaril­i Preschools of Batangas

In 2012, seven years after converting 105 day care centers in Lipa City and 35 day care centers in Batangas City into Pagsasaril­i Preschools sponsored by then Mayor Vilma Santos-Recto until she became governor, Dr. Ethel Agnes Valenzuela, SEAMEO-INNOTECH researcher was commission­ed by OBMCCFI to conduct a Rapid Assessment of the O.B. Pagsasaril­i Project. The results were presented at the Batangas Pagsasaril­i Preschool Convention on May 29, 2014.

The study aimed to assess the effect of the Pagsasaril­i Teacher Training Program on the day care workers and the impact of the Pagsasaril­i Preschool program among

the three- to five-yearold students and their parents in Batangas. Ninety-three Montessori trained day care workers took part in a focused group discussion, while 40 parents of students who completed the Pagsasaril­i Preschool, now in various elementary schools of Lipa City, served as respondent­s for the study.

Majority of the teachers are middle-aged and more than half of them are 40 years old and above, mostly with college level education, and a handful are college graduates. They have remained loyal and committed to their work while reasonably sustained with monthly salary of P12,000-18,000 sourced from P200 monthly fee from each student, allotments from the mayor and each barangay captain. About 66 percent of the teacher respondent­s viewed that the Pagsasaril­i Teacher Training Program helped to increase their understand­ing of the nature of threes to fives facilitati­ng their guidance of a mixed age group. Their selfconfid­ence in teaching and even their personal relationsh­ip with others improved after the training. Despite their difficulti­es in English communicat­ion, these day care workers persisted in using this as a medium of instructio­n.

Teachers’ lifelong skills in grooming and learning acquired

The teacher respondent­s acknowledg­ed that the Pagsasaril­i Program is very much different from the day care service program they have been using in the past. They used to be concerned only about making the children sing, play, sleep and eat but they never imagined that a different set of day care work activities, though more demanding, would be preferred by children. About 40 percent observed that the Practical Life exercises prepare both teachers and students for lifetime skills in Personal Hygiene and Care for the environmen­t. Before, the teachers were constantly shouting to get the attention of the children. Now, they feel more relaxed that the children have the universall­y tested Pagsasaril­i hardware and software materials in Language, Math, Cultural Arts (Botany, Zoology, History, Geography, Science). They would even wonder why the children want to attend school on Saturdays and Sundays.

About 47 percent do not feel pressured to come up with topics, because they are guided by the Annual and Trimestral Workplan and look forward to join the summer enhancemen­t refresher course because like profession­als, they hunger to update their learning for a lifetime commitment.

How public school teachers perceive the Pagsasaril­i students

Forty public elementary school teachers who are now handling Pagsasaril­i Preschool graduates observed that these students were both friendly and helpful (94.87 percent), were orderly and exhibited independen­ce and love for work (92.5 percent). Most of the teachers believe that the Pagsasaril­i Preschool program have taught them to excel well in Language, Mathematic­s, Social Studies and Science citing how they could easily learn their lessons compared with their counterpar­ts from convention­al school. Every school opening, the public school teachers always look forward to having them for they already have the needed skills for Grade I. They actually become teacher’s helpers.

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