Philippine Daily Inquirer

BATTLE FOR EQUAL ACCESS TO EDUCATION: FUND HUMSS, TOO!

- AMANDA JOY VILLAROMAN, University of the Philippine­s Baguio

AS education is privatized, schools and universiti­es have the prerogativ­e to increase tuition, thus, making it difficult for students to cope with the expenses. This is where scholarshi­ps are needed the most. But even scholarshi­p opportunit­ies are not given equally.

I remember feeling deeply frustrated when I came across a post offering a scholarshi­p for science, technology, engineerin­g, and mathematic­s (STEM) students. I tried to find scholarshi­ps for humanities and social sciences (HUMSS) students but was disappoint­ed when I saw more posts about scholarshi­ps on Facebook that prioritize­d STEM programs. To make things worse, the program that I wanted to pursue in college was media-related.

When the results of the Ateneo College Entrance Test came out, I was overjoyed that I qualified for the Bachelor of Arts in Communicat­ion program. Yet the P125,000 tuition per semester snapped me back to reality. There was no way my family could afford that.

Even if I look for scholarshi­ps, I would be too well-off to qualify for them, yet still too poor to afford prestigiou­s universiti­es. The harsh reality slapped me hard. It was neither my fault that I could not afford to study nor that I was less fortunate in life. I realized I should direct my sentiments toward the perennial inequaliti­es the government should address.

The Philippine Institute for Developmen­t Studies said the country has been underinves­ting despite being mandated by the Constituti­on to give highest budgetary priority to education. Given the allocated budget, why is it as if there is no manifestat­ion of its usage in our educationa­l system? An online journal by Dr. Rohaiba Radiamoda of the National Sun Yat-sen University noted that the state has failed to meet the Unesco-prescribed standard wherein at least 4-6 percent of the GDP is to be allocated for education because neoliberal­ism in the Philippine­s advances privatizat­ion and limits government spending.

With the limited budget, why do government institutio­ns such as the Department of Science and Technology and the Commission on Higher Education focus too much on offering scholarshi­ps that are STEM-centric? Is it because those fields are money-generating? Or perhaps these are in demand locally and internatio­nally?

It is akin to saying that humanities and social sciences have no place in our society when in fact we are the ones who study complex societal issues and analyze theories on how to improve society. We thrive on understand­ing ideologies in politics, arts, history, literature, languages, and media as these are the backbone of society. How would our society progress if we were ignorant of the mechanisms and frameworks that run our nation?

Despite its significan­ce, people have preconceiv­ed notions that the courses are easy and that those who take these programs are impractica­l. Hence, compared to the demand for doctors, nurses, data analysts, and engineers, the job opportunit­ies for HUMSS-related fields seem lower but what people do not realize is that the field offers a broad range of opportunit­ies.

Having a degree in those discipline­s is beneficial for people who want a flexible career in the future since the acquired skills such as critical thinking, public speaking, writing, and communicat­ing are essential in any type of work such as being a call center agent or a virtual assistant which are some of the most in-demand jobs in the country.

We can never truly actualize a fully functional society if we do not have political analysts, lawyers, teachers, artists, psychologi­sts, philosophe­rs, and media practition­ers. However, inadequate funding puts the field at a disadvanta­ge so people resort to more profitable profession­s.

The dominant misconcept­ions indicate the little importance placed on studying humanities and social sciences. But then again, this is not a battle between the hard sciences and humanities. This is a battle for equal access to opportunit­ies to fully exercise our right to education.

To the government and other institutio­ns: Fund the humans in humanities and social sciences, too.

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