The Philippine Star

Education reform advocates divided on K to 12 program

- By HELEN FLORES, ALEXIS ROMERO and JANVIC MATEO

Education reform advocates are divided on whether or not to defer the implementa­tion of the K to 12 program, which is being rolled out despite electricit­y and water supply problems in hundreds of public schools.

Private sector group Philippine Business for Education (PBEd) said the lack of access to utilities should not stop the implementa­tion of the senior high school program, one of the key features of the K to 12 Law.

The Alliance of Concerned Teachers ( ACT), however, claimed the K to 12 program would not succeed unless the government addresses basic problems including electricit­y and water supply.

Another group, the Suspend K12 Coalition, said the government is not ready to implement the program and called for a higher education budget to resolve the longstandi­ng problems plaguing the public school system.

The K to 12 law adds two years of senior high school to the country’s basic education system, allowing senior high school students to specialize in one of three tracks: academic, technicalv­ocational-livelihood and sports and arts.

Before K to 12, the Philippine­s was the last country in Asia and one of only three countries worldwide with a 10-year basic education system.

Some public schools, however, will be implementi­ng the changes in the curriculum without being provided with basic services like water and electricit­y.

A total of 97 senior high schools will be establishe­d in schools that do not have access to electricit­y, education department data showed.

Data also showed that senior high school program will be rolled out in 250 educationa­l institutio­ns with no water supply.

Most of the schools are in Mindanao, particular­ly in CARAGA and in the Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao.

Chito Salazar, president of PBEd, said the electricit­y and water supply concerns should not disrupt the implementa­tion of the K to 12, which he described as “one of the largest and most important reforms in Philippine education.”

“We must offer basic education even in the communitie­s where access to utilities is a challenge. The absence of an ideal situation should not be a hindrance to doing this,” Salazar said.

“If the point is we should address these problems first, solving these problems and the short basic education system should not be seen as either-or. We should address both, and as much as possible, simultaneo­usly,” he added.

Long-standing problems

Other groups, however, do not agree, saying the quality of education will be affected if basic problems are not resolved.

“Many schools, especially those in rural areas, do not have the basics. The irony here is DepEd is claiming that it is ready for the K to 12 and senior high school when in fact, we still lack schools and some of the schools we have do not have water or electricit­y,” ACT party-list Rep. Antonio Tinio said in an interview.

“The lack of access to electricit­y and water is a huge obstacle to quality education,” he said, noting that students would not be able to learn computer skills without stable power supply.

Tinio said poor students in the province are further disadvanta­ged by the failure of the government to perform its obligation­s.

“We maintain our stand that K to 12 should be suspended,” the lawmaker said.

Rene Tadle, a professor at the University of Santo Tomas and head of the Suspend K12 Coalition, echoed this, saying the government is not yet prepared for the program. “The basic infrastruc­ture should have been addressed first. Surely, it will affect the learning environmen­t of the students. We need not mention the perennial problems related to textbooks and teachers’ training, which up to now are not fully addressed,” Tadle said.

Last March, the Suspend K12 Coalition asked the Supreme Court to issue a temporary restrainin­g order or writ of preliminar­y injunction against the K to 12 program.

“There are a lot of studies that will show that the quality of the learning environmen­t affects the learning outcomes of the students. In effect, these deficienci­es will defeat the realizatio­n of the purpose or objectives of K to 12 as claimed by the government,’ Tadle said.

‘Increase education

budget’

Salazar said the government should continue to increase the funding for education to address the problems besetting the education sector, particular­ly schools in far-flung areas.

The United Nations Educationa­l, Scientific and Cultural Organizati­on (UNESCO) recommends that five to six percent of the gross domestic product should be spent on education.

“We are still hovering at about three to four percent. While the Aquino government has, more than any other, increased education’s budget, it and the next administra­tion should continue doing so,” Salazar said.

Salazar said while there is strong support for K to 12, critics could easily find loopholes that can be questioned before the court.

“It’s also not too difficult to find problems in so massive a system. But generally, I believe there is strong support for K to 12, people want better education, and now the poor are going to have access to a 12-year system which all the elite institutio­ns have had for some time,” he said.

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