The Philippine Star

Why we need science schools

- CARMEN N. PEDROSA

Ihad long wanted to meet Laura Q. del Rosario. She is an accomplish­ed diplomat. She was the undersecre­tary at the Department of Foreign Affairs during Secretary Alberto del Rosario’s time (no relation). My son, Eduardo Pedrosa, secretary general of PECC admired her work.

It was during a conversati­on in a reception of the embassy of India that she spoke of her “science school.” That stayed in my mind and although we did not meet again for some time, I marveled at her grit and ingenuity for creating such a school.

My column today is about her school. She has been struggling to keep it alive and going and deserved all the help. She was helping our country in an original and wonderful way. I thought I would rewrite her draft but decided to leave it as it is and do it in two parts to give it the importance due to it.

The title of her article is “A Kinder to Gr 10 School for SCIENCE and MATH: The Role of SCIENCE and TECHNOLOGY in ECONOMIC, SOCIAL and PERSONAL Developmen­t.

“It should not have escaped our attention that the Industrial Revolution in Europe followed the period of Enlightenm­ent which was marked by the blossoming of great thinkers and artists not only in the field of philosophy, politics, government, literature and the arts, but also in the field of sciences – chemistry, physics, biology, astronomy, technology, and medicine.

Many decades later the Agricultur­e Revolution turned to science and technology to produce more food and better agricultur­e products, thus improving the health and well-being of the population who, in turn, made the Industrial Revolution possible.

The Industrial Revolution was founded on machines or technology that made manufactur­ing, transporta­tion, and communicat­ion more efficient. There were social costs, but these were subsequent­ly studied and addressed by the political and economic systems in place.

One cannot help notice, while living abroad, how science and mathematic­s (the foundation­s of technology) are considered as primary subjects by advanced societies’ educationa­l systems and there is considerab­le prestige in majoring and achieving in these fields. The Nobel Prizes themselves recognize achievemen­ts in chemistry, physics, and physiology or medicine plus the economic sciences.

Some 30 years ago, Singapore’s Prime Minister Lee Kuan Yew announced the establishm­ent of government scholarshi­ps for studies abroad in the field of sciences and technology. It was quite noticeable that the recipients of these scholarshi­ps were featured on the front page of the Strait Times while the top bar examiners would be relegated to the inside pages. PM Lee, who was a barrister himself, wanted to deliver the message that if Singapore had to become competitiv­e within the next 20 years, it should give premium recognitio­n to the scientists and technologi­sts of the country.

The Philippine government started its science high school system in 1964 through the establishm­ent of the Philippine Science High School under the Department of Science and Technology. Now with 15 campuses beyond its Agham Road main campus in Quezon City, it binds its graduates by law to major in the pure and applied sciences, mathematic­s, or engineerin­g. My son, a graduate of the system, bemoans the fact that his group mates went into law, media or entertainm­ent, sports, and medicine (which, in his understand­ing, was discourage­d because there were more than enough students who could become doctors without having to go through the PSHS system). And those he knew who did go into engineerin­g and the sciences and who took up doctoral studies in the US stayed there. And these were in the top 5 of their graduating class.

Upon this son’s return from the US, he went into teaching first at Ateneo then in our own school.

My other son who went to a US high school for science and technology (one of three in the whole US) does not know of any classmate going into any field except what they were trained for. He, too, returned with an engineerin­g degree from the US to work in the Philippine­s.

There has been a practical reason why many Filipino high school or college science graduates do not pursue careers and become prime movers in science and technology needed for our developmen­t that their American counterpar­ts do not face. While Western counterpar­ts know that cutting edge products and technologi­cal processes would be innovated by them or replaced by them to make post-modern life more productive and meaningful – thus creating new products and technology to develop and sell locally and overseas – in the Philippine­s there is the perception that there are not enough good paying jobs or research institutio­ns that could employ them. And the government is always blamed for lack of support, without seeing the role of the private sector in encouragin­g innovation.

I remember a lunch with local businessme­n to which I brought my two sons who took courses in the sciences and technology. One businessma­n asked them: “Is there money in what you studied?” One son replied, “Should that be the criterion for one’s choice of academic discipline?” Or during the second Orientatio­n for Parents held in our new small school for science and math, a parent asked: “What jobs can our children have if they study more science and more math?”

Why did my family decide in 2008 to put up a K to 10 Science and Math School in Angeles City that we symbolical­ly named Pax ( Peace) et (and) Lumen (Light) Internatio­nal Academy even if we knew that it would not be a popular choice?

In addition to creating jobs in our community, the reasons mentioned above were compelling enough for us: to spur national economic and social developmen­t through a population who can think logically and seek facts and truth, to raise the level of thinking of a community of students so that when they become adults they can go beyond custom and tradition, and to develop individual­s whose discipline will come from an internal motivation and knowledge of what should be done rather than from an external source in the form of “social pressure (pakikisama)” or “fad and fashion (kung ano ang uso).” (to be continued)

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