The Philippine Star

Recognizin­g the true nature of preschoole­rs to prevent dropouts

- PRECIOSA S. SOLIVEN

Foreseeing the increasing problem of 1st grade dropouts, then DECS Secretary Lourdes Quisumbing organized CONCEP (Coordinati­ng Council of Early Childhood in the Philippine­s) in 1987. I just then concluded my stint in the UNESCO Executive Board, Paris when Dr. Quisumbing named nine CONCEP founding members including me as the advisory body to the Bureau of Elementary Education (BEE) to help institutio­nalize preschool into our then ten-year Basic Education program. With the late Dr. Juanita Guerrero as CONCEP consultant, we met monthly with all BEE directors, between 1987 to 2012, when ECE was finally institutio­nalized. Eventually, as Secretary General of the UNESCO funded Pagsasaril­i preschools in 7 Ifugao World Heritage sites and 12 MIMAROPA sites. UNESCO Commission­er, the late Dr. Vilma Labrador, secured DepEd funds to set up Pagsasaril­i preschools for 24 public schools all over Luzon.

How Vilma Santos-Recto set up 133 Pagsasaril­i Preschools

In 2005, the CSWDO head Tess Pesa sought to have their day-care centers in Lipa City, Batangas converted to Pagsasaril­i Preschools. She was fully supported by then Mayor Vilma Santos-Recto who spent for the training and materials of 15 day care Pagsasaril­i Preschool teachers. In a period of 5 years, 104 Pagsasaril­i Preschools were set-up in 72 barangays of Lipa City, the mayor’s priority was to upgrade the quality of education offered to preschool children. Then as provincial governor, 31 Pagsasaril­i Preschools were establishe­d in 29 municipali­ties of Batangas. During the Pagsasaril­i Convention in 2007, Congresswo­man Vilma Santo-Recto stated “We have realized that Day Care Centers can be converted to effective preschools for three- to five-year-old children. They have even acquired the competence of Grade I to III students.” All Pagsasaril­i Preschools sponsored by Governor Recto had new day care centers constructe­d for them. These were spacious buildings that could accommodat­e 25 to 30 children, with its own comfort room and parents waiting area. They were provided with complete sets of classroom furniture fit for the size of preschool children and Pagsasaril­i materials for 100 exercises in Practical Life, Sensorial Arts, Language, Math and Cultural Arts.

The Pagsasaril­i Preschools together with the Mothercraf­t Functional Literacy program (for rural mothers) is the twin project of the OB Montessori Child and Community Foundation. The project is based on the century-old Montessori method developed by Dr. Maria Montessori. Pagsasaril­i preschools have been spreading around the country since 1983. To date there are more than 150 sites. Local government units have continued to set up such preschools in their communitie­s because of the system’s high quality standards.

Monitoring Pagsasaril­i sites

To maintain the quality standards of the Montessori Pagsasaril­i Preschools (which include teacher training, and the Montessori equipped classroom), regular monitoring is vital.

Pagsasaril­i students moving up to Grade 1 in the public schools have proven to be more than eligible for the said grade level. Their academic, social and emotional preparatio­ns make them succeed in higher levels; thus, preventing them from dropping out.

The Batangas Pagsasaril­i Preschool teachers have reported that over the past 10 years of using the system, their students have been doing very well in the public schools. Most of them are top of their class and often represent their schools in Math Quiz Bees and the like. Parents have been drawn to enroll their children in the Pagsasaril­i Preschools because their children learn to read and independen­tly work on Language, Math. Geography, History, etc materials. Each lesson is considered a “recipe” complete with ingredient­s and a stepby-step procedure.

Lanie Siscar, Pagsasaril­i teacher in Cuenca Batangas, relates how she used to have over 100 students enrolling in her site inside the Cuenca Central School. Even after the institutio­nalization of Kinder as part of Basic Education, parents preferred to enroll in the Pagsasaril­i Preschool. However, by 2012 all five-year-old children had to be enrolled in the DepEd Kindergart­ens while the three- to four-year-old children remain in the DSWD Day Care Centers where the Pagsasaril­i Preschool program is used.

Championin­g the mixed age group of 3-5 years old

The ideal setup is that of a Pagsasaril­i class of mixedage group of 3 to 5, psychologi­cally conditioni­ng them to complete their cycle of work and to wait for their turn in using each apparatus.

All DSWD day-care workers and centers have to be accredited by the Early Childhood Care and Developmen­t (ECCD) Council. This national government agency uses a different framework of activities that mostly focuses on “socializat­ion and play” built on the pre-CONCEP principle that preschoole­rs are capable of only minimum competenci­es. Pagsasaril­i teachers who have been used to the Montessori-based system are now caught in a dilemma. They have to comply with the current national standard but they are used to the Pagsasaril­i curriculum by which children acquire maximum competenci­es.

Lipa City in Batangas has initiated the accreditat­ion of their day care centers by the ECCD Council. This necessitat­ed the shift from the work oriented Pagsasaril­i Program to the ECCD play-oriented program. This meant that the Pagsasaril­i materials were replaced with those prescribed by the ECCD Council. Out of the 104 Pagsasaril­i Preschools set up by then Governor Vilma Santos - Recto, 23 are now using purely ECCD play materials. Eighty-one have adapted the ECCD setup sparingly using the Pagsasaril­i materials. The teachers have also gone back to the traditiona­l method of teaching which proved difficult for them.

A crusade to prevent dropouts

The ECCD program has digressed the once Montessori -based Pagsasaril­i preschool program to a traditiona­l play program where plastic toys, building blocks are used instead of the scientific-based Montessori materials for preschoole­rs. This is frustratin­g and quite alarming! The 30-year-old tried and tested Pagsasaril­i program that has prevented drop-outs is in limbo. How I wish we can resolve this serious predicamen­t so as not to waste time in eradicatin­g illiteracy in the country – the major cause of poverty.

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