Archive for the 'Education' Category

Students, youth groups reclaim Mendiola; Slam gov’t neglect of education

Monday, June 4th, 2007

Photo Sharing and Video Hosting at Photobucket
Students rush towards Mendiola Bridge leading to the Presidential Palace in Manila, Philippines to protest tuition fee increases imposed by schools around the country on Monday June 4, 2007, the opening day of classes for the school year 2007-2008. About 20 million students troop back to schools Monday with protesters assailing Philippine President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo for the alleged deteriorating quality of education in the country. (AP Photo/Bullit Marquez)

Photo Sharing and Video Hosting at Photobucket
Photo Sharing and Video Hosting at Photobucket
Riot police clash with students who stormed the Mendiola Bridge leading to the Presidential Palace in Manila, Philippines to protest tuition fee increases imposed by schools around the country on opening of classes for the school year 2007-2008 Monday June 4, 2007. About 20 million students troop back to schools Monday with protesters assailing Philippine President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo for the alleged deteriorating quality of education in the country. (AP Photo/Bullit Marquez)

Photo Sharing and Video Hosting at Photobucket
Students try to hold back riot police as they are pushed away after storming the Mendiola Bridge leading to the Presidential Palace in Manila, Philippines to protest tuition fee increases imposed by schools around the country on Monday June 4, 2007, the opening of classes for the school year 2007-2008. About 20 million students troop back to schools Monday with protesters assailing Philippine President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo for the alleged deteriorating quality of education in the country. (AP Photo/Bullit Marquez)

Back-to-school woes worse than ever - youth groups
http://www.gmanews.tv/story/44915/Back-to-school-woes-worse-than-ever—youth-groups
http://www5.gmanews.tv/photoblog/displayimage.php?album=lastup&cat=0&pos=3

Despite the government’s “business-as-usual” attitude, militant youth groups scored the government for abandoning the country’s education system as shown by the continued lack of classrooms, facilities and teachers.

Kabataan party and the National Union of Students of the Philippines (NUSP) cited United Nations figures showing the classroom-to-student ratio in the Philippines still pales in comparison to other Asian countries.

“The DepEd claims the government is prepared for the school opening but the dismal state of classrooms and facilities and the severe shortage of teachers in public elementary and high schools nationwide say otherwise,” Kabataan Party Vice President Carl Marc Ramota said in a statement.

Yet, he said classrooms in the Philippines is among the most crowded in Asia, as shown by data from the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) Institute for Statistics.

He said UNESCO figures show that class size in the Philippine public elementary schools (43.9) pales in comparison to Malaysia (31.7), Thailand (22.9), Japan (28.6) and even in India (40).

The disparity between the Philippines and other Asian countries in class size was even bigger in the high school level, he said.

In the same survey, the country registered an average high school class size of 56.1, higher than Malaysia’s 34, Thailand’s 41.5, Japan’s 33.9 and India’s 39.

“The same problems continue to haunt the education sector year after year. The shortages in classrooms and chairs worsened with the transfer of students from private to public schools. Many middle-income families that cannot afford the high tuition in private schools are transferring their children to the public schools, which offer free tuition and books,” he said.

Even DepEd’s own studies reveal that public schools nationwide are in decrepit
conditions. Some 80 percent of them have no running water, 60 percent have no toilets, 40 percent have no ceilings and 50 percent have no electricity.

Ramota said government misprioritization and poor education spending aggravated by rampant graft and corruption were to be blamed for worsening crisis in education.

In 2004, education spending dropped to 14.9 percent of the national budget from 19.3 percent in 1997 and it continued to decline ever since, he said.

On the other hand, government spending on debt payments shot up from 15.9 percent in 1997 to almost 40 percent of the national budget at present.

Ramota said the Philippine government is spending only an average of 3 percent of the country’s Gross Domestic Product on public educational institutions.

In 2003, the country spent a measly 3.3 percent for education. This pales in comparison to its neighboring countries Malaysia (7.4 percent) and Thailand (4 percent). It is also lower than the 4 percent average for all countries that were included in the World Education Indicators in 2006.

The minimum prescribed standard for education spending set by UNESCO is 6 percent of a country’s GDP.

Also, Ramota said the Philippines is also lagging behind its Asian counterparts in public expenditure on education as a percentage of total public spending.

At all levels of education, the Philippines is only spending 17.2 percent compared to Thailand’s 40 percent and Malaysia’s 28 percent, he said.

Translating this into expenditures per student, he said the same study shows that the Philippine education spending is still way below its Asian competitors.

The country spends 500, 505 and 1,717 dollars (purchasing power parity) for primary education, secondary education and tertiary education, respectively.

The Philippines lags behind Malaysia (1,830, 2,920 and 10,792 dollars) and Thailand (3,442, 2,484 and 4,474 PPP dollars).

“The government has been formulating several education policies and programs with the aim of improving the quality of education in the country but it is missing the most important and decisive factor to meet this goal – spending more on education. Unfortunately, government spending on education has been the complete opposite in the past years,” he said.

“Education is an avowed priority of the State but under the present administration, like its predecessors, it does not draw an ounce of sympathy from the authorities,” he added. - GMANews.TV

Bulatlat: No Free Basic Education: Public High Schools Charge Higher Tuition, Other Fees

Monday, June 4th, 2007

Much to the consternation of various youth groups, some public schools that are supposed to provide free education are now charging tuition and other fees. The age-old problems of teacher shortage and lack of facilities, along with higher tuition, are more than enough basis for the protest actions being organized in time for the opening of classes this June.

BY AUBREY MAKILAN
Bulatlat
Vol. VII, No. 17, June 3-9, 2007
http://www.bulatlat.com/2007/06/no-free-basic-education-public-high-schools-charge-higher-tuition-other-fees

No less than Education Secretary Jesli Lapuz said that collection of school fees is not a prerequisite to enrollment in public elementary and high schools where students enjoy free tuition.

But Aling Nena (who requested anonymity for fear that the school administration might get back at her children) even paid a much higher “tuition” this year for her two daughters at Lawang Bato High School, a public school in Valenzuela City.

Last year, she said she paid P100 ($2.17, based on an exchange rate of P46.08 per US dollar) as tuition. This enrollment, it increased to P200 ($4.34), excluding the Parents-Teacher Association (PTA) fee of P100 ($2.17).

Aside from that, she said parents also complained to the Department of Education (DepEd) about the cost of the school uniform. Aling Nena said that in the recent PTA meeting, the school administration and the parents agreed that only the costs of the uniforms of the freshmen will increase.

However, they discovered that the school changed the uniform for sophomores, requiring the latter’s parents to order new sets of uniforms from the school. Aling Nena was dismayed that her sophomore daughter could no longer use her old uniform. And since a new set of uniform costs P450 ($9.77) each for small size, she might be forced to spend P900 ($19.53) if her daughter were to have two sets which she will use for the whole week.

Lapuz said that “contributions, whether for student activities or for upgrading of school facilities, can only be collected from students on a voluntary basis.”

At Paso de Blas Elementary School, a public school also in Valenzuela, P20 ($0.43) is being collected upon enrolment for the repainting of the school, said Mercy, a parent of a Grade II student. She said others who could not really afford the P20 ($0.43) would not pay. “Pero paano ka naman tatanggi kapag kaharap mo na ang teacher?” she said, noting that it might have a negative impact on her child’s relationship with the teacher. (But how can you refuse if you are in front of the teacher?)

For her daughter studying at Maysan National High School, another public school in Valenzuela, she paid “tuition” amounting to P200 ($4.34). The receipt, however, only reflected an amount of P190 ($4.12). She was told that the remaining P10 ($0.22) was for the school paper.

The DepEd said that public schools are authorized to collect fees only for Boy Scouts, Girl Scouts, Red Cross and the Anti-TB campaign and these are “voluntary.” Contributions for school papers should not be more than P55 and P80 ($1.19 and $1.74) for elementary and secondary levels, respectively. DepEd-recognized student organizations are also allowed to collect “voluntary contributions” up to P55 ($1.19) per student.

The DepEd Oplan Balik Eskwela (Operation Back to School) Command Center reported that it is now investigating several public schools after receiving complaints about the illegal collection of fees in these schools. Among those being investigated are Novaliches Elementary School (ES), Krus na Ligas ES, Barangay Holy Spirit ES, Commonwealth ES, San Antonio ES and Lagro National High School in Quezon City.

Hiding shortages?

Aside from the tuition and fee increases, students also suffer from shortages of teachers, classrooms and facilities.

Lapus said that there is no teacher shortage this school year for primary and secondary public schools. “With 16,390 new teachers, we actually eliminated the problem of shortage of teachers in the public school system.”

The proposed teaching post allocation is broken down into 8,586 for elementary schools and 7,804 for high schools. Region 4-A gets the most number of new teachers with 3,850, followed by the National Capital Region (NCR) with 2,583. Central Luzon is third with 1,598 new teaching allocations.

But youth organizations are doubtful if the shortage was really filled up. The groups said that just last year, the DepEd data pegged the shortage of teachers at 49,699, classroom shortage at 57,930 and armchair shortage at 3.48 million.

Kabataan Party President Raymond Palatino said the Philippines has one of the lowest per capita spending for education in Asia at P3,557 ($77.19). “That means less than P10 ($0.22) per day for every student.”

“Dagdag-bawas”

Not just a prevalent practice in elections, “dagdag-bawas” (“addition-subtraction” or “vote padding-vote shaving”) also victimizes the education sector, Palatino said.

Palatino said that private tertiary schools have allegedly long developed and perfected its own “dagdag-bawas” machinery with yearly tuition hikes.

The youth leader said that reports of tuition increases involving hundreds of schools nationwide only confirmed what they said earlier that the anomalous suspension of the tuition cap early this year would be used by school owners to increase tuition beyond the inflation rate.

Reports from the League of Filipino Students (LFS), National Union of Students of the Philippines (NUSP) and Anakbayan (Sons and Daughters of the People) revealed that the Commission on Higher Education (CHED) approved tuition increases in 88 schools in the NCR.

Palatino said that the CHED, Coordinating Council of Private Educational Associations (COCOPEA) and the Arroyo administration connived to suspend the implementation of CHED Memorandum Order (CMO) No. 14 and subsequent amendments CMO 42 and CMO 7 which prohibited private schools from increasing their tuition above the 6.2-percent inflation rate.

He questioned the timing of the suspension last Feb. 20 as it came out in the middle of tuition consultations in various private schools and after COCOPEA’s meeting with President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo a week earlier.

“Even state universities, which are supposed to accommodate poor but deserving students, have increased their tuition,” said Vencer Crisostomo, LFS national chairperson. “As a result, many deserving students have not been able to enroll.”

At the University of the Philippines, tuition increased from P300 to P1,000 ($6.51 to $21.70) per unit.

At the Eulogio “Amang” Rodriguez Institute of Science and Technology (EARIST), the tuition increased from P15 to P100 ($0.33 to $2.17) per unit, said sisters Irene and Angie Benjamin. They added that miscellaneous fees for old students also increased.

Drop outs

If the “dagdag” scheme meant “tuition padding,” the youth group said that the decrease in the number of enrollees and the corresponding upsurge in the number of dropouts and out-of-school youth led to “bawas” (reduction). “With higher tuition rates and more preventive (prohibitive) fees being charged both in public and private institutions, we fear that the number of drop outs will double this coming semester,” warned Palatino.

According to independent think-tank Ibon Foundation, the worsening economic conditions in the country have denied millions of children the right to a decent education as shown by increasing drop out rates.

Data from the Department of Education showed that dropout rates, which had been steadily improving during the 1990s, worsened since the year 2000. It reached 10.6 percent in the elementary level and 15.8 percent in the secondary level in school year (SY) 2005-2006. Comparing these rates to enrolment figures during the same year would show that as many as 2.4 million children may have dropped out of school last year, said Ibon.

Ibon said that majority of those who dropped out came from public schools. Enrolment in public elementary schools fell by 106,903 in SY 2005-2006 while that in public secondary schools decreased by 64,746.

Palatino said that the trend for the past 10 years showed that for every 10 pupils who enrolled in grade school, only seven graduated. “Students drop out because of poverty. While basic education is free, many poor families are unable to finance the auxiliary school needs of their children.”

Citing the 2003 Family Income and Expenditure Survey (FEIS), Palatino said Filipinos are now allocating less for their education.

He said the average spending of families on school fees, books and supplies fell to 4.0 percent from 4.2 percent during the three-year period as average family income in the country also declined 10 percent between 2000 and 2003. Before the turn of the millennium, the share of educational expenses had been gradually increasing, he said.

“Unfortunately, most Filipino families now have to make a choice between sending their children to school and spending their meager income on food in order to survive. Poverty and government neglect have made education a luxury to many of our countrymen,” Palatino said.

Because of this, many of these children might have been forced to leave school to earn a living, Ibon said. In 2006, it reported that some 2.5 million children aged 5 to 17 were working either to augment family income or simply to survive. It added that the number of children in schools is also dropping: in SY 2005-2006 only 84 percent of children aged 6-11 was able to attend elementary school, a sharp decrease from the 90 percent recorded in 2001-2002.

“The declining number of children who are able to go to school reflects their vulnerability to economic difficulties which have been worsening during the last six years of the Arroyo administration,” Ibon said. “Among the country’s basic sectors, the biggest number of poor people is found among the children, with some 14.1 million of them considered poor.”

This school year, the Department of Education (DepEd) estimated an enrolment of 13.24 million in the elementary level. Of this, 12.18 million will go to public schools while 1.06 million will enroll in private schools. For the secondary level, there is a projected 6.43 million enrollees with 5.13 million set to go to public high schools, while 1.3 million will be taken in by private secondary high schools, Lapus said.

Military deployment

Militant youth activists also protested the planned redeployment of military troops in Metro Manila schools for the class opening.

Palatino and Crisostomo said the military deployment in schools is related to the implementation of the Human Security Act (HSA) of 2007 which is “intended to target progressive student organizations, student councils and publications that are critical of the Arroyo administration.”

He cited cases where youth activists have been victimized allegedly by the military like the murder of two Kabataan poll watchers in Camarines Norte in May; the brutal killings of known Bicol student leaders Cris Hugo, Farly Alcantara and Reimon Guran; and abduction of UP student activists Karen Empeño and Sherlyn Cadapan.

“We fear that this could lead to an escalation of human rights violations against known student activists and even members of student councils and campus publications,” Palatino said, noting that this might also have an impact on the psychological well-being of students.

“Military troops have no place in academic institutions. Schools are not war zones. We will not allow this government to transform our schools into military camps.

The militant youth organizations warned that the military will get more than the eggs and mud Chief of Staff Gen. Hermogenes Esperon got when he went to UP.

Protests

Meanwhile, Palatino called on elected district representatives and soon-to-be senators to make good their promises and prove their claims during the campaign period that they are for making education accessible to the youth by prioritizing the resolution of the “tuition hike crisis” when Congress opens.

The youth groups called on lawmakers “to join the students’ clamor for an end to unabated tuition and other fee increases and to conduct an immediate investigation on the suspension of the tuition cap.”

Kabataan Party and other student groups are gearing up for huge protests on June 4 and 13 to mark the beginning of classes at the basic and tertiary levels, respectively. Bulatlat

Poor education spending blamed for education crisis

Sunday, June 3rd, 2007

Back-to-school woes worse than ever

While the Department of Education adopted a “business-as-usual” attitude in explaining preparations for the school opening, the Kabataan Party and the National Union of Students of the Philippines said students and teachers are also getting ready on Monday to take the government to task for its abandonment of education as they provide an alternative analysis of the country’s educational system.

“DepEd claims the government is prepared for the school opening but the dismal state of classrooms and facilities and the severe shortage of teachers in public elementary and high schools nationwide say otherwise,” Kabataan Party Vice President Carl Marc Ramota said.

Ramota said classrooms in the Philippines is among the most crowded in Asia.

Data from the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) Institute for Statistics show that class size in the Philippine public elementary schools (43.9) pales in comparison to Malaysia (31.7), Thailand (22.9), Japan (28.6) and even in India (40).

He said the disparity between the Philippines and other Asian countries in class size was even bigger in the high school level. In the same survey, the country registered an average high school class size of 56.1, higher than Malaysia’s 34, Thailand’s 41.5, Japan’s 33.9 and India’s 39.

” The same problems continue to haunt the education sector year after year. The shortages in classrooms and chairs worsened with the transfer of students from private to public schools. Many middle-income families that cannot afford the high tuition in private schools are transferring their children to the public schools, which offer free tuition and books.”

He said DepEd’s own studies reveal that public schools nationwide are in decrepit
conditions. Some 80 percent of them have no running water, 60 percent have no toilets, 40 percent have no ceilings and 50 percent have no electricity.

Ramota said government misprioritization and poor education spending aggravated by rampant graft and corruption were to be blamed for worsening crisis in education.

In 2004, education spending dropped to 14.9 percent of the national budget from 19.3 percent in 1997 and it continued to decline ever since, he said. On the other hand, government spending on debt payments shot up from 15.9 percent in 1997 to almost 40 percent of the national budget at present.

He added that the Philippine government is spending only an average of 3 percent of the country’s Gross Domestic Product on public educational institutions. In 2003, the country spent a measly 3.3 percent for education. This pales in comparison to its neighboring countries Malaysia (7.4 percent) and Thailand (4 percent). It is also lower than the 4 percent average for all countries that were included in the World Education Indicators in 2006.

The minimum prescribed standard for education spending set by UNESCO is 6 percent of a country’s GDP.

Ramota said the Philippines is also lagging behind its Asian counterparts in public expenditure on education as a percentage of total public spending.

At all level s of education, the Philippines is only spending 17.2 percent compared to Thailand’s 40 percent and Malaysia’s 28 percent.

Translating this into expenditures per student, he said the same study shows that the Philippine education spending is still way below its Asian competitors.

The country spends 500, 505 and 1,717 dollars (purchasing power parity) for primary education, secondary education and tertiary education, respectively. The Philippines lags behind Malaysia (1,830, 2,920 and 10,792 dollars) and Thailand (3,442, 2,484 and 4,474 PPP dollars).

“The government has been formulating several education policies and programs with the aim of improving the quality of education in the country but it is missing the most important and decisive factor to meet this goal – spending more on education. Unfortunately, government spending on education has been the complete opposite in the past years.”

“Education is an avowed priority of the State but under the present administration, like its predecessors, it does not draw an ounce of sympathy from the authorities.”

Pass pending bills on education, solons urged

Sunday, June 3rd, 2007

The Kabataan Party and the National Union of Students of the Philippines urged lawmakers to maximize the remaining days of the 13th Congress by passing pending bills that seek to institute much needed reforms in the education sector.

Among the bills awaiting approval are the proposed moratorium on tuition and other fee increases and amendments to the Education Act of 1982 which placed private tertiary education in a deregulated environment, Kabataan Party President Raymond Palatino said.

“It’s high time that Congress starts to flex its muscles on unabated increases in tuition and other fees. Government’s tuition deregulation policy has resulted to skyrocketing tuition and miscellaneous fee hikes and caused the ranks of dropouts and out-of-school youth to swell for the past decade. ”

Palatino particularly emphasized the need to resolve the controversy created by the anomalous suspension of CHED Memorandum Order No. 14 or the guidelines for tuition and other fee increase applications and its subsequent amendments last February.

“We call on the lawmakers to investigate CHED and its officials for committing grave abuse of discretion and violating its own standard operating procedures when it hastily suspended the tuition cap amid ongoing tuition consultations.”

CHED Chairman Carlito Puno issued the memorandum suspending the tuition cap last February 20 days before the conclusion of regular tuition hike consultations in private colleges and universities.

Kabataan and NUSP earlier accused CHED of conspiring with the Coordinating Council of Private Educational Associations (COCOPEA) to lift the tuition cap to allow private school owners to increase tuition beyond the inflation rate.

Palatino also urged lawmakers to investigate schools that are charging dubious and excessive fees to students.

In 2003 alone, nine schools landed among the top 1,000 corporations in the country with a combined profit of P1.23 billion, he said, citing data from the Securities and Exchange Commission.

“How was it possible for big private schools to rake in millions in profit while CHED’s guidelines only provide a 10 percent return of investment for imposed fee increases? School owners have certainly made a lucrative business out of tertiary education and CHED appears to be a willing accomplice.”

Meanwhile, Palatino said the next Congress should conduct a comprehensive review of existing education policies similar to the Education Commission of 1992.

“The recurring problems hounding the education sector should prompt lawmakers and education officials to assess the effectiveness and viability of existing policies and formulate new policies that are responsive to the needs of students, the academe and the local economy in general.”

Students drop out because of poverty, high fees

Saturday, June 2nd, 2007

The Kabataan Partylist today expressed alarm over the sharp decline in the preliminary enrollment figures for the current school year which it said reflected the huge “gap” between the increasing cost of education in the country and the financial capacity of Filipino families to send their children to school.

“When classes open next week, many school-age children and youth won’t be in school,” Kabataan Party president Raymond Palatino said, adding more Filipino families are finding it increasingly difficult to eke out a living.

“We see a decline of 50 percent in enrollment in private schools this year or even more,” he added, saying the enrollment decline is also being experienced in state schools where tuition rate is relatively cheaper.

Palatino said more and more Filipino families could no longer afford even the tuition rate in state universities and colleges (SUCs) which for the past years have also been plagued with huge budget cuts and fee adjustments.

Citing the 2003 Family Income and Expenditure Survey (FEIS), he said Filipinos are now allocating less for their household education spending.

Average spending on school fees, books and supplies fell to 4 percent from 4.2 percent during the three-year period as average family income in the country also declined 10 percent between 2000 and 2003. Before the turn of the millennium, the share of educational expenses had been gradually increasing.

“Unfortunately, most Filipino families now have to make a choice between sending their children to school and spending their meager income on food in order to survive. Poverty and government neglect have made education a luxury to many of our countrymen,” Palatino pointed out.

He said the lower household spending on schooling, prompted by increasing prices of basic commodities and services, unabated tuition and school fee hikes and stagnant wage levels, is inflating the number of school dropouts and out of school youth this year.

Palatino said the trend for the past 10 years showed for every 10 pupils who enrolled in grade school only seven graduated.

“Students drop out because of poverty. While basic education is free, many poor families are unable to finance the auxiliary school needs of their children,” he stressed.

He also cited another study from the Department of Education (DepEd) which shows 96.77 percent of elementary school-age children go to school while 66.06 percent of high school-age teenagers go to secondary school.

But for every 100 students who enroll in the first grade, 33 drop out before reaching Grade V and 31 out of 100 high-school freshmen drop out before reaching their senior year.

He said only seven out 100 students who enter Grade I will be able to reach college.

He added many of those who manage to enter college are also doomed to eventually dropout because of the high cost of private tertiary education and limited slots in poorly-funded state schools.

Palatino blamed President Arroyo and her government’s failure to stop unabated tuition and school fee hikes for the high rate of school dropouts in the country.

He said the Kabataan Partylist together with the National Union of Students of the Philippines and other student groups are gearing up for a huge protest on June 4 and 13 to mark the beginning of classes in the basic and tertiary level, respectively.

Related post: School owners also into “dagdag-bawas”

Student activists to be main targets of troop deployment in schools

Friday, June 1st, 2007

The Kabataan Partylist today criticized government plans to redeploy military troops in Metro Manila schools for the class opening, saying it is intended to target progressive student organizations, student councils and publications that are critical of the Arroyo administration.

“This rehashed plan is no different from the vilification and terror campaign earlier instigated by the military against progressive groups in several baranggays and schools in Metro Manila last elections in the guise of peace caravans and humanitarian missions,” Kabataan Partylist President Raymond Palatino said.

“We have all the reasons to be apprehensive about this plan. Two Kabataan poll watchers were murdered in Camarines Norte last May following the brutal killings of known student leaders Cris Hugo, Farly Alcantara and Reimon Guran in other parts of Bicol. UP student activists Karen Empeno and Sherlyn Cadapan have gone missing to this day. All evidences and witnesses point to one common perpetrator – the military.”

“How could students feel secure with soldiers lurking around the campus knowing they could be the next target of abduction or physical elimination?,” he pointed out.

“Whether in full battle gear on in plain clothing, their mere presence sends a chilling effect among students, faculty and school personnel. We fear that this could lead to an escalation of human rights violations against known student activists and even members of student councils and campus publications. This might also have an impact on the psychological well-being of students.”

Palatino said the planned deployment of military troops in schools is dubious and highly irregular.

“Ensuring the students’ safety and peace and order during the opening of classes has always been a policeman’s job. This will only result into the duplication or redundancy of tasks and responsibilities which means additional expenditures on the part of the government.”

“We suspect the deployment is not only meant for the opening of classing but is intended to be permanent in line with the implementation of the draconian Human Security Act otherwise known as the Anti-Terror Law.”

Meanwhile, Palatino said student groups are prepared to oppose the troop deployment through legal and even “extra-legal” means.

He called on the Commission and Human Rights to look into the matter and appealed to lawmakers to conduct an immediate investigation as Congress resumes its session next week.

“Military troops have no place in academic institutions. Schools are not war zones. We will not allow this government to transform our schools into military barracks and make students their target practices.

“If they will continue with the deployment, they will certainly get a dose of what their Chief of Staff Gen. Hermogenes Esperon got when he went to the UP, and even more. Rotten eggs are nothing compared to the hundreds of innocent people they’ve ordered killed for the last five years.”

School owners also into “dagdag-bawas”

Tuesday, May 29th, 2007

Regulate tuition hikes, new lawmakers told

“Apparently, “dagdag-bawas” activities don’t just happen in elections. So pervasive is the culture of dagdag-bawas, corruption and greed in this country that even the education sector is not spared from this wicked practice.”

This was the reaction of Kabataan Partylist President Raymond Palatino over reports of new round tuition hikes in private colleges and universities, adding that among private school owners now emerge the new breed of “dagdag-bawas operators.”

Palatino said corrupt politicians and election operators don’t have the monopoly over dagdag-bawas activities as private tertiary schools have long developed and perfected its own “dagdag-bawas” machinery with yearly tuition hikes.

“While candidates accuse each other manipulating election results to clinch victory, private schools owners and administrators are padding tuition and other fees to jack up their profits.”

“Partial reports of tuition hikes involving hundreds of schools all over the country only confirm our long-held fears that the anomalous suspension of the tuition cap early this year will be used by school owners to increase tuition beyond the inflation rate which will lead to bigger tuition and miscellaneous fee hikes this school year,” he pointed out

He accused the Commission on Higher Education (CHED), Coordinating Council of Private Educational Associations (COCOPEA) and the Arroyo administration of conniving with each other to suspend the implementation of CHED memorandum order no. 14 and subsequent amendments CMO 42 and CMO 7 which provide for a cap on tuition and other fee increases based on the prevailing national inflation rate.

“This gave private schools bigger room for “tuition padding” (dagdag) which served as a pay off for the much need school owners’ support for administration candidates.”

Palatino said the timing of the tuition cap’s suspension last February 20 is questionable as it came out in the middle of tuition consultations in various private schools and after COCOPEA’s meeting with President Arroyo a week earlier.

“Unfortunately, the reverse result of “tuition padding” is the decrease (bawas) in the number of enrollees and the corresponding upsurge in the number of dropouts and out-of-school youth. With higher tuition rates and more preventive fees being charged both in private institutions, we fear that their numbers will double up this coming semester,” he warned.

Meanwhile, Palatino called on elected district representatives and soon-to-be senators to translate their electoral agenda and promises to practice by making the immediate resolution of the current ‘tuition hike crisis’ their top priority this Congress.

“This will be the best opportunity for them to prove to us that they are really for the youth and they participated in this elections to defend and uphold the interest of young Filipinos, particularly for education.”

“Tuition and other fee increases in these times of economic hardship and poverty are clearly uncalled for. These only make college education more elusive to young Filipinos.”

“We call on our next set of lawmakers to join the students’ clamor for an end to unabated tuition and other fee increases and an immediate investigation on the suspension of the tuition cap,” Palatino concluded.

Matrikula, dropout sa kolehiyo, lolobo sa pasukan

Wednesday, April 18th, 2007

Malakanyang at Cocopea, nasa likod ng pagtanggal sa tuition cap

Nagbabala ang Kabataan Partylist ng higit na paglobo ng matrikula at bilang ng mga dropout sa kolehiyo bunga ng pagkakatanggal sa tuition cap sa mga pribadong paaralan.

Ani Raymond Palatino, Pangulo at Unang Nominado ng Kabataan Partylist, maanomalya ang ginawang hakbang ng Commission on Higher Education sa suspensyon ng CHED Memorandum Order No. 14 (CMO 14) o ang mga panuntunan sa mga konsultasyon hinggil sa pagtaas ng matrikula at iba pang bayarin na naglalagay sa tuition cap katumbas ng kasalukuyang tantos ng implasyon.

Kinuwestiyun din ni Palatino ang bagong pahayag ni Puno na nagsasabing maaari nang magtaas ng matrikula ang mga pribadong paaralan katumbas ng 10 porsyento para sa darating na pasukan.

Aniya, tapos na ang mga konsultasyon hinggil sa pagtaas ng matrikula at maraming mga pribadong paaralan ang nagsimula na ng kanilang enrolment.

“Magdudulot lamang ito ng kalituhan at kaguluhan sa enrolment at ginagamit na ngayon ng mga may-ari ng mga paaralan para higit pang itaas ang kanilang matrikula.”

Dagdag pa ni Palatino, wala itong pinag-iba sa maanomalya ring pagsusupindi sa tuition cap sa kalagitnaan ng mga konsultasyon para sa pagtataas ng matrikula noong Pebrero.

Nasa kalagitnaan na ng mga konsultasyon sa mga pribadong paaralan para sa mga panukalang pagtaas sa matrikula at iba pang mga bayarin nang biglaang naglabas si Commission on Higher Education (Ched) Chairman Carlito Puno ng isang memorandum na nagsususpinde sa implementasyon ng CMO 14.

Sa nasabing memorandum na inilabas noong Pebrero 20, ang ibinasura nang CMO 13, Series of 1998, ang gagamiting batayan para sa mga panukalang pagtaas sa matrikula sa susunod na school year.

“Kaduda-duda at batbat ng iregularidad ang naging hakbang ni Puno dahil lumabas ito ilang araw na lamang bago ang pagtatapos ng mga konsultasyon sa pagtaas ng matrikula noong Pebrero 28. Hindi rin ito dumaan sa konsultasyon sa mga mag-aaral.”

Ani Palatino, ginawa rin ng Ched ang nasabing hakbang sa harap ng agresibong pagla-lobby ng mga school owners sa ilalim ng Coordinating Council of Private Educational Associations o Cocopea.

Aniya, isang linggo bago ang suspensyon ng CMO 14, nakipagpulong ang mga lider ng Cocopea kay Arroyo. Ito ay malinaw na nakasaad sa ipinapakalat na circular ng Cocopea sa mga miyembro nito:

“Please be advised that after a meeting Cocopea had with President Macapagal-Arroyo last week, the President took the initiative to order the creation of a review team…The review will also cover Ched Memorandum Orders No. 7, Series of 2007; No. 42, Series of 2006; and No. 14, Series of 2005. Hence, the suspension of these CMOs.”

“Ang ginawa ng Cocopea ay di naiiba sa walang hiya at harap-harapang pagla-lobby ng malalaki at dayuhang kompanya ng gamot noon para harangin ang pagpapasa ng panukala sa Kongreso para sa mas murang presyo ng gamot. Ngunit sa pagkakataong ito, lumalabas na hindi lamang kasabwat kundi pangunahing utak din si Arroyo at ang Ched sa isang “grand conspiracy” upang makahuthot ng mas malaking pera sa mga bulsa ng mga magulang at mag-aaral.”

“Isa rin itong malinaw konsesyon sa bahagi ni Arroyo upang makuha ang suportang pampulitika ng mga private school owners sa kanyang administrasyon at sa mga manok nito ngayong eleksiyon.”

“Ang malaking kabalintunaan nga lang, habang ipinangangalandakan ng mga kandidato ng administradyon sa kanilang mga TV ad na sila ay para sa edukasyon at kabataan, higit na mas marami ang hindi makakapasok sa kolehiyo sa Hunyo sa ginawang pakikipagsabwatan ni Arroyo.”

NCAE results show DepEd’s inability to address education crisis

Friday, March 23rd, 2007

We express our disappointment not only on the results of the recent National Career Assessment Exam (NCAE), but also on the attitude the Department of Education towards the result.

It is an irony for us that the Department of Education seems happy and satisfied of the results, instead of showing dismay and regret in its recent statements. It even applauds the results and pats its shoulder for doing a job well done in creating voc-tech skilled students with low scholastic capability. (more…)

Sabwatang Ched, Malakanyang at Cocopea

Sunday, March 11th, 2007

ni Carl Marc Lazaro Ramota
http://www.pinoyweekly.org/pw6-09/op_ed/ed-6_09_5.htm

Nasa kalagitnaan na ng mga konsultasyon sa mga pribadong paaralan para sa mga panukalang pagtaas sa matrikula at iba pang mga bayarin nang biglaang naglabas si Commission on Higher Education (Ched) Chairman Carlito Puno ng isang memorandum na nagsususpinde sa implementasyon ng Ched Memorandum Order No. 14 (CMO 14) o ang mga panuntunan sa mga konsultasyon hinggil sa pagtaas ng matrikula at iba pang bayarin, kasama na ang CMO 7 at 42 na naging pag-amyenda rito.

Sa nasabing memorandum na inilabas noong Pebrero 20, ang ibinasura nang CMO 13, Series of 1998, ang gagamiting batayan para sa mga panukalang pagtaas sa matrikula sa susunod na school year.

Kaduda-duda at batbat ng iregularidad ang naging hakbang ni Puno dahil lumabas ito ilang araw na lamang bago ang pagtatapos ng mga konsultasyon sa pagtaas ng matrikula noong Pebrero 28. Hindi rin ito dumaan sa konsultasyon sa mga mag-aaral at tila walang balak ang Ched na ipaalam pa ito kung hindi pa nadiskubre ng ilang student council sa Baguio City, National Union of Students at Kabataan Party-list ang maanomalyang kautusan ni Puno. (more…)

Modest proposals

Monday, March 5th, 2007

Raymond Palatino, national president and 1st nominee
March 1, 2007
visit his blog

I met with political science students last Thursday and I shared some of our legislative proposals. Here is an excerpt of my speech…. (more…)

Youth Partylist scores CHED-COCOPEA-Malacanang conspiracy to remove tuition cap

Saturday, March 3rd, 2007

Students call for moratorium on tuition and other fee increases

The Kabataan Partylist and the National Union of Students of the Philippines (NUSP) today condemned what it called a “grand conspiracy” of officials of the Commission on Higher Education (CHED), Coordinating Council of Private Educational Associations (COCOPEA) and President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo to suspend the implementation of CHED memorandum order no. 14 and subsequent amendments CMO 42 and CMO 7 which provide for a cap on tuition and other fee increases based on the prevailing national inflation rate.

“CHED Chairman Carlito Puno’s unilateral and shameless act shows the commission’s subservience and capitulation to strong pressure from school owners even at the expense of students. This only proves that CHED is toothless and merely functions as a rubber stamp for school owners’ business interests,” Kabataan Partylist president Raymond Palatino pointed out. (more…)

Suspension of CHED memo 14 triggers bigger tuition hikes, sparks students’ uproar

Tuesday, February 27th, 2007

Students call for moratorium on tuition and other fee increases

Student leaders from different private schools in Metro Manila led by the Kabataan Partylist and the National Union of Students of the Philippines (NUSP) today stormed the Commission on Higher Education (CHED) main office to protest the hasty suspension of the CHED Memorandum Order 14 (CMO 14) or the guidelines for tuition and other fee increases proposals few days before the end of consultations for school fee hike proposals. (more…)

STOP Tuition and other Fee Increases!

Monday, February 26th, 2007

Photobucket - Video and Image Hosting

“Tuition and other fee increases in these times of economic hardship and poverty are clearly uncalled for. These only make college education more elusive to young Filipinos.”
- Raymond Palatino, Kabataan Partylist president and first nominee

Read KABATAAN’s statement.

Photos of the February 22 anti-tuition hike protest action in the university belt. These were taken from bikoy.net and gmanews.tv

Photobucket - Video and Image Hosting

Photobucket - Video and Image Hosting

Students to senatoriables: Speak up against tuition hikes

Friday, February 23rd, 2007

February 22, 2007

The Kabataan Partylist, together with the National Union of Students of the Philippines (NUSP) and College Editors Guild of the Philippines (CEGP) today called on senatorial aspirants to join the students’ clamor for an end to unabated tuition and other fee increases.

“This will be the best opportunity for them to prove to us that they are really for the youth and they are running to defend and uphold the interest of young Filipinos particularly on education,” Kabataan Partylist president Raymond Palatino said. (more…)