SlideShare une entreprise Scribd logo
1  sur  5
PATTERN OF EDUC IN THE PHILIPPINES

FR: Pinas your gateway to information(pinas.dlsu.edu.ph/gov/education.html)
Philippine education is patterned after the American system, with English as the medium of
instruction. Schools are classified into public (government) or private (non-government). The
general pattern of formal education follows four stages: Pre-primary level (nursery and
kindergarten) offered in most private schools; six years of primary education, followed by four
years of secondary education.
College education usually takes four, sometimes five and in some cases as in medical and law
schools, as long as eight years. Graduate schooling is an additional two or more years. Classes in
Philippine schools start in June and end in March. Colleges and universities follow the semestral
calendar from June-October and November-March. There are a number of foreign schools with
study programs similar to those of the mother country.

The Philippine Educational System
The Philippine Educational System [1] | Hello.Lenin!
karlomongaya.wordpress.com/.../the-philippine-educational-system-1
By KarloMongaya / January 6, 2012 / Historia, Política, Theoria / 6 Comments
Education is generally described as “the process of receiving or giving systematic
instruction.”[2] It is a basic human right because it is considered one of the fundamental
guarantees that enable an individual to live his full potential as a human being.
Various international agreements entered into by the Philippines, including the 1948 Universal
Declaration of Human Rights and the United Nations Millennium Development Goals, state that
the state has a responsibility to guarantee the people‟s right to education.
Our 1987 Constitution itself explicitly provides for government to “protect and promote the right
of all citizens to quality education at all levels” and “take appropriate steps to make such
education accessible to all.”[3] The constitution also states that “the highest budgetary priority”
shall be assigned to education.[4]
Reactionary or liberatory
Education is given a high value in the country because it is perceived by the masses as a stepping
stone out of poverty, it is imagined by the middle classes as a way to climb to a higher social
status, and is used by the ruling classes to reinforce their influence over the populace.
Education, more importantly, is of great importance for nation-building because it can mold the
consciousness of the youth and the people and direct them towards particular purposes.
Education, in this sense, can be either reactionary or liberatory.[5]
It is reactionary if it functions to defend an exploitative and oppressive social order by
“prevent[ing] the people from gaining critical awareness, from „reading‟ critically their
reality.”[6] Education can be liberating if it seeks the opposite and works for social
transformation.[7]
The Philippine educational system has been plagued by a severe and chronic crisis that leaves it
incapable of pushing for national progress. It has instead been molded “according to the interests
of those who have power”[8] and has reinforced worsening social inequality.
Rather than being treated as an investment with a crucial role in nation-building, education has
become perpetually hostage to grave shortages, wrong priorities, and the demands of foreign
powers. Instead of being conferred to the people as a basic right, it has become a privilege for a
few.
A colonial education
The sorry state of affairs of Philippine education can be traced back to the country‟s colonial
period when the educational system was designed to mold loyal colonial subjects who valued the
interests of their foreign masters above their own needs and aspirations.
This was clearly the case under 300 years of Spanish colonial rule when all the schools were
under the control and the direction of the Catholic Church. After all, “the most effective means
of subjugating a people is to capture their minds.”[9]
The arrival of the Americans did little to change this. Having waged a genocidal war that
murdered over a million Filipinos in order to subdue the Filipino revolutionaries, the new
colonizers realized the need for establishing a public school system in order to make the new
regime acceptable.
Filipinos were forced to speak in the colonizers‟ tongue. They sang the “Star Spangled Banner.”
They were told that the colonizers came to liberate them and teach them democracy. They were
inculcated with the new rulers‟ consumerist values. They were transformed into “little brown
Americans.”
Schools like the University of the Philippines and the Philippine Normal University were
established to produce a new generation of Filipino clerks, businessmen, bureaucrats, teachers,
and other professionals who are trained in the ways of the colonizers and beholden to foreign
interests.
Ultimately, education was fashioned to suit the colonial project of making the country dependent
on the U.S. economically, politically, and culturally even after it was “granted” freedom.
Under a neocolonial state
The formal declaration of independence finally came on 1946, but the policies of the new
government would remain bound to U.S. designs through various unequal treaties and
agreements. Philippine education became and continues to be a testament of this new neocolonial
status.
Fashioned to serve the aims of foreign powers and the demands of the international market, the
Philippine educational system became a regular testing ground for World Bank and International
Monetary Fund prescriptions and impositions.[10]
This assumed a more brazen form under President Ferdinand Marcos who would subsequently
assume dictatorial powers. His regime would reconfigure the educational system to focus on
technical and vocational training “to provide the manpower required by foreign investors and
their local partners.”[11]
The Marcos-era Education Act of 1982 allowed unregulated tuition increases while his regime‟s
New Elementary School Curriculum (NESC)of 1983 used World Bank funded textbooks.
Marcos revised foreign borrowing rules “for a more extensive funding of educational projects
from foreign and external sources.”[12]
The removal of the dictatorship from power did not bode any change for the prevailing
orientation of Philippine education. The new president would promise the U.S. government to
pay the $26 billion debt accumulated under Marcos never mind that much of it went to the
dictator and his cronies‟ pockets.[13]
Cory Aquino remained subservient to the dictates of foreign banks and powers, which would
attain larger roles in crafting the country‟s educational policies. Her regime‟s New Secondary
Education Curriculumof 1989, for instance, would simply serve as the high school version of
Marcos‟ NESC.
Philippines 2000 and beyond
The same pattern would continue under Fidel Ramos whose Education 2000 program would
direct the reduction of government funding for state universities and colleges (SUCs) in order to
make way for higher allocations for foreign debt servicing.
The short-lived Estrada regime would meanwhile form the Philippine Commission on
Educational Reform (PCER) which recommended that the “use of large allocations of the
government budget for public higher education is perceived to be inefficient and
inequitable.”[14]
Some of the proposals of the study, in the main, included the raising of tuition to “realistic
levels,” the use of SUCs‟ idle assets for commercial purposes, and intensified fund-raising from
the private sector.
President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo‟s Long Term Higher Education Development Plan
(LTHEDP) would put this direction to its logical conclusion by directing:
The decrease of SUCs by 20 percent,
Transforming 20 percent of SUCs into semi-corporatized entities,
Making 20 percent self-sufficient by selling intellectual products and grants,
Requiring 50 percent of SUCs to engage in active income generating projects,
Having 70 percent of SUCs charge tuition comparable to private universities, and
Involving 60 percent of SUCs into collaborations with big business.
In order to produce a “globally competitive” labor force, the Arroyo government also introduced
the World Bank and the Asian Development Bank-recommended “Millennium Curriculum”
which emphasized English, Math and Science at the expense of history, humanities and social
sciences.
The same perverted logic would form the core of the education policies of the Aquino regime.
His Philippine Development Plan 2011-2016 would aim to “Harness private-sector resources in
the delivery and monitoring of, social marketing and advocacy for education, especially higher
education.”
The implementation of K to 12 would meanwhile take-off where the “Millennium Curriculum”
left by creating a new generation of cheap semi-skilled workers who are employable by
transnational corporations or qualified for labor exports immediately after high school
graduation.
Globally competitive
What has become clear after the end of every administration and the passing of each decade is
the way the educational system has been structured to benefit the profit-oriented political and
economic interests of foreign and local elites.
Under this setup, the “global competitive workforce” which the educational system seeks to mass
produce becomes another fancy name for cheap and docile labor, a youth that can be easily
disposed of in transnational corporations in the country or abroad.
Thus, Philippine education is directed towards whatever is the demand in the international
market: it was engineering in the 1960s, medicine in the 1970s, computer science and
information technology in the 1980s and 1990s, and nursing and caregiving courses in the first
decade of the 21st century.
What the government euphemistically terms “job-skills mismatch” is actually a result of its very
own labor export policy and the lack of national industries that can essentially provide job
opportunities at home. It is a symptom of an economy that has become overly dependent on
foreign economies.
The predominance of the English language in the Philippines is closely linked to the country‟s
foreign-dominated economy. English, after all, is essential if one pursues a career in call centers
or goes abroad. The use of the foreign language is therefore strongly campaigned by the present
educational system.
The fining of students speaking in the native tongue in order to promote English has become a
common practice in several schools. English is prescribed as the favored medium of instruction
even if using native languages is more effective than the use of a foreign one.

EDUCATIONAL PROFILE OF THE PHILIPPINES
www.unc.edu/world/2006_K12Symp/Pres.../Florido_Handout1.pdf

Philippines - International Bureau of Education - Unesco
www.ibe.unesco.org/Countries/WDE/2006/.../Philippines/Philippines.pdf

Contenu connexe

Tendances

ANTI-HAZING-ACT-OF-2018-pptx.pptx
ANTI-HAZING-ACT-OF-2018-pptx.pptxANTI-HAZING-ACT-OF-2018-pptx.pptx
ANTI-HAZING-ACT-OF-2018-pptx.pptxJaninGallana
 
Curriculum development in the philippines in new society
Curriculum development in the philippines in new societyCurriculum development in the philippines in new society
Curriculum development in the philippines in new societySharel Mae Ponce
 
The PRINCIPLES of LEARNING (Principles of Teaching 1)
The PRINCIPLES of LEARNING (Principles of Teaching 1)The PRINCIPLES of LEARNING (Principles of Teaching 1)
The PRINCIPLES of LEARNING (Principles of Teaching 1)Taguig City University
 
Teaching profession (Historical Perspective of Philippine Educational System)
Teaching profession (Historical Perspective of Philippine Educational System)Teaching profession (Historical Perspective of Philippine Educational System)
Teaching profession (Historical Perspective of Philippine Educational System)Franzelle Mae Lignes
 
Indigenous peoples education curriculum of the Philippines
Indigenous peoples education curriculum of the PhilippinesIndigenous peoples education curriculum of the Philippines
Indigenous peoples education curriculum of the PhilippinesBobby Mascarenas
 
The 1987 Constitution of the Republic of the Philippines – Article xiv
The 1987 Constitution of the Republic of the Philippines – Article xivThe 1987 Constitution of the Republic of the Philippines – Article xiv
The 1987 Constitution of the Republic of the Philippines – Article xivZephie Andrada
 
Code of ethics for professional teachers - simple
Code of ethics for professional teachers - simpleCode of ethics for professional teachers - simple
Code of ethics for professional teachers - simpleSavel Umiten
 
The 1987 constitution of the republic of the philippines – article xiv
The 1987 constitution of the republic of the philippines – article xivThe 1987 constitution of the republic of the philippines – article xiv
The 1987 constitution of the republic of the philippines – article xivJerine Aina Lugami
 
The Constitution- Foundations of Education
The Constitution- Foundations of EducationThe Constitution- Foundations of Education
The Constitution- Foundations of EducationAiza Santos
 
RA 9163 - NSTP Act
RA 9163 - NSTP ActRA 9163 - NSTP Act
RA 9163 - NSTP Actnstp1uerm
 
Curriculum development.ppt
Curriculum development.pptCurriculum development.ppt
Curriculum development.pptbernadethyana
 
Legal foundation of education in the philippines presentation transcript
Legal foundation of education in the philippines presentation transcriptLegal foundation of education in the philippines presentation transcript
Legal foundation of education in the philippines presentation transcriptLeny Angana
 
Japanese regime Education in the Philippines
Japanese regime Education in the PhilippinesJapanese regime Education in the Philippines
Japanese regime Education in the PhilippinesNathalie Gaile Pantoja
 
Batas pambansa bldg. 232 part 1
Batas pambansa bldg. 232  part 1Batas pambansa bldg. 232  part 1
Batas pambansa bldg. 232 part 1TechELa
 
Center of excellence for teacher education
Center of excellence for teacher educationCenter of excellence for teacher education
Center of excellence for teacher educationImelda Reyes
 
The Teaching Profession - Linkages & Networking with Organizations
The Teaching Profession - Linkages & Networking with OrganizationsThe Teaching Profession - Linkages & Networking with Organizations
The Teaching Profession - Linkages & Networking with OrganizationsJad Justalero
 

Tendances (20)

ANTI-HAZING-ACT-OF-2018-pptx.pptx
ANTI-HAZING-ACT-OF-2018-pptx.pptxANTI-HAZING-ACT-OF-2018-pptx.pptx
ANTI-HAZING-ACT-OF-2018-pptx.pptx
 
Curriculum development in the philippines in new society
Curriculum development in the philippines in new societyCurriculum development in the philippines in new society
Curriculum development in the philippines in new society
 
The PRINCIPLES of LEARNING (Principles of Teaching 1)
The PRINCIPLES of LEARNING (Principles of Teaching 1)The PRINCIPLES of LEARNING (Principles of Teaching 1)
The PRINCIPLES of LEARNING (Principles of Teaching 1)
 
article IV
article IVarticle IV
article IV
 
Teaching profession (Historical Perspective of Philippine Educational System)
Teaching profession (Historical Perspective of Philippine Educational System)Teaching profession (Historical Perspective of Philippine Educational System)
Teaching profession (Historical Perspective of Philippine Educational System)
 
Presidential decree no.ann
Presidential decree no.annPresidential decree no.ann
Presidential decree no.ann
 
Indigenous peoples education curriculum of the Philippines
Indigenous peoples education curriculum of the PhilippinesIndigenous peoples education curriculum of the Philippines
Indigenous peoples education curriculum of the Philippines
 
Batas pambansa bldg. 232
Batas pambansa bldg. 232   Batas pambansa bldg. 232
Batas pambansa bldg. 232
 
The 1987 Constitution of the Republic of the Philippines – Article xiv
The 1987 Constitution of the Republic of the Philippines – Article xivThe 1987 Constitution of the Republic of the Philippines – Article xiv
The 1987 Constitution of the Republic of the Philippines – Article xiv
 
Code of ethics for professional teachers - simple
Code of ethics for professional teachers - simpleCode of ethics for professional teachers - simple
Code of ethics for professional teachers - simple
 
The 1987 constitution of the republic of the philippines – article xiv
The 1987 constitution of the republic of the philippines – article xivThe 1987 constitution of the republic of the philippines – article xiv
The 1987 constitution of the republic of the philippines – article xiv
 
The Constitution- Foundations of Education
The Constitution- Foundations of EducationThe Constitution- Foundations of Education
The Constitution- Foundations of Education
 
RA 9163 - NSTP Act
RA 9163 - NSTP ActRA 9163 - NSTP Act
RA 9163 - NSTP Act
 
Curriculum development.ppt
Curriculum development.pptCurriculum development.ppt
Curriculum development.ppt
 
Legal foundation of education in the philippines presentation transcript
Legal foundation of education in the philippines presentation transcriptLegal foundation of education in the philippines presentation transcript
Legal foundation of education in the philippines presentation transcript
 
Japanese regime Education in the Philippines
Japanese regime Education in the PhilippinesJapanese regime Education in the Philippines
Japanese regime Education in the Philippines
 
RA 6655.
RA 6655.RA 6655.
RA 6655.
 
Batas pambansa bldg. 232 part 1
Batas pambansa bldg. 232  part 1Batas pambansa bldg. 232  part 1
Batas pambansa bldg. 232 part 1
 
Center of excellence for teacher education
Center of excellence for teacher educationCenter of excellence for teacher education
Center of excellence for teacher education
 
The Teaching Profession - Linkages & Networking with Organizations
The Teaching Profession - Linkages & Networking with OrganizationsThe Teaching Profession - Linkages & Networking with Organizations
The Teaching Profession - Linkages & Networking with Organizations
 

Similaire à Pattern of educ in the philippines

Present Problem of Philippines Educational System.pdf
Present Problem of Philippines Educational System.pdfPresent Problem of Philippines Educational System.pdf
Present Problem of Philippines Educational System.pdfBorbeAnaliza
 
Philosophy of philiippine education
Philosophy of philiippine educationPhilosophy of philiippine education
Philosophy of philiippine educationST. JAMES COLLEGE
 
Philosophical Education in Different Period
Philosophical Education in Different PeriodPhilosophical Education in Different Period
Philosophical Education in Different PeriodDaniel Bragais
 
Globalization And Nationalism
Globalization And NationalismGlobalization And Nationalism
Globalization And NationalismAdvancedAlgebra
 
Economics in education1/financing Education
Economics in education1/financing EducationEconomics in education1/financing Education
Economics in education1/financing EducationReve Faith Bagas
 
The leadership of president marcos
The leadership of president marcosThe leadership of president marcos
The leadership of president marcosjane fortunado
 
ISLAMIYAT RESEARCH REPORT-1.pdf
ISLAMIYAT RESEARCH REPORT-1.pdfISLAMIYAT RESEARCH REPORT-1.pdf
ISLAMIYAT RESEARCH REPORT-1.pdfUmairMushtaq42
 
philosophyofphiliippineeducation-100606191526-phpapp01-converted.pptx
philosophyofphiliippineeducation-100606191526-phpapp01-converted.pptxphilosophyofphiliippineeducation-100606191526-phpapp01-converted.pptx
philosophyofphiliippineeducation-100606191526-phpapp01-converted.pptxAguilaJairus
 
trends-issues-and-policies-in-philippine-education.docx
trends-issues-and-policies-in-philippine-education.docxtrends-issues-and-policies-in-philippine-education.docx
trends-issues-and-policies-in-philippine-education.docxNestorJepolanCapia
 
Redefining Education in America Cultivating Ethical & Moral Leadership
Redefining Education in America Cultivating Ethical & Moral LeadershipRedefining Education in America Cultivating Ethical & Moral Leadership
Redefining Education in America Cultivating Ethical & Moral LeadershipAnne Hamilton
 
MAP 504 INTERNATIONALIZATION OF EDUCATION : CURRENT AND FUTURE ROLE OF WESTER...
MAP 504 INTERNATIONALIZATION OF EDUCATION : CURRENT AND FUTURE ROLE OF WESTER...MAP 504 INTERNATIONALIZATION OF EDUCATION : CURRENT AND FUTURE ROLE OF WESTER...
MAP 504 INTERNATIONALIZATION OF EDUCATION : CURRENT AND FUTURE ROLE OF WESTER...Dr. Rosemarie Sibbaluca-Guirre
 
The philippine new education highway
The philippine new education highwayThe philippine new education highway
The philippine new education highwayezra ayado
 

Similaire à Pattern of educ in the philippines (20)

Present Problem of Philippines Educational System.pdf
Present Problem of Philippines Educational System.pdfPresent Problem of Philippines Educational System.pdf
Present Problem of Philippines Educational System.pdf
 
Philosophy of philiippine education
Philosophy of philiippine educationPhilosophy of philiippine education
Philosophy of philiippine education
 
UCSP aaa.pptx
UCSP aaa.pptxUCSP aaa.pptx
UCSP aaa.pptx
 
Chapter 15
Chapter 15Chapter 15
Chapter 15
 
Educational Transformation in the Philippine Education System:Towards Global ...
Educational Transformation in the Philippine Education System:Towards Global ...Educational Transformation in the Philippine Education System:Towards Global ...
Educational Transformation in the Philippine Education System:Towards Global ...
 
Recana powerpoint
Recana powerpointRecana powerpoint
Recana powerpoint
 
Philosophical Education in Different Period
Philosophical Education in Different PeriodPhilosophical Education in Different Period
Philosophical Education in Different Period
 
MSOE 001 paper
MSOE 001 paperMSOE 001 paper
MSOE 001 paper
 
Globalization And Nationalism
Globalization And NationalismGlobalization And Nationalism
Globalization And Nationalism
 
Economics in education1/financing Education
Economics in education1/financing EducationEconomics in education1/financing Education
Economics in education1/financing Education
 
The leadership of president marcos
The leadership of president marcosThe leadership of president marcos
The leadership of president marcos
 
ISLAMIYAT RESEARCH REPORT-1.pdf
ISLAMIYAT RESEARCH REPORT-1.pdfISLAMIYAT RESEARCH REPORT-1.pdf
ISLAMIYAT RESEARCH REPORT-1.pdf
 
philosophyofphiliippineeducation-100606191526-phpapp01-converted.pptx
philosophyofphiliippineeducation-100606191526-phpapp01-converted.pptxphilosophyofphiliippineeducation-100606191526-phpapp01-converted.pptx
philosophyofphiliippineeducation-100606191526-phpapp01-converted.pptx
 
trends-issues-and-policies-in-philippine-education.docx
trends-issues-and-policies-in-philippine-education.docxtrends-issues-and-policies-in-philippine-education.docx
trends-issues-and-policies-in-philippine-education.docx
 
Redefining Education in America Cultivating Ethical & Moral Leadership
Redefining Education in America Cultivating Ethical & Moral LeadershipRedefining Education in America Cultivating Ethical & Moral Leadership
Redefining Education in America Cultivating Ethical & Moral Leadership
 
MAP 504 INTERNATIONALIZATION OF EDUCATION : CURRENT AND FUTURE ROLE OF WESTER...
MAP 504 INTERNATIONALIZATION OF EDUCATION : CURRENT AND FUTURE ROLE OF WESTER...MAP 504 INTERNATIONALIZATION OF EDUCATION : CURRENT AND FUTURE ROLE OF WESTER...
MAP 504 INTERNATIONALIZATION OF EDUCATION : CURRENT AND FUTURE ROLE OF WESTER...
 
Education
EducationEducation
Education
 
Education.ppt
Education.pptEducation.ppt
Education.ppt
 
Educ.system
Educ.systemEduc.system
Educ.system
 
The philippine new education highway
The philippine new education highwayThe philippine new education highway
The philippine new education highway
 

Dernier

Exploring Gemini AI and Integration with MuleSoft | MuleSoft Mysore Meetup #45
Exploring Gemini AI and Integration with MuleSoft | MuleSoft Mysore Meetup #45Exploring Gemini AI and Integration with MuleSoft | MuleSoft Mysore Meetup #45
Exploring Gemini AI and Integration with MuleSoft | MuleSoft Mysore Meetup #45MysoreMuleSoftMeetup
 
會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文
會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文
會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文中 央社
 
BỘ LUYỆN NGHE TIẾNG ANH 8 GLOBAL SUCCESS CẢ NĂM (GỒM 12 UNITS, MỖI UNIT GỒM 3...
BỘ LUYỆN NGHE TIẾNG ANH 8 GLOBAL SUCCESS CẢ NĂM (GỒM 12 UNITS, MỖI UNIT GỒM 3...BỘ LUYỆN NGHE TIẾNG ANH 8 GLOBAL SUCCESS CẢ NĂM (GỒM 12 UNITS, MỖI UNIT GỒM 3...
BỘ LUYỆN NGHE TIẾNG ANH 8 GLOBAL SUCCESS CẢ NĂM (GỒM 12 UNITS, MỖI UNIT GỒM 3...Nguyen Thanh Tu Collection
 
Financial Accounting IFRS, 3rd Edition-dikompresi.pdf
Financial Accounting IFRS, 3rd Edition-dikompresi.pdfFinancial Accounting IFRS, 3rd Edition-dikompresi.pdf
Financial Accounting IFRS, 3rd Edition-dikompresi.pdfMinawBelay
 
philosophy and it's principles based on the life
philosophy and it's principles based on the lifephilosophy and it's principles based on the life
philosophy and it's principles based on the lifeNitinDeodare
 
Graduate Outcomes Presentation Slides - English (v3).pptx
Graduate Outcomes Presentation Slides - English (v3).pptxGraduate Outcomes Presentation Slides - English (v3).pptx
Graduate Outcomes Presentation Slides - English (v3).pptxneillewis46
 
ĐỀ THAM KHẢO KÌ THI TUYỂN SINH VÀO LỚP 10 MÔN TIẾNG ANH FORM 50 CÂU TRẮC NGHI...
ĐỀ THAM KHẢO KÌ THI TUYỂN SINH VÀO LỚP 10 MÔN TIẾNG ANH FORM 50 CÂU TRẮC NGHI...ĐỀ THAM KHẢO KÌ THI TUYỂN SINH VÀO LỚP 10 MÔN TIẾNG ANH FORM 50 CÂU TRẮC NGHI...
ĐỀ THAM KHẢO KÌ THI TUYỂN SINH VÀO LỚP 10 MÔN TIẾNG ANH FORM 50 CÂU TRẮC NGHI...Nguyen Thanh Tu Collection
 
MSc Ag Genetics & Plant Breeding: Insights from Previous Year JNKVV Entrance ...
MSc Ag Genetics & Plant Breeding: Insights from Previous Year JNKVV Entrance ...MSc Ag Genetics & Plant Breeding: Insights from Previous Year JNKVV Entrance ...
MSc Ag Genetics & Plant Breeding: Insights from Previous Year JNKVV Entrance ...Krashi Coaching
 
TỔNG HỢP HƠN 100 ĐỀ THI THỬ TỐT NGHIỆP THPT VẬT LÝ 2024 - TỪ CÁC TRƯỜNG, TRƯ...
TỔNG HỢP HƠN 100 ĐỀ THI THỬ TỐT NGHIỆP THPT VẬT LÝ 2024 - TỪ CÁC TRƯỜNG, TRƯ...TỔNG HỢP HƠN 100 ĐỀ THI THỬ TỐT NGHIỆP THPT VẬT LÝ 2024 - TỪ CÁC TRƯỜNG, TRƯ...
TỔNG HỢP HƠN 100 ĐỀ THI THỬ TỐT NGHIỆP THPT VẬT LÝ 2024 - TỪ CÁC TRƯỜNG, TRƯ...Nguyen Thanh Tu Collection
 
....................Muslim-Law notes.pdf
....................Muslim-Law notes.pdf....................Muslim-Law notes.pdf
....................Muslim-Law notes.pdfVikramadityaRaj
 
An overview of the various scriptures in Hinduism
An overview of the various scriptures in HinduismAn overview of the various scriptures in Hinduism
An overview of the various scriptures in HinduismDabee Kamal
 
ANTI PARKISON DRUGS.pptx
ANTI         PARKISON          DRUGS.pptxANTI         PARKISON          DRUGS.pptx
ANTI PARKISON DRUGS.pptxPoojaSen20
 
Features of Video Calls in the Discuss Module in Odoo 17
Features of Video Calls in the Discuss Module in Odoo 17Features of Video Calls in the Discuss Module in Odoo 17
Features of Video Calls in the Discuss Module in Odoo 17Celine George
 
The Last Leaf, a short story by O. Henry
The Last Leaf, a short story by O. HenryThe Last Leaf, a short story by O. Henry
The Last Leaf, a short story by O. HenryEugene Lysak
 
II BIOSENSOR PRINCIPLE APPLICATIONS AND WORKING II
II BIOSENSOR PRINCIPLE APPLICATIONS AND WORKING IIII BIOSENSOR PRINCIPLE APPLICATIONS AND WORKING II
II BIOSENSOR PRINCIPLE APPLICATIONS AND WORKING IIagpharmacy11
 
Software testing for project report .pdf
Software testing for project report .pdfSoftware testing for project report .pdf
Software testing for project report .pdfKamal Acharya
 
Basic Civil Engineering notes on Transportation Engineering, Modes of Transpo...
Basic Civil Engineering notes on Transportation Engineering, Modes of Transpo...Basic Civil Engineering notes on Transportation Engineering, Modes of Transpo...
Basic Civil Engineering notes on Transportation Engineering, Modes of Transpo...Denish Jangid
 
How to Manage Closest Location in Odoo 17 Inventory
How to Manage Closest Location in Odoo 17 InventoryHow to Manage Closest Location in Odoo 17 Inventory
How to Manage Closest Location in Odoo 17 InventoryCeline George
 
Pragya Champions Chalice 2024 Prelims & Finals Q/A set, General Quiz
Pragya Champions Chalice 2024 Prelims & Finals Q/A set, General QuizPragya Champions Chalice 2024 Prelims & Finals Q/A set, General Quiz
Pragya Champions Chalice 2024 Prelims & Finals Q/A set, General QuizPragya - UEM Kolkata Quiz Club
 

Dernier (20)

Exploring Gemini AI and Integration with MuleSoft | MuleSoft Mysore Meetup #45
Exploring Gemini AI and Integration with MuleSoft | MuleSoft Mysore Meetup #45Exploring Gemini AI and Integration with MuleSoft | MuleSoft Mysore Meetup #45
Exploring Gemini AI and Integration with MuleSoft | MuleSoft Mysore Meetup #45
 
會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文
會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文
會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文會考英文
 
BỘ LUYỆN NGHE TIẾNG ANH 8 GLOBAL SUCCESS CẢ NĂM (GỒM 12 UNITS, MỖI UNIT GỒM 3...
BỘ LUYỆN NGHE TIẾNG ANH 8 GLOBAL SUCCESS CẢ NĂM (GỒM 12 UNITS, MỖI UNIT GỒM 3...BỘ LUYỆN NGHE TIẾNG ANH 8 GLOBAL SUCCESS CẢ NĂM (GỒM 12 UNITS, MỖI UNIT GỒM 3...
BỘ LUYỆN NGHE TIẾNG ANH 8 GLOBAL SUCCESS CẢ NĂM (GỒM 12 UNITS, MỖI UNIT GỒM 3...
 
Financial Accounting IFRS, 3rd Edition-dikompresi.pdf
Financial Accounting IFRS, 3rd Edition-dikompresi.pdfFinancial Accounting IFRS, 3rd Edition-dikompresi.pdf
Financial Accounting IFRS, 3rd Edition-dikompresi.pdf
 
philosophy and it's principles based on the life
philosophy and it's principles based on the lifephilosophy and it's principles based on the life
philosophy and it's principles based on the life
 
Graduate Outcomes Presentation Slides - English (v3).pptx
Graduate Outcomes Presentation Slides - English (v3).pptxGraduate Outcomes Presentation Slides - English (v3).pptx
Graduate Outcomes Presentation Slides - English (v3).pptx
 
ĐỀ THAM KHẢO KÌ THI TUYỂN SINH VÀO LỚP 10 MÔN TIẾNG ANH FORM 50 CÂU TRẮC NGHI...
ĐỀ THAM KHẢO KÌ THI TUYỂN SINH VÀO LỚP 10 MÔN TIẾNG ANH FORM 50 CÂU TRẮC NGHI...ĐỀ THAM KHẢO KÌ THI TUYỂN SINH VÀO LỚP 10 MÔN TIẾNG ANH FORM 50 CÂU TRẮC NGHI...
ĐỀ THAM KHẢO KÌ THI TUYỂN SINH VÀO LỚP 10 MÔN TIẾNG ANH FORM 50 CÂU TRẮC NGHI...
 
MSc Ag Genetics & Plant Breeding: Insights from Previous Year JNKVV Entrance ...
MSc Ag Genetics & Plant Breeding: Insights from Previous Year JNKVV Entrance ...MSc Ag Genetics & Plant Breeding: Insights from Previous Year JNKVV Entrance ...
MSc Ag Genetics & Plant Breeding: Insights from Previous Year JNKVV Entrance ...
 
TỔNG HỢP HƠN 100 ĐỀ THI THỬ TỐT NGHIỆP THPT VẬT LÝ 2024 - TỪ CÁC TRƯỜNG, TRƯ...
TỔNG HỢP HƠN 100 ĐỀ THI THỬ TỐT NGHIỆP THPT VẬT LÝ 2024 - TỪ CÁC TRƯỜNG, TRƯ...TỔNG HỢP HƠN 100 ĐỀ THI THỬ TỐT NGHIỆP THPT VẬT LÝ 2024 - TỪ CÁC TRƯỜNG, TRƯ...
TỔNG HỢP HƠN 100 ĐỀ THI THỬ TỐT NGHIỆP THPT VẬT LÝ 2024 - TỪ CÁC TRƯỜNG, TRƯ...
 
....................Muslim-Law notes.pdf
....................Muslim-Law notes.pdf....................Muslim-Law notes.pdf
....................Muslim-Law notes.pdf
 
An overview of the various scriptures in Hinduism
An overview of the various scriptures in HinduismAn overview of the various scriptures in Hinduism
An overview of the various scriptures in Hinduism
 
ANTI PARKISON DRUGS.pptx
ANTI         PARKISON          DRUGS.pptxANTI         PARKISON          DRUGS.pptx
ANTI PARKISON DRUGS.pptx
 
Features of Video Calls in the Discuss Module in Odoo 17
Features of Video Calls in the Discuss Module in Odoo 17Features of Video Calls in the Discuss Module in Odoo 17
Features of Video Calls in the Discuss Module in Odoo 17
 
The Last Leaf, a short story by O. Henry
The Last Leaf, a short story by O. HenryThe Last Leaf, a short story by O. Henry
The Last Leaf, a short story by O. Henry
 
II BIOSENSOR PRINCIPLE APPLICATIONS AND WORKING II
II BIOSENSOR PRINCIPLE APPLICATIONS AND WORKING IIII BIOSENSOR PRINCIPLE APPLICATIONS AND WORKING II
II BIOSENSOR PRINCIPLE APPLICATIONS AND WORKING II
 
Software testing for project report .pdf
Software testing for project report .pdfSoftware testing for project report .pdf
Software testing for project report .pdf
 
Mattingly "AI and Prompt Design: LLMs with Text Classification and Open Source"
Mattingly "AI and Prompt Design: LLMs with Text Classification and Open Source"Mattingly "AI and Prompt Design: LLMs with Text Classification and Open Source"
Mattingly "AI and Prompt Design: LLMs with Text Classification and Open Source"
 
Basic Civil Engineering notes on Transportation Engineering, Modes of Transpo...
Basic Civil Engineering notes on Transportation Engineering, Modes of Transpo...Basic Civil Engineering notes on Transportation Engineering, Modes of Transpo...
Basic Civil Engineering notes on Transportation Engineering, Modes of Transpo...
 
How to Manage Closest Location in Odoo 17 Inventory
How to Manage Closest Location in Odoo 17 InventoryHow to Manage Closest Location in Odoo 17 Inventory
How to Manage Closest Location in Odoo 17 Inventory
 
Pragya Champions Chalice 2024 Prelims & Finals Q/A set, General Quiz
Pragya Champions Chalice 2024 Prelims & Finals Q/A set, General QuizPragya Champions Chalice 2024 Prelims & Finals Q/A set, General Quiz
Pragya Champions Chalice 2024 Prelims & Finals Q/A set, General Quiz
 

Pattern of educ in the philippines

  • 1. PATTERN OF EDUC IN THE PHILIPPINES FR: Pinas your gateway to information(pinas.dlsu.edu.ph/gov/education.html) Philippine education is patterned after the American system, with English as the medium of instruction. Schools are classified into public (government) or private (non-government). The general pattern of formal education follows four stages: Pre-primary level (nursery and kindergarten) offered in most private schools; six years of primary education, followed by four years of secondary education. College education usually takes four, sometimes five and in some cases as in medical and law schools, as long as eight years. Graduate schooling is an additional two or more years. Classes in Philippine schools start in June and end in March. Colleges and universities follow the semestral calendar from June-October and November-March. There are a number of foreign schools with study programs similar to those of the mother country. The Philippine Educational System The Philippine Educational System [1] | Hello.Lenin! karlomongaya.wordpress.com/.../the-philippine-educational-system-1 By KarloMongaya / January 6, 2012 / Historia, Política, Theoria / 6 Comments Education is generally described as “the process of receiving or giving systematic instruction.”[2] It is a basic human right because it is considered one of the fundamental guarantees that enable an individual to live his full potential as a human being. Various international agreements entered into by the Philippines, including the 1948 Universal Declaration of Human Rights and the United Nations Millennium Development Goals, state that the state has a responsibility to guarantee the people‟s right to education. Our 1987 Constitution itself explicitly provides for government to “protect and promote the right of all citizens to quality education at all levels” and “take appropriate steps to make such education accessible to all.”[3] The constitution also states that “the highest budgetary priority” shall be assigned to education.[4] Reactionary or liberatory Education is given a high value in the country because it is perceived by the masses as a stepping stone out of poverty, it is imagined by the middle classes as a way to climb to a higher social status, and is used by the ruling classes to reinforce their influence over the populace. Education, more importantly, is of great importance for nation-building because it can mold the consciousness of the youth and the people and direct them towards particular purposes. Education, in this sense, can be either reactionary or liberatory.[5]
  • 2. It is reactionary if it functions to defend an exploitative and oppressive social order by “prevent[ing] the people from gaining critical awareness, from „reading‟ critically their reality.”[6] Education can be liberating if it seeks the opposite and works for social transformation.[7] The Philippine educational system has been plagued by a severe and chronic crisis that leaves it incapable of pushing for national progress. It has instead been molded “according to the interests of those who have power”[8] and has reinforced worsening social inequality. Rather than being treated as an investment with a crucial role in nation-building, education has become perpetually hostage to grave shortages, wrong priorities, and the demands of foreign powers. Instead of being conferred to the people as a basic right, it has become a privilege for a few. A colonial education The sorry state of affairs of Philippine education can be traced back to the country‟s colonial period when the educational system was designed to mold loyal colonial subjects who valued the interests of their foreign masters above their own needs and aspirations. This was clearly the case under 300 years of Spanish colonial rule when all the schools were under the control and the direction of the Catholic Church. After all, “the most effective means of subjugating a people is to capture their minds.”[9] The arrival of the Americans did little to change this. Having waged a genocidal war that murdered over a million Filipinos in order to subdue the Filipino revolutionaries, the new colonizers realized the need for establishing a public school system in order to make the new regime acceptable. Filipinos were forced to speak in the colonizers‟ tongue. They sang the “Star Spangled Banner.” They were told that the colonizers came to liberate them and teach them democracy. They were inculcated with the new rulers‟ consumerist values. They were transformed into “little brown Americans.” Schools like the University of the Philippines and the Philippine Normal University were established to produce a new generation of Filipino clerks, businessmen, bureaucrats, teachers, and other professionals who are trained in the ways of the colonizers and beholden to foreign interests. Ultimately, education was fashioned to suit the colonial project of making the country dependent on the U.S. economically, politically, and culturally even after it was “granted” freedom. Under a neocolonial state The formal declaration of independence finally came on 1946, but the policies of the new government would remain bound to U.S. designs through various unequal treaties and
  • 3. agreements. Philippine education became and continues to be a testament of this new neocolonial status. Fashioned to serve the aims of foreign powers and the demands of the international market, the Philippine educational system became a regular testing ground for World Bank and International Monetary Fund prescriptions and impositions.[10] This assumed a more brazen form under President Ferdinand Marcos who would subsequently assume dictatorial powers. His regime would reconfigure the educational system to focus on technical and vocational training “to provide the manpower required by foreign investors and their local partners.”[11] The Marcos-era Education Act of 1982 allowed unregulated tuition increases while his regime‟s New Elementary School Curriculum (NESC)of 1983 used World Bank funded textbooks. Marcos revised foreign borrowing rules “for a more extensive funding of educational projects from foreign and external sources.”[12] The removal of the dictatorship from power did not bode any change for the prevailing orientation of Philippine education. The new president would promise the U.S. government to pay the $26 billion debt accumulated under Marcos never mind that much of it went to the dictator and his cronies‟ pockets.[13] Cory Aquino remained subservient to the dictates of foreign banks and powers, which would attain larger roles in crafting the country‟s educational policies. Her regime‟s New Secondary Education Curriculumof 1989, for instance, would simply serve as the high school version of Marcos‟ NESC. Philippines 2000 and beyond The same pattern would continue under Fidel Ramos whose Education 2000 program would direct the reduction of government funding for state universities and colleges (SUCs) in order to make way for higher allocations for foreign debt servicing. The short-lived Estrada regime would meanwhile form the Philippine Commission on Educational Reform (PCER) which recommended that the “use of large allocations of the government budget for public higher education is perceived to be inefficient and inequitable.”[14] Some of the proposals of the study, in the main, included the raising of tuition to “realistic levels,” the use of SUCs‟ idle assets for commercial purposes, and intensified fund-raising from the private sector. President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo‟s Long Term Higher Education Development Plan (LTHEDP) would put this direction to its logical conclusion by directing: The decrease of SUCs by 20 percent,
  • 4. Transforming 20 percent of SUCs into semi-corporatized entities, Making 20 percent self-sufficient by selling intellectual products and grants, Requiring 50 percent of SUCs to engage in active income generating projects, Having 70 percent of SUCs charge tuition comparable to private universities, and Involving 60 percent of SUCs into collaborations with big business. In order to produce a “globally competitive” labor force, the Arroyo government also introduced the World Bank and the Asian Development Bank-recommended “Millennium Curriculum” which emphasized English, Math and Science at the expense of history, humanities and social sciences. The same perverted logic would form the core of the education policies of the Aquino regime. His Philippine Development Plan 2011-2016 would aim to “Harness private-sector resources in the delivery and monitoring of, social marketing and advocacy for education, especially higher education.” The implementation of K to 12 would meanwhile take-off where the “Millennium Curriculum” left by creating a new generation of cheap semi-skilled workers who are employable by transnational corporations or qualified for labor exports immediately after high school graduation. Globally competitive What has become clear after the end of every administration and the passing of each decade is the way the educational system has been structured to benefit the profit-oriented political and economic interests of foreign and local elites. Under this setup, the “global competitive workforce” which the educational system seeks to mass produce becomes another fancy name for cheap and docile labor, a youth that can be easily disposed of in transnational corporations in the country or abroad. Thus, Philippine education is directed towards whatever is the demand in the international market: it was engineering in the 1960s, medicine in the 1970s, computer science and information technology in the 1980s and 1990s, and nursing and caregiving courses in the first decade of the 21st century. What the government euphemistically terms “job-skills mismatch” is actually a result of its very own labor export policy and the lack of national industries that can essentially provide job opportunities at home. It is a symptom of an economy that has become overly dependent on foreign economies. The predominance of the English language in the Philippines is closely linked to the country‟s foreign-dominated economy. English, after all, is essential if one pursues a career in call centers or goes abroad. The use of the foreign language is therefore strongly campaigned by the present educational system.
  • 5. The fining of students speaking in the native tongue in order to promote English has become a common practice in several schools. English is prescribed as the favored medium of instruction even if using native languages is more effective than the use of a foreign one. EDUCATIONAL PROFILE OF THE PHILIPPINES www.unc.edu/world/2006_K12Symp/Pres.../Florido_Handout1.pdf Philippines - International Bureau of Education - Unesco www.ibe.unesco.org/Countries/WDE/2006/.../Philippines/Philippines.pdf