Friday, January 20, 2012

No new college freshmen enrolling in 2016

Sunday, 15 January 2012 16:30 Dennis D. Estopace / Reporter

COLLEGES and universities across the country would have no freshmen enrolling by 2016, dislocating teachers of general education courses and may impair revenue of private schools.

“It’s a cause of worry, I agree, but only for those who are not prepared or have not been preparing for the K+12,” Education Secretary Armin Altamirano Luistro told the BusinessMirror.

Luistro explained that teachers currently teaching the general education subjects, like English 101, should be encouraged to teach in senior high school, one of the additional years under the K+12 program.

The model proposed by the DepEd, the K-6-4-2, involves Kindergarten, six years of elementary education, four years of junior high school (Grades 7 to 10) and two years of senior high school (Grades 11 to 12).

During a forum by the Catholic Educational Association of the Philippines where Luistro spoke, academic professionals also noted that the K+12 program would also impact on salary structures as well as tuition.

Education Undersecretary for Finance and Administration Francisco M. Varela said that education officials couldn’t do anything with the latter “as we don’t regulate tuition.”

“You’re really free to set that,” Varela said during the open forum.

Varela added that it is only the public schools that would be financially back-stopped by the government.
“Private schools would have to do that on their own.”

Still he added that the government is “studying these at present, including the price points because we need to balance what could be the cost if government were to provide financial support.”

Adamson University Legal Affairs Office Director Agnes V. Rivera noted that by 2016, the school would lose 5,000 freshmen and expect displacement of its faculty members teaching general education subjects.

 A department chairman of the Miriam College who spoke on conditions of anonymity told the BusinessMirror that they don’t expect all teachers to opt to teach in senior high school.

“Some are saying they’re going to explore higher studies, like finish their masters degree or doctoral degree.

Some, well, the school may not be able to absorb,” the source, said noting that some teachers would see the move as a demotion.

Luistro said that is just a matter of nomenclature, but that “actually, walang mawawala, and the displacement need not happen.”

The 20th president of De La Salle University said during the forum that there’s a need to move away from the traditional notion of teachers and that some leeway should be given.

“A teacher in a sports academy, for example, can hire a coach; a chef to teach omelet. They need not be called teachers,” Luistro said, adding that this is how some schools for indigenous peoples practice. “We can call them resource persons.”

Luistro told the BusinessMirror after the forum that the impact to the economy would be more positive, with an expected 1.1 million work force entering the market by 2018. “And these are not just your ordinary workers; they would be highly skilled and needed by the economy.”

Luistro said during the forum that the K+12 program will be implemented this coming school year 2012-13, which will start in June.

The DepEd briefing material said that the new curriculum for Grades 1 and 7 (high-school Year 1) will be implemented in SY 2012-13 and will progress in the succeeding school years.

Luistro said the first batch of senior high-school graduates will be in 2018 while the first batch of K+12 graduates will be in 2024.

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