Rising tuition
>> Monday, June 9, 2014
EDITORIAL
It is
understandable if youth groups and students all over the country are protesting
rise in tuition and other fees imposed by colleges and universities as approved
by the Commission on Higher Education. They are pressing their rights to “accessible
education” and want moratorium on tuition among other fees.
In Baguio City, youth groups led by Kabataan Party-list opened the school
year with protest actions saying such does not answer basic problems of the educational system but gives additional burden to students and parents paying expensive fees in universities and colleges.
year with protest actions saying such does not answer basic problems of the educational system but gives additional burden to students and parents paying expensive fees in universities and colleges.
“As another school year begins, millions of students return to their
schools only to find the same old problems—inadequate facilities and
skyrocketing matriculation,” said Kabataan party-list coordinator
Marben Panlasigui.
Marben Panlasigui.
According to data released by the CHEd Cordillera regional office, 8
universities and colleges in Baguio City and La Trinidad Benguet proposed
increases in their tuition. These include University of Baguio-5%, Saint Louis
University-5%, Philippine Women’s University-7%, University of the Cordilleras-7%, Easter Colleges-10%, Pines City Colleges-10%, Baguio School of Business and Technology -15%, and Phil. Nazarene College-
30%.
University-5%, Philippine Women’s University-7%, University of the Cordilleras-7%, Easter Colleges-10%, Pines City Colleges-10%, Baguio School of Business and Technology -15%, and Phil. Nazarene College-
30%.
Panlasigui said most increases are implemented without undergoing any
form of proper and democratic consultation with students, parents, and other
concerned sectors even with theimplementation of CHED memorandum Order No. 03 or
the current government’s tuition regulation policy.
“CHED Memo Order 3 is a toothless regulation policy. While it
has guidelines for consultations regarding fee increases, CHEd has no proper
mechanism to monitor compliance of University Administrators,”Panlasigui said.
The youth leader also added that tuition increases on incomingfreshmen
is not included in the said memorandum. This is the reasonwhy, according to
him, different universities and colleges usuallyimplement carry-over scheme to
bypass consultations.
The Kabataan Party-list and other party-list groups under the Makabayan
Bloc in Congress last week reiterated the call to the immediate passage of House
Bill 698 or the Tuition Regulation bill and filed House Bill 354 which seeks to
impose a three-year moratorium on tuition and other fee increases on all
educational institutions.
“Considering how important education is for our people and how costlyit
has become for them, it will only be fair for the government toensure our
citizen’s right to education by imposing a three-year
moratorium on all kinds of fee increases, whether tuition or otherschool fees, on all schools that have registered a profit in theprevious year. This is just to give our people some kind of relief,considering that they have yet to feel the promised social paybackfrom higher taxes,” the Makabayan solon said.
moratorium on all kinds of fee increases, whether tuition or otherschool fees, on all schools that have registered a profit in theprevious year. This is just to give our people some kind of relief,considering that they have yet to feel the promised social paybackfrom higher taxes,” the Makabayan solon said.
The sentiments of students and the Makabayan bloc in Congress are well
taken. But then reasonable and pragmatic approach could be taken by government
to study merits of their sentiments. Running
schools, according to its administrators is not that easy as they have
to contend with rising costs like salaries of teachers and making better
facilities conducive to learning. There has to be a middle ground somehow – and
this could be attained by having more consultations between schools and
students to arrive to reasonable consensus.
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