Graduation, school fees
>> Friday, March 29, 2013
EDITORIAL
Graduation ceremonies
are set in most schools in Northern Luzon and other parts of the country the
next few days even as those who are about to leave the portals of educational
institutions, particularly high students, are pondering what course to take and
how they would finance these.
But even after having
passed their elementary, high school or college education, they are hampered by
high graduation fees. It is the dream of every parent to make their children
graduate a course so they could make their lives better and that of their
families. Can the government give free education to all as espoused by some
legislators?
"We should make
public education absolutely free," Sen. Alan Cayetano said last week when
asked to comment on violations by several schools on the ban on imposing
graduation fees issued by the Department of Education. "Otherwise, we will
continue the sad cycle of children dropping out of school just to support their
families. In this case, the students skip their graduation rites because they
cannot afford it."
Cayetano said the only
way to make this memorandum effective is to cover the fees incurred by schools,
saying in Taguig, they don't have this problem because the city continued his
program of ensuring there is enough budget to cover all expenses not only for
graduation, but also uniforms, text books, school supplies, the electric bill,
and even the prom.
Cayetano said teachers
and heads of universities charge graduation fees because they are not making
enough income or have insufficient MOOE (maintenance and other operating
expenses). "A lot of schools do not have enough income, so we cannot blame
them for having to resort to charging fees for special occasions like graduation.
But in Taguig, in continuing my educational programs, the city has been waiving
the graduation fees of all 34 public schools the past two years."
Cayetano said that for
this year’s graduation, Taguig City is sponsoring the graduation fees of 17,613
public school students. This is in addition to the scholarships given by the
city to all students of the graduating class and also to the most outstanding
student of each class in all levels both in elementary and high school.
He said Mayor Lani Revilla
improved educational funding program and doubled the city’s scholarship fund,
going from P100 million in 2011 to P200 million this year. “This was done
through careful re-allocation of funds and strict budgeting of public
resources. I urge the national government and other local government units
(LGUs) to study the model that we used."
According to Cayetano,
the national government should also share this burden with LGUs by allocating
part of the budget of DepEd to subsidize graduation fees, especially in poorer
provinces and municipalities.
Cayetano noted that
with the P30 billion increase in the DepEd budget for 2013, the agency has to
put equal focus on all important aspects of the Basic Education Enhancement
Program and at the same time, relieve the burden of the poor from these
additional expenses.
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