EDITORIAL
The Department of
Education is mulling over entering into more service contracting schemes with
private schools to absorb more than a third of the expected one million
students who will be entering senior high school in 2016.
The two years of
senior high school—Grades 11 and 12—that will be added to the 10-year basic
education curriculum will be implemented nationwide beginning June 2016.
Education Secretary
Armin Luistro said they estimated that about a million students in the public
schools would be graduating from Grade 10 or 4th year high school in March
2016.
If all of them will go
on to the public schools (for Grade 11), the government needs to build
classrooms for one million students, accoding to Luistro, by 2017, the public
school system will again have to find a way to accommodate the same number
students—about one million—for Grade 12. “We have to compute the additional
teachers and classrooms needed based on this number.”
The education
secretary said accommodating these students in private schools would be less
costly than building new classrooms and facilities, procuring furniture and
hiring more teachers.
The DepEd said it
currently subsidizes the tuition of about 700,000 students in private high
schools under the education service contracting scheme (ESC).
What is strange is no
student in northern Luzon had been a beneficiary of this program. How does the
DepEd distribute and accou t for the money under the ESC?
The ESC is a program
under the Government Assistance to Students and Teachers in Private Education
(GASTPE) for students who could not be accommodated in public high schools and
are therefore enrolled in private schools with a government subsidy.
The current annual
subsidy is P10,000 per student in private schools in Metro Manila and P6,500
per student in participating schools outside Metro Manila.
“We’ll be happier if
we have to build fewer classrooms. The government will be able to save more by
giving subsidies instead,” Luistro said, explaining that the cost of keeping a
student in the public school system is P14,000 a year.
He said two months
ago, they estimated private schools may be able to absorb about 30 percent, or
300,000, of the incoming one million Grade 11 students. “I wish the figure in
the private schools will increase to 60:40 (60 percent for public schools and
40 percent for private schools).”
Public
elementary and high schools will open on June 3 while many private schools are
scheduled to open a week later.
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