Cordillera Senior High School students lack classrooms, books
>> Thursday, June 8, 2017
By
Aldwin Quitasol
BAGUIO CITY — After
the Department of Education Cordillera admitted number of classrooms for the
Senior High School students is short of around 60%, teachers from the region
also complained incoming Grade 7
students will face the scarcity or absence of reliable and credible textbooks
this coming school year 207-2018.
According
to Thomas Millanes of the Alliance of Concerned Teachers (ACT) Cordillera in a
press conference here at Teachers’ Camp, there are still no textbooks or
materials for the subjects Technical Livelihood Education (TLE), English and
Pilipino. “The needed books are not yet
complete and the opening of classes is nearing so what will they use then?,” he
asked.
Millanes
who prepares for necessary educational materials especially for the grade 7
students said one of problems they are facing is unreliable and inappropriate
contents of some textbooks as they were not properly evaluated before being
printed.
He cited
the case in the textbook for the subject Araling Palipunan (AP) where he said, Igorots of Mountain Province were portrayed
erroneously as Aetas.
“With all due respects to Aeta as our IP
(indigenous peoples) brothers, they have their own identity as the Igorots have
also their own,” he said. Such mistakes
in the books and in other educational materials are harmful for the students as
they will grow uninformed of the things they should know.
“The
problem here is that whenever we make instructional materials and pass it to
the evaluators, it is like we are passing through the needle hole getting many
comments and revisions but if the educational materials like textbooks coming
from the national, they bring it directly to the schools even without passing
through the evaluators and be reviewed also by the teachers here in the
Cordillera who know more of the needed data and reliable information based from
the actual situation of the region),” Millanes said.
He said
when they are already in class, teachers as responsible as they have to go over
the books of their pupils and they will manually put corrections on them.
“The
government is spending a lot of money for the textbooks, the printing presses
cannot be blamed for printing erroneous information, the problem is on the
people who are prioritizing profit over the welfare of the students.” Millanes
said.
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