This story
was taken from Bulatlat, the Philippines's alternative weekly
newsmagazine (www.bulatlat.com, www.bulatlat.net, www.bulatlat.org).
Vol. V, No. 5, March 6-12, 2005
Profit-makers Produce Mediocre Graduates
If the average tuition rate
increase of 12 percent continues for the next five years, the national average
per unit would reach P590.20 by 2010. By then tuition would have increased by as
high as 1,257.41 percent since 1990.
By Carl Marc Ramota Many college students are
dropping out of school, but there are no similar danger signs as far as some
private universities and colleges are concerned. Their new corporate owners are
raking in profits as they continue to hike tuition and other fees. But the question is, do
higher college costs mean quality education? Not necessarily, if recent reports
about the results of board or licensure exams are any indication. In the current schoolyear,
381 out of 1,321 private higher education institutions - or 29 percent of the
total – have applied for tuition increase. The national average tuition increase
is 11.37 percent or P33.15; the current rate per unit is P334.89. In the National Capital
Region, the average tuition is pegged at P614.54 posting a 10.83 percent
increase compared to last year’s figures. A study made by Anak ng
Bayan Youth Party on the rising cost of tertiary education showed that in just
five years, from academic year 2000-2001 to the present, the national average
tuition rate has increased by as much as 63 percent. The National Capital Region
(NCR) average rate, on the other hand, went up by 57 percent. Based on the Commission on
Higher Education’s (CHED) records on tuition increases, tuition was steadily
increasing by an average of almost 12 percent for the last five years.
Deregulation of tuition Raymond Palatino, vice
president of Anak ng Bayan, blamed the Education Act of 1982 for the staggering
tuition hikes in the last two decades. “By giving them a free hand in
determining tuition rate, the Education Act effectively bestowed private school
owners limitless powers,” he said. Batas Pambansa (national
law) No. 232, otherwise known as the Education Act of 1982, laid down the
guidelines and regulations governing the collection and application of tuition
and other fees by all educational institutions. In particular, Section 42 gave
private schools a free hand in determining tuition rates thus allowing private
schools to increase the fee every school year. The deregulated environment
set by the Act ensured the wholesale commodification of a fast-expanding private
tertiary education, Palatino said. “This was also the reason
behind the unexpected collapse of the College Assurance Plan (CAP),” Palatino
said. “CAP’s downfall merely highlights how the cost of education, particularly
in the tertiary level, has dramatically increased after the deregulation of
tuition.” From 1990-1995 just before
the Asian financial bubble burst in 1997, tuition jumped to 275 percent. For the
last 15 years since 1990, tuition has swelled by a whopping 670 percent.
Anak ng Bayan projects that
if the average tuition rate increase of 12 percent continues for the next five
years, the national average per unit would reach P590.20 by 2010. By then
tuition would have increased by as high as 1,257.41 percent since 1990. But these figures only
speak of the average tuition rate per unit in private schools. Most exclusive
schools charge tuition five times higher than the average. At present, Jose Rizal
University (JRU) in Mandaluyong, Metro Manila imposes the highest tuition rate
with P2,600 per unit. The runners-up include De La Salle University (DLSU)-Manila
(P1,506/unit); Asia Pacific College (P1,240/unit); and Mapua Institute of
Technology (P1,254.64/unit). Based on the average
tuition increase every academic year in these schools, tuition per unit in JRU
would reach P4,582.09 in five years; DLSU-Manila with P2,654.10; Asia Pacific
College with P2,185.31; and MIT with P2,211.10. In 2010, a student with a full
21-unit load have to pay P96,223.89, P55,736.10, P45,891.51 and P46,433.10,
respectively. “Clearly, the relentless
hikes in tuition and other fees have earned for private school owners millions
of profits over the last two decades,” Palatino says. “This largely explains why
some business tycoons like Lucio Tan and the Yuchengcos are now venturing into
tertiary education.” Most of these schools have
consistently landed among the country’s top 1,000 corporations since 1996. By
the end of 2003, nine schools were included in this list. Their combined profits
amounted to P1.13 billion. Private schools frequently
listed among the top corporations in the country in terms of profit are the
Centro Escolar University (CEU), MIT, Far Eastern University (FEU), UE,
Philippine Maritime Institute (PMI), Technological Institute of the Philippines
(TIP), AMA Computer University and STI College.
Substandard education So, does expensive
education mean quality education? This is not so in the country: While the cost
of tertiary education has increased, the results of the licensure examinations
showed a continuous decline in the quality of higher education in the last few
years. In 1995, the Task Force on
Higher Education even said, “College education in the Philippines is comparable
to top science high schools in the country and regular secondary education in
Europe and Japan.” This comment is reflected by the pathetic results of annual
licensure examinations. In the list of most popular
programs, according to CHED, are Teacher Education, Accountancy, Criminology,
Marine Transportation and Electronic and Communications Engineering (ECE).
However, records of the Professional Regulation Commission (PRC) show that only
a fraction among the thousands who flock to these courses are able to attain
their dream professional career. The national passing
average for these courses and for most programs offered in the Philippines has
not even reached 50 percent. From 1997 to 2001, the passing rate for Accountancy
was only 18.40 percent; Criminology was better with 47.60 percent; and ECE was
the highest so far with 48.20 percent. In the 2003 licensure
exams, Accountancy remained the lowest at 19 percent. Teacher Education, both in
basic and secondary level, had only a 26 percent passing rate. So mediocre were the
results that in the same year, CHED ordered the phasing out of 115 higher
private institutions that had a five percent or lower passing rate in the
licensure exams. Of these, only 17 schools have followed the order. Some schools are offering
programs without government permit. The most notorious of these, according to
CHED, is the ABE international School of Business and Economics. ABE is
currently offering degrees in Hotel and Restaurant Management, Business
Administration, Tourism and Accountacy in its Caloocan, Taft and Makati branches
with no standard permit from CHED. Dim
future Palatino urged lawmakers to
repeal the Education Act of 1982. “Our lawmakers must immediately act to stop
these tuition and miscellaneous fee increases and put a moratorium on the
proposed new round of hikes for the next school year. Unless the government
starts to flex its muscles on these increases, we will be seeing a higher
drop-out rate and bigger number of out-of-school youth in the next five years.” Even CHED admits that
“unless BP 232 (Education Act of 1982) is repealed or amended, the most viable
course for all concerned is to take a close look at where the increases are
going.” “Unless the government
reverses its present education policies and its thrust to hand over tertiary
education to private sector and until it flexes its muscles to stop the
incessant hikes in tuition and other fees, it will certainly bury the
confidence, hopes and great faith of the Filipino youth and the nation for a
brighter future ahead,” Palatino warned. Bulatlat © 2004 Bulatlat
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(Conclusion)