The Manila Times

Unhappy with senior high school program

ASIDE from the recently expanded K to 10 program, the Department of Education also has to revamp its senior high school curriculum in the face of high dissatisfaction with the program. Only four of 10 Filipinos are satisfied with the senior high school (SHS) program, according to a Pulse Asia survey commissioned by Sen. Sherwin Gatchalian. The survey conducted from June 19 to 23 showed that only 41 percent of 1,200 respondents expressed satisfaction with the SHS program.

Meanwhile, 42 percent of the respondents said they were dissatisfied, while 16 percent were undecided. The survey underscored the failure of the SHS program to prepare the youth for college and eventually for work, Gatchalian said.

The senator cited a discussion paper by the Philippine Institute for Development Studies (PIDS) in 2020 that showed that SHS graduates do not have a statistically significant advantage or disadvantage in pay compared to those who have completed Grade 10 and second year college.

“The additional two years in high school were just an added financial burden to the parents,” Gatchalian said, adding fuel to the argument of parents who are against the K to 12 program.

The DepEd said it would improve the SHS curriculum, with a focus on greater student access to employment, entrepreneurship, advanced education and training.

Initially implemented in 2016, the SHS program added two years to the basic education system to align with international standards. It was planned to produce “job-ready” SHS graduates.

But according to DepEd, several studies have shown that the program largely failed to deliver on this promise.

For instance, a tracer study of 2018 graduates found that a large majority, or 83 percent, pursued higher education instead of employment. This jibes with parents’ expectations of their children to graduate from college and not “merely” from high school, since a college diploma is supposed to translate to a good job that would be their ticket out of poverty.

A Philippine Business for Education study indicated that out of the 70 leading companies across all sectors in the Philippines, only 20 percent were inclined to hire SHS graduates, with most companies opting to hire job applicants with at least two years of college education, thereby effectively excluding SHS graduates.

Meanwhile, a study conducted by the Department of Labor and Employment in 2019 found that while employers are open to accepting SHS graduates, their options are limited to rank-and-file, blue-collar or clerical positions. This is due to their belief that college graduates are more competent and skilled in professional work and careers than SHS graduates, the DepEd said.

Opinion

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2023-09-12T07:00:00.0000000Z

2023-09-12T07:00:00.0000000Z

https://digitaledition.manilatimes.net/article/281848648193729

The Manila Times