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Tuesday, April 30, 2024

House leader backs moves on liberalized education

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Deputy Speaker David Suarez allayed fears that a liberalized educational system will lead to a decline in nationalism and patriotism, saying that these fears are unfounded.

Suarez made the statement during the discussions of the Resolution of Both Houses (RBH) 7, particularly on the proposed amendments to the education provisions of the 1987 Constitution.

The Quezon province representative said the status quo, which disallows Filipinos from accessing better education, deprives the entire nation of the chance for better lives, prosperity and gainful employment.

Department of Education (DepEd) Undersecretary Omar Alexander Romero admitted that a gap exists in basic education and that the country is behind its other ASEAN neighbors.

Romero, nonetheless, aired DepEd’s concern that the provision “control and administration” will be removed from the Philippines once the proposed education reform is approved.

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Meanwhile, Constitutional Reform and Rectification for Economic Competitiveness and Transformation (CoRRECT) Movement co-founder Orion Perez Dumdum said that there is no basis at all on the issue of nationalism and patriotism once the country’s education system is liberalized.

Dumdum countered that, historically, people naturally become more patriotic the moment their economy actually becomes a better performing one. He cited Japan as an example when they became a powerful country in terms of its econ my and its defense capabilities.

“I believe that if we focus on becoming a successful country economically and in many other things—technologically, in terms of education—we will naturally become very patriotic and nationalistic,” Dumdum said.

Ateneo De Manila University Law School professor Atty. Anthony Abad also referenced a study by John Naisbitt, which found that countries which get more integrated into the global economy tend to exhibit increased patriotism. This patriotism extends to regions, where a growing sense of pride in cultural identity, language, history, and tradition was observed.

University of Asia and the Pacific (UA&P) Assistant Professor Dr. Robin Michael Garcia noted how Dr. Jose Rizal and other Filipinos enhanced their sense of nationalism after studying abroad.

According to Garcia, strengthening history and Filipino identity can be pursued simultaneously when the country starts liberalizing the education sector.

Suarez remarked that the most anti-nationalistic and unpatriotic viewpoint is to deny the Filipino people the opportunity to improve their circumstances.

“And if you truly love the Philippines and the Filipinos, let the Filipinos blossom in every opportunity available in the world regardless of boundaries and borders,” Suarez concluded.

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